The modern crisis of identity
It has never been easy to answer the question ‘Who am I?’ but increasing social pluralism, the fast-changing world of social media, and easy access to cosmetic surgery make it more difficult than ever
It has never been easy to answer the question ‘Who am I?’ but increasing social pluralism, the fast-changing world of social media, and easy access to cosmetic surgery make it more difficult than ever
The ‘risk society’ that we live in has increasingly structured itself around attempting to manage an uncertain future.
The Christian’s conscience is increasingly set in opposition to some of the values and political aims of wider Western culture.
British higher education is increasingly secular in outlook. This paper identifies three aspects of that secularity: specialisation, instrumentalisation and globalisation.
Our culture understands the choice to be the means by which we express our freedom and individuality but sees choice as a range of consumer options.
This paper argues that Christianity is the most coherent form of humanism. By contrast, secular humanism is historically and philosophically dependent upon Christianity's view of the human person.
Covert Power: Unmasking the world of witchcraft by Jonathan Burnside
By any other name? 'Fundamentalist' and 'evangelical' as terms of public discourse by Christopher Watkin