-
📣 Join the AI Commons
-
📖 Things I’ve read in 2026
-
🌕 You are the music while the music lasts
-
What’s it like to spend your entire life as a cruise ship guest?
-
Our entire life is only 4000 weeks
-
Civil inattention on public transport during a pandemic
-
What does it feel like to be inspired?
-
Levelling Up Education: New Approaches to Place, Work and Education
-
The phenomenology of insomnia
-
Groping nervously towards the expression of inner life
-
Three books that shaped my work
-
The Enemy Bacteria
-
The bloody scene is bloody sad
-
To every thing there is a season
-
What does it mean to be human after Covid-19?
-
Music for thinking
-
Music is the basis of all life
-
What do you do? Intellectual biography as self-constitution
-
Cambridge: the most unequal city in the UK
-
The suprisingly familiar character of the TikTok algorithm
-
Why capitalism made it impossible to eradicate Covid
-
So you don’t want to be a normal journal any more?
-
When will we know how dangerous Omicron is?
-
I keep having dreams of things I need to do, of waking up and of following through
-
Towards a sociology of splintered minds
-
A beginner’s guide to Omicron
-
What will post-neoliberalism look like?
-
We need a military history of the culture wars
-
The things which bring us together
-
A Heideggerian reading of Margaret Archer
-
Will QAnon go mainstream through evangelical christianity?
-
So may the sunrise bring hope where it once was forgotten
-
Resources for organising online conferences
-
The inner life of behaviourists
-
The existential challenge of the post-capitalist condition
-
Sing, Sing, Sing
-
How Covid-19 accelerated the transition into post-capitalism
-
We’re leaving neoliberalism and entering something worse
-
I don’t rate you 👊
-
The emptiness that comes with online performance
-
New Paper: Platforms and Institutions in the Post-Pandemic University
-
Yanis Varoufakis on Post-Pandemic Technofeudalism
-
CfP: Digital Academia
-
The Rise of Educational Audio
-
Winter is coming 🎶😷🌨☃️
-
The flow of writing
-
A few thoughts on Peter Sloterdijk’s Spheres
