Julian Baggini



Profile:
Full name: Julian Guiseppe Baggini

Area of interest: Philosophy

Journals/Organisation: The Guardian | Financial Times

Email: [mailto:julian@julianbaggini.com julian@julianbaggini.com]

Personal website: http://www.julianbaggini.com

Website: Guardian.co/Julian Baggini

Blog: Comment is free...

Representation: http://www.davidhigham.co.uk/clients/Baggini.htm

Networks: https://twitter.com/#!/microphilosophy | http://www.linkedin.com/pub/julian-baggini/35/6a1/210



Biography:
About:

Education: University College London: Philosophy PhD (thesis: Psychological Reductionism About Persons: A Critical Development)

Career:

Current position/role: Commentator


 * also writes/written for: The Observer, The Independent, The Sunday Herald, Prospect, Times Educational Supplement, New Humanist

Other roles/Main role: editor of The Philosophers' Magazine

Other activities:

Disclosures:

Viewpoints/Insight: In his search for England, Julian Baggini expected to find racism, sexism and fear ...He found something much more thought-provoking - 'Time Out with Nick Cohen', New Statesman, 2nd April 2007

Broadcast media:

Video:
 * frequently heard on BBC radio programmes including (Melvyn Bragg's) In Our Time In Our Time, Off the Page and Nightwaves
 * [http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01k2cg0 Julian Baggini argues that Aristotle has more to tell us about how to live than Freud'' - On BBC Radio 4's Start the Week, 25th June 2012
 * see also: list of appearances at (julianbaggini.com)

Controversy/Criticism:

Awards/Honours:

Scoops:

Other:



Books & Debate:

 * New British Philosophy: The interviews OCLC 123123650, 2002 (co-author J. Stangroom)
 * Philosophy: key texts OCLC 49991439, 2002
 * Philosophy: key themes OCLC 50035216, 2002
 * Making sense: philosophy behind the headlines OCLC 50018091, 2002
 * What Philosophers Think OCLC 51528113, 2003 (co-author J. Stangroom)
 * The philosopher's toolkit: a compendium of philosophical concepts and methods OCLC 48989252, 2003 (co-author P.S. Fosl)
 * Atheism: A Very Short Introduction OCLC 52972452, 2003 (click here to watch 'meet the author' VIDEO about the book)
 * Great Thinkers A-Z OCLC 70219721, 2004
 * What's It All About? Philosophy and the Meaning of Life OCLC 58546876, 2005
 * Do you think what you think you think? : the ultimate philosophical quiz book OCLC 71239490, 2006 (co-author J. Stangroom)
 * The Pig That Wants To Be Eaten and 99 Other Thought Experiments OCLC 65768087, 2006
 * Welcome to everytown: a journey into the English mind OCLC 76936511, 2007
 * The duck that won the lottery: and 99 other bad arguments OCLC 232713206, 2008
 * Complaint: from minor moans to principled protests OCLC 220004322, 2008
 * Do they think you're stupid?: 100 ways of spotting spin and nonsense from the media, pundits and politicians OCLC 559844393, 2010
 * What's It All About? Philosophy and the Meaning of Life OCLC 502042653, 2010
 * Should You Judge This Book by Its Cover?: 100 Fresh Takes on Familiar Sayings and Quotations OCLC 460054491, 2010
 * Hume on religion OCLC 609532902, 2010
 * The philosopher's toolkit : a compendium of philosophical concepts and methods OCLC456977595, 2010
 * The Ego Trick : in search of the self OCLC 694600656, 2011

✒Julian's page at Amazon✒ Latest work: The shrink and the sage: A guide to living with Antonia Macaro. Icon Books Ltd., May 2012

Academic papers: papers/texts (julianbaggini.com)

Speaking/Appearances:
 * Ego With Julian Baggini, The School of Life, 22nd March 2011
 * talks & events - regularly updated!
 * lecturelist.org

Debate: 

Journals:

 * No regular column



Articles: 2015

 * Should we ‘get over it’? - With Antonia Macaro: Those who can neither forgive nor forget are doomed to be eaten up from within by their own resentments - 14th February
 * What transforms us? - With Antonia Macaro: Philosophy is rarely transformative, being neither a good cure for misery nor a cause of it - 7th February
 * Are good intentions enough? - With Antonia Macaro: Effort and intention are up to us, whereas results depend on the precarious outside world - 24th January
 * Should we have pets? - With Antonia Macaro: At best, the pet-human relationship is a mutually beneficial symbiotic relationship - 17th January
 * Watch what you tweet – there’s no such thing as off duty in an age of corporate conscience - Post something ill-judged and get the sack for it? I’m afraid it’s only fair - 11th January
 * Do we need props? - With Antonia Macaro: The main issue is whether gadgets and apps help us to run our lives or whether we allow ourselves to be ruled by them - 10th January
 * Watch what you tweet – there’s no such thing as off duty in an age of corporate conscience - Post something ill-judged and get the sack for it? I’m afraid it’s only fair - 10th January
 * What do we owe our parents? - With Antonia Macaro: We want to both pay our debt to our parents and lash out for the baggage they’ve bequeathed us - 3rd January



Articles: 2014

 * Should we meditate? - With Antonia Macaro: In terms of health, meditation is lodging itself firmly alongside your five-a-day and physical exercise - 20th December
 * Why you really don’t need that ironic reindeer jumper - Don’t buy less, buy better. After all, being wise and bearing gifts is part of the Christmas story - 20th December
 * Should you show you care? - With Antonia Macaro: There are sometimes good reasons why feelings do not result in clear expressions of love - 6th December
 * Are we in denial? - With Antonia Macaro: How many of our most cherished beliefs are strongly immune from evidence? - 22nd November
 * What is comfort? - With Antonia Macaro: There is a reason why one of the oldest soap opera clichés is to put the kettle on - 15th November
 * Should we seek material security? - With Antonia Macaro: Instead of chasing chimeras, we should learn to come to terms with life’s fundamental insecurity - 8th November
 * Should we seek material security? - With Antonia Macaro: Instead of chasing chimeras, we should learn to come to terms with life’s fundamental insecurity - 25th October
 * Where does motivation come from? - With Antonia Macaro: You can discover your motivation by simply noticing what you are inclined to do or what you find yourself doing - 18th October
 * Should we cultivate resilience? - With Antonia Macaro: If you find yourself drawing on your resilience a lot, then you ought to ask yourself why you keep hitting the floor - 11th October
 * Should we stop moaning? - With Antonia Macaro: There is something therapeutic about having a mutual moan – ‘mutual’ being the operative word here - 26th September
 * What’s the problem with anger? - With Antonia Macaro: The more a machine is designed to look as though it’s trying to help, the more angry we get when it lets us down - 13th September
 * How should we present ourselves? - With Antonia Macaro: We feel we have to blow our own trumpet for fear of being perceived as negative and lacking in self-esteem - 6th September
 * Something rotten in the town of Rotherham - How did child sex abuse become rife when so many people seemed to know about it? - 30th August
 * How gloomy should we be? - With Antonia Macaro: Yes, there is a lot to be disheartened about, but that doesn’t mean we have to forgo what happiness comes our way - 30th August
 * Do we need hobbies? - With Antonia Macaro: The things that matter most are appreciated for what they are, not for where they lead - 23rd August
 * Where should we draw the line? - With Antonia Macaro: It’s too demanding for most people to think things through clearly when they are in the grip of a powerful desire - 16th August
 * Is it OK not to have an opinion? - With Antonia Macaro: Having fixed opinions on subjects we know little about can be a problem - 9th August
 * Is the whole really greater than the sum of its parts? - ''] - With Antonia Macaro: While we can easily take individual problems in our stride, when they exceed a certain load it can all become too much - 2nd August
 * What is wisdom? - With Antonia Macaro: It does not automatically come with age. Many older people never put their life experience to good use - 19th July
 * Radicalisation is not brainwashing. We need to rethink how we tackle it - The idea that people freely choose to do terrible things is one that we find hard to accept - 14th July
 * Must we agree with ourselves? - Within each of us is a number of different voices that achieve just enough harmony to sing as one melodious choir - 12th July
 * What happens when empathy isn’t enough? - With Antonia Macaro: It seems that feeling for others is necessary for living with others - 5th July
 * Should we grow old disgracefully? - With Antonia Macaro: What matters is retaining some zest for life, in whatever way is appropriate for us. Bungee jumping is strictly optional - 28th June
 * Is better off really better? - With Antonia Macaro: We should aim to enjoy things in the genuine understanding that they will not last for ever or give meaning to our life - 7th June
 * Should we avoid ‘shoulds’? - With Antonia Macaro: ‘Should’ has become a kind of dirty word. Say it and you often get the retort, ‘Says who?’ - 31st May
 * How can we improve our wellbeing? - With Antonia Macaro: By acting as though wellbeing is measurable, the government is glossing over contested issues of value - 17th May
 * Should we avoid avoidance? - With Antonia Macaro: We avoid thinking about the meaningless suffering of millions. And who could blame us? It’s impossible to take it all on board - 10th May
 * How open should we be? - With Antonia Macaro: If you’re interested in the person you’re talking to, you might want to share something of yourself - 3rd May
 * How allotments lost the plot - A BBC2 TV series turns allotments into a site of competition, when in essence they're all about co-operation and solidarity - 19th April
 * Should we be more spontaneous? - With Antonia Macaro: We need both reason and passion, since while desire without reflection is blind, reflection without desire is indifferent - 19th April
 * Shellburne Thurber’s images of consulting rooms - With Antonia Macaro: When it comes to consulting rooms, psychoanalysts are supposed to provide a ‘blank canvas’. Yet the reality is they are rooms full of useful insights - 19th April
 * Is envy diabolical? - With Antonia Macaro: Envy needs to be managed. While a certain amount is probably inevitable, you don’t have to indulge it - 12th April
 * Is it OK to objectify people? - With Antonia Macaro: It’s fine to treat people as means to an end as long as we don’t reduce them to just that - 5th April
 * How useful is self-knowledge? - With Antonia Macaro: While becoming more aware of your inner landscape may be fascinating, it need not change the way you act and live - 22nd March
 * Should we mind our language? - With Antonia Macaro: We create prisons for ourselves by talking in certain ways. Shifting the way we use words can be enough to let us out - 8th March
 * How free are we? - With Antonia Macaro: Therapy can be about navigating the grey area between what is beyond our control and what we may be able to change - 15th February
 * Should we fear the worst? - With Antonia Macaro: People cope with what they consider disasters much more positively than they would have guessed - 8th February
 * Is it better to focus on today or tomorrow? - With Antonia Macaro: Focusing on the long-term view doesn’t guarantee we’ll find meaning, just as focusing on the here and now doesn’t guarantee happiness - 31st January
 * Is it OK to do nothing? - With Antonia Macaro: In our achievement-orientated culture there is a danger of construing as “nothing” any activity without a clear end-product - 11th January



Articles: 2013

 * Move your money from the high street and help to achieve a fairer society - Never mind a new fitness regime for 2014, resolve instead to make things better without a revolution - 31st December
 * Can you be too intelligent? - Our brains are incredible but you can be too smart for your own good. History often warns against what reason alone commends - 29th December
 * Are good intentions enough? - With Antonia Macaro: Even if you want the best for someone, it’s arrogant to act without trying to think things through from their point of view - 7th December
 * Glasgow helicopter crash: A rare risk but it makes sense to prevent a repeat - Psychologists and risk experts are always telling us that we fixate far too much on unusual danger - 2nd December
 * What should we talk about? - With Antonia Macaro: Talking about celebrity sex scandals has at least one advantage over topics such as whether free will is an illusion or artistic taste purely subjective - 30th November
 * Happiness: the silver lining of economic stagnation? - A study suggests that national wellbeing stalls peaks at £22k average income. But that doesn't mean there's no point in pushing for wealth - 28th November
 * Should we be more stoic? - With Antonia Macaro: The Stoics’ message is to think rationally and challenge assumptions about what has value - 23rd November
 * Should we embrace change? - With Antonia Macaro: Changes are often less important than what remains unaltered, whether it’s a person or a smartphone - 16th November
 * Does it matter what people think? - With Antonia Macaro: The balancing act is to pay attention to what others think without allowing them to do our thinking for us - 9th November
 * The Shrink & The Sage: Doth the lady protest too much? - With Antonia Macaro: Most of us are implicitly Freudian: quick to attribute unconscious motives - 2nd November
 * The Shrink & The Sage: is luck important? - With Antonia Macaro: You turn right and meet the love of your life, or left and a falling flowerpot lands squarely on your head - 26th October 2013
 * The Shrink & The Sage: What can dreaming tell us? - With Antonia Macaro: Whether or not the stuff of dreams actually reflects our waking concerns, exploring it could be a useful way of gaining insight - 12th October
 * The Shrink & The Sage: Why do I always do that? - With Antonia Macaro: The word “always” magnifies and exaggerates, and suggests a monolithic narrative - 5th October
 * Is trying enough? - With Antonia Macaro: Don’t banish ‘trying’: all we can ever do is try the best we can, and that is good enough - 7th September
 * Is philosophy therapeutic? - With Antonia Macaro: If you are harbouring ‘stuff’, a deep exploration of Nietzsche may be the last thing you
 * Is gratification better delayed? - With Antonia Macaro: ‘Anticipation is also a pleasure in itself, some would say greater than that of indulgence’ - 24th August
 * What is the benefit of doubt? - With Antonia Macaro: ‘Used properly, doubt is neither a dead end, nor an obstacle to be overcome, but a guide’ - 17th August
 * Should we retreat? - With Antonia Macaro: A retreat is not about turning your back on the world but confronting directly what is most real in it - 10th August
 * Are we compassionate enough? - With Antonia Macaro: Feeling someone else’s pain is not good enough: you have to know how you can lessen it - 3rd August
 * Is life too short? - With Antonia Macaro: Reminding yourself of life’s brief span can be used to justify a potentially unwise course of action
 * The heroism of the murdered Good Samaritan proves society needs both justice and compassion - This tragic story of murder in Hertfordshire newly sharpens the edge of Jesus’s once-radical parable. Like Christ, we must ask again, "Who is my neighbour?" - 16th July
 * Will something turn up? - With Antonia Macaro: Most of the time we do well enough at adapting ourselves to whatever life throws at us - 15th June
 * The secret to happiness? It's complicated - Marriage, money, S&M – a raft of studies into what makes us happy can't agree, but we can still learn from this research - 31st May
 * Is ego an asset? - With Antonia Macaro: The knack is to live with a kind of ironic sense of our own insignificance which amuses but does not crush us - 25th May
 * 'I feel so humble' – the common cry of heroes and villains - Chris Huhne is humbled by his disgrace, Alex Ferguson by his triumph. Those with true humility let their actions do the talking - 18th May
 * What do we need? - With Antonia Macaro: Love, sex, money, status: are these universal human necessities or personal desires? - 11th May
 * Should we live in hope? - With Antonia Macaro: Too much hope invites self-deception and can interfere with our ability to deal wisely with reality - 4th May
 * The Shrink & The Sage: Do we have too many things? - With Antonia Macaro. The human desire for self-expression and autonomy conflicts with the continuing allure of materialism - 27th April
 * The Shrink & The Sage: how important is friendship? - With Antonia Macaro: ‘Aristotle’s advice is to have only as many friends as you can share joys and sorrows with’ - 20th April
 * We want it all. And we want it now. But why? - Life seems to get faster and faster. On the 75th anniversary of the invention of powdered coffee, Julian Baggini pauses consider the Instant Society - 30th March
 * The Shrink & The Sage: Do we wear masks? - With Antonia Macaro: To say we are only ourselves in one situation is as nonsensical as saying water is only itself when liquid - 30th March
 * The Shrink & The Sage: Is it our fault? - With Antonia Macaro: A lot of things in life are determined less by decisions than by chance, luck or coincidence - 23rd March
 * Fairtrade, ethical eating, and why the choice between buying local and global is a distraction - As Fairtrade fortnight begins, what does good food actually mean? - 25th February
 * Huhne case highlights the end of privacy - It might be wise to pause before pressing the send button - 9th February
 * Confused? Maybe you’re not drinking enough - We leap upon officially sanctioned numbers to live by. We should count less and think more - 3rd January



Articles: 2012

 * Think there’s too much excess at Christmas? I can’t get enough of it - It's that time of year when many start to worry about the amount we waste - 22nd December
 * What good luck to miss out on a £64m lottery win - If we find it hard to believe winning millions might not be so great after all, we just don't have a good enough imagination - 6th December
 * Why are we so obsessed with therapy? - What is of value tends to be lost or perverted if we turn all that is therapeutic into therapy - 1st December
 * The lessons of fasting for atheists - Spiritual disciplines can teach us much about food discipline – I found my 10-day fast extremely rewarding - 22nd October
 * Dover: chalk face of home or citadel wall? - The White Cliffs have a dark side – as a barrier that travellers are not welcome to cross - 13th October
 * Don’t let the barbarians hand over the White Cliffs of Dover - Dover's historic port and its famous backdrop must be saved for the nation - 31st August
 * Why the white cliffs of Dover are so special - Both proud and porous, Dover's coastline could be a perfect symbol for a new kind of patriotism - 19th August
 * Individuals? Or members of society? That's what the right to die is about - The social contract we all implicitly sign limits our personal autonomy for our own protection - 18th August
 * Why it's not the Dalai Lama's job to break the silence on Tibet - There's no reason to expect religious leaders such as the Dalai Lama to be political operators, it's not their world - 19th June
 * Is Osborne's dad worth a £19,000 desk? - The one thing you would never do at the desk Sir Peter Osborne has his eye on is write at it - 23rd April
 * Reflections on the end of Heathen's progress - Heathen's progress: It is a shame some responses to this series have been tribal, because atheists and believers can have a constructive dialogue - 23rd March
 * Give me a reasonable believer over an uncompromising atheist any day - Heathen's progress: In a coalition of the reasonable, I might have more fruitful dialogue with an evangelical or Catholic than a fellow atheist - 16th March
 * Yes, life without God can be bleak. Atheism is about facing up to that - Attempts to brighten atheism's image miss the point – life can be brutal, yet we accept that - 9th March
 * Why do the religious insist on presenting a united front? - Heathen's progress: Religious leaders of different faiths have no problem being critical of anyone – apart from each other. Something's going on - 1st March 2012
 * Being tone deaf to religion does matter - Heathen's progress: Atheists are irritated by emphasis on their 'tone', but that's because it's key to showing an understanding of the subject
 * 'A secular state must be neutral' – what does that mean exactly? - Heathen's progress: A healthy secular society must allow for a plurality of ways of living – but these must never compromise the common good - 16th February
 * There's a dark side to this piety about 'going local' - I'd rather go to John Lewis than the locally run café whose bastard of an owner exploits the underpaid - 8th February
 * Monarchists are from Mars, republicans are from Venus - If you want proof that there is not one universe but a multitude of parallel worlds, you don't need any quantum physics: just read the Letters pages of our national newspapers - 21st January
 * You don't have to be religious to pray … but it helps - Religious rituals can provide real benefits, but try to separate them from the beliefs and they lose their potency and grip - 12th January
 * Can it be rational for the religious to be non-rational? - Heathen's progress: Bypassing it with a leap of faith is problematic, but there's a serious debate to be had about rationality's limits - 5th January

Articles: 2011

 * The parable of the allotments - Heathen's progress: This apocryphal lesson provides a possible response to my argument that religiosity is more about belief than practice - 16th December
 * The myth that religion is more about practice than belief - My own research shows that the vast majority of Christians appear to take the orthodox doctrine at face value - 11th December
 * Is generosity a luxury we can't afford? Frankly, I don't buy it - The latest British Social Attitudes report offers an annual opportunity for commentators to jump to conclusions about the precise ways in which the country is going to pot, for that is always how its findings are interpreted - 7th December
 * Respect for you and your crazy beliefs - Heathen's progress: I can respect the intelligence of people who believe stupid things. It's a variant of 'hate the sin, love the sinner' - 3rd December
 * Is common ground between atheism and belief possible? - Heathen's progress: My articles of 21st-century faith have met with little enthusiasm. That may mean the common ground lies in a different area - 26th November
 * The articles of 21st-century faith - Heathen's progress: My four articles make religion intellectually respectable, even to the hardest-nosed atheists. Can believers sign up to them? - 20th November
 * To debate religion, we must first find out what people believe - Heathen's progress: Does true religion involve belief in mythical beings, or is it really practice not doctrine? To find out we need an empirical approach - 14th November
 * 'You just don't understand my religion' is not good enough - Heathen's progress: Too often, faith is mysterious only selectively. When questions get tough, a god can disappear in a puff of ineffability - 7th November
 * What is this foolish lust for uncertainty? - Heathen's progress: On religion and other thorny questions, there is a class of educated liberals for whom uncertainty is prized above all - 28th October
 * Religion's truce with science can't hold - Heathen's progress: Any religious belief seeking to explain the 'how's of the universe is competing with science – and in this sphere science will always win - 14th October
 * How not to be a dogmatic fundamentalist - Heathen's progress: It's not how strong our views are, or how vigorously we defend them, but how open we are to others changing our mind - 10th October
 * How Steve Jobs changed capitalism - The death of Apple's co-founder has seen him acclaimed as a technological and creative visionary. But his greatest legacy is how he transformed the business world - 7th October
 * Heathen's progress, part one: stalemate - This is the first in new a series looking to redraw the battlelines in the God wars and establish a new heathen manifesto - 1st October
 * still has its place'' - It might seem frivolous, indeed distasteful, to talk about a woman blinded by an acid attack in Tehran in the same breath as a fortunate batsman at a cricket match in Nottingham. But not only is it fruitful to do so, it is precisely the juxtaposition of the trivial and the grave that makes the comparison so apt - 2nd August
 * hard shoulder to cry on'' - A road does not have to be driven along just because it is there - 18th April
 * is not evil, simply amoral'' - We should respect Gaia as a fighter respects the skill of an opponent, not as a pupil respects the wisdom of her master - 14th March
 * for modern living: you'' - You are therefore you exist: learning the ego trick - 13th March



Articles: 2010

 * science silence the doubters on David Kelly?'' - Baseless conspiracy theories are a sadly inevitable side-effect of the kind of sceptical inquiry we really need - 27th October
 * and believers can get along'' - My atheist 'sermon' in Westminster Abbey seems incongruous, but it shows good faith is more important than the right beliefs - 17th October
 * we stand'' - I may not like some of the pontiff's policies – but when atheists gang up, things soon get ugly - 18th September
 * science has not actually killed God, it has rendered Him unrecognisable'' - There is no room in the universe of Hawking or most other scientists for the activist God of the Bible - 4th September (writing in The Independent)
 * chief says privacy is dying. But does the Facebook generation care?'' - The embrace of social networking could be seen to support the claim that people value belonging much more than the autonomous liberal individual supposes - 21st August (writing in The Independent)
 * are exams for? That’s the hard question'' - Let’s stop obsessing about A levels getting easier and ask if they are stimulating enough - 18th August (writing in The Times)
 * is rarely black and white'' - The more we scrutinise our own decisions and attend to inconvenient facts, the more we can be said to have acted freely - 3rd August
 * complain less – do it better'' - Too often written off as trivial moaning, the ability to make effective complaints is fundamental to a fair society - 14th July
 * is deep thought?'' - I think most people are more sceptical than ever. We are learning to test out claims for ourselves - 6th July (writing in The Independent)
 * is no one either good or bad, but circumstances make them so'' - Derrick Bird reminds us that moral character is fragile much more often than it is robust. Most people have no robust character at all - 5th June (writing in The Independent)
 * Green victory?'' - Caroline Lucas's win in Brighton does not signify a national breakthrough. The Green's share of the vote went down - 9th May (Cif at the polls)
 * vote for the Lib Dems could check the Tories'' - We can forget about a Labour government, so a tactical vote may be our best shot at avoiding unfettered Tory rule - 1st May
 * women will remain outnumbered'' - Bidisha is right to complain that women are vastly under-represented, but fixing the problem is far from simple - 26th April
 * philosopher kings of UK politics'' - Are Clegg, Brown and Cameron just modern-day versions of Locke, Hobbes and Rousseau? - 22nd April
 * behaving badly'' - Doing good deeds as a way of earning naughtiness points shows ethics has become a form of unenlightened self-interest - 16th March
 * can be a rational choice'' - The possibility it may be justified is why we’re so unwilling to tackle the issue - 28th February (writing in The Independent on Sunday)
 * Nicholas not simply a first-class twit'' - Tory MP Nicholas Winterton has been pilloried for his comments about second-class train carriages – but he has a point -20th February
 * miserable results of our quest for happiness'' - Those who pillage rich traditions for contemporary tastes take the easy but shallow route to happiness - 13th January (writing in The Daily Telegraph)
 * 'ethical' shopping habit'' - From food supplements to feng shui kits, which 'virtuous' products we buy are really wasteful and useless? - 9th January



Articles: 2009

 * Father, thou still shalt not steal'' - We should only upset our moral values in dire circumstances. At other times, render unto Tesco . . . - 23rd December
 * fairytale farce of the monarchy'' - Before we end up with a King Charles speaking out of turn or a bland, waving King William, let's rethink the whole royal situation - 15th December
 * guerrillas are following a noble tradition'' - Eco-protesters should be saluted. And then banged up - 19th October (writing in The Times)
 * doing it for the kids'' - The child-free life can be great. Why is it almost always presented as second-best, cold and empty? - 18th September
 * is honesty the best policy?'' - A study has found that we can't agree on what constitutes honest behaviour – but standards of decency don't have to be universal - 8th September
 * perceptions harm organ donation'' - The problem is not foreigners or the rich jumping the queue for transplants, it's a failure to stand by the system - 31st July
 * fear of trespass'' - To remove the need for people to defend their privacy so doggedly, make the public square safe - 18th July
 * all deaths are not equal'' - The discrepancy in the media coverage of two plane crashes is a reflection of our need to value some lives more than others - 2nd July
 * time for Pringles' sense of self'' - Should we defer to Aristotle or Plato on the potatoness of Pringles? Or ask a child? A court case raises essential questions - 23rd May
 * but not clear'' - Atheists must turn down the volume and have a real conversation - or lose out to the fluffy brigade - 13th April
 * on religion, part 8: What did he believe?'' - So was Hume an atheist or an agnostic? Strange as it sounds, we can see him as both - 30th March
 * on Religion: response to comments'' - Hume's arguments are stronger and more subtle than many commenters here allow and there is a steep price to meeting them - 26th March 2009
 * on religion, part 7: Soul-searching'' - Hume considers three types of argument for the soul's immortality, and demolishes them all - 23rd March
 * on religion, part 6: True religion looks a lot like false'' - Protestants of Hume's time prided themselves on their freedom from superstition. With delicate irony he proved them wrong - 16th March 2009
 * Hume on religion, part 5: Reason to be cautious - Hume's pessimism challenges those who see science and rationality as two invincible superheroes - 9th March 2009
 * Calm? Why should I be calm? - There's far too much emphasis on being happy these days. Anger is vital too. It could even, say scientists, help our careers. Julian Baggini on the emotion that has changed the world for the better - 3rd March 2009
 * Hume on religion, part 4: The limits of scepticism - Julian Baggini: How to believe Hume's Dialogues put forward criticisms of his own views, arguments we still hear today. But are they strong enough? - 2nd March 2009
 * Hume on religion: response to comments - Hume's targets are those who argue rationally for the existence of God or the reality of miracles - 26th February 2009
 * The past is full of boys like Alfie - The 13-year-old father has been big news – but from a biological and historical perspective, the story is not unusual - 24th February 2009
 * Hume on religion, part 3: How he skewered intelligent design - Hume's view of causation gives us no reason for deducing the God of monotheism from our observations of the world around us - 23rd February 2009
 * Theo Hobson v Julian Baggini - Is Christianity a good influence on British culture? - 20th February 2009
 * The paradox of dementia - Another Thought for the Day: When someone's mind has been lost to Alzheimer's but their body remains, we find it hard to make sense of what is left behind - 19th February 2009 (AUDIO)
 * Hume on religion, part 2: Faith or reason - Hume strips away the comforting sense that faith can supplement reason, setting believers a stark challenge - 16th February 2009
 * Hume on religion, part 1: The agnostic philosopher - How to believe: The most pressing and telling critiques of religion not only cannot, but should not, attempt to deliver any fatal blows - 19th February 2009
 * Can I have a word? It's thriftifarian - The better the neologism, the catchier the concept: will this genuinely new coinage be my shortcut to eternity? - 18th January 2009



Articles: 2008

 * Dear God, we could really use you - It does us good to try to see ourselves from your point of view, even though you don't really have one - Monday, 15th December 2008
 * The science of ignorance - Knowing how people behaved in one economic crash won't tell you how they'll behave in the next - Tuesday, 25th November 2008
 * Theo Hobson v Julian Baggini - Does it matter whether the majority of religious believers actually think the things atheists claim they do? - 3rd November 2008
 * Just good friends? - If you want to be happy, make sure you have at least 10 friends – or so we're told by the latest research - 26th October 2008
 * Misinforming the nation - An important debate about treating drug addicts is the latest victim of John Humphrys' abrasive style - 2nd October 2008
 * Cock and bull - For Christians to take offence at Terence Koh's statue of Jesus is bogus. But the licence to mock belief is not unlimited - 3rd September 2008
 * Everyday wisdom - Can serious intellectual theory provide the key to happiness and personal fulfilment for everyone? Julian Baggini examines a new series of practical philosophy books dedicated to 'the art of living' - 2nd September 2008

World Congress of Philosophy, 2008
 * Truth stranger than falsehood - At the World Congress of Philosophy everyone at least tries to pretend to take strange beliefs seriously - 31st August 2008
 * A class apart? - Philosophers from around the world are gathering in Seoul. But you don't have to be a professional to ask the big questions - 30th August 2008
 * Broadening British horizons - For some philosophers, attending the World Congress in Seoul is a huge privilege. So why does it leave British delegates cold? - 5th August 2008
 * Great minds don't think alike - Everyone listens respectfully but no one is interested in changing their opinion. So what exactly is the point of conferences? - 4th August 2008
 * I think, therefore iPod - Is an iPod part of your mind? The question is not as daft as it may sound - 3rd August 2008


 * We need to talk about lending - Lionel Shriver is right that debt has a moral dimension, but it's not a simple matter of 'saving good, borrowing bad' - 25th August 2008
 * Pinch me, I'm dreaming - Some cried foul over China's Olympic ceremony, but the line between reality and representation can be a blurry one - 12th August 2008
 * Consensus of hard and soft - On asylum, the tough brigade and the bleeding hearts in fact want many of the same things - 24th July 2008
 * Courage of the flip-flop - It's easy to be a conviction politician. Real bravery consists of changing tack according to the evidence - 5th July 2008
 * Foca matters, even if you're an atheist - Belief will always be with us. And if we want those churches that thrive to be inclusive we have to take an interest in the debate - 2nd July 2008
 * Good news for optimists - Try looking on the bright side of current events. You might feel a little silly, but you will be a lot happier - 7th June 2008
 * Speakers' corner - Should we stop people we consider evil from speaking in public? It can be tempting, but the answer must be no - 23rd May 2008
 * The chicken and the capitalist eggs - Has Easter become more commercialised because business wants our money, or because we want to buy more? - 22nd March 2008
 * The fear factor - Julian Baggini discovers the difference between sensible risk assessment and abject terror in Risk by Dan Gardner and Panicology by Simon Briscoe and Hugh Aldersey-Williams - 22nd March 2008



Articles: 2007

 * Giving up the goats - The fashionable presents of last Christmas seemed to mark a new altruism, but Scrooge is now back - 11th December 2007
 * Giving up on giving - Charitable donations decreased in the UK last year but what's the explanation? And why are married women more generous than single men? - 10th December 2008
 * For God's sake, start moaning - Our ability to complain is what drives humanity forward and separates us from the beasts - 6th December 2007
 * The wireless disconnect - A negative, paranoid attitude is displacing the optimistic ethos the internet once promised - 17th November 2008
 * What is celebration? - Should we celebrate World Philosophy Day today? And if so, what would be an appropriate way to do so? - 15th November 2007
 * The passion killers - Once again, scientists are pouring cold factual disdain on one of the warmer areas of human interaction: falling in love - 7th November 2007
 * Binary limitations - A predictable debate surrounds James Watson's recent comments. But how far could you go along with his argument before descending into racism? - 22nd October 2007
 * Xiaolu Guo on censorship, UK style - The Chinese author and film-maker has complained of 'commercial censorship' of her latest film. Is it just sour grapes? - 12th June 2008
 * Good heavens - some decent atheist drama - Non-believers these days seem so zealous and shrill. Fortunately, two plays deal the subject in a sympathetic and balanced way - 11th June 2008
 * The call of duty - As Tony Blair said in South Africa today, interventionist policies are often mocked. But our moral duty to help the developing world should be beyond dispute - 31st May 2007
 * A date with the Elvis of philosophy - The charismatic and eccentric king of thinking, Slavoj Zizek, is in town and I could watch him talk all day - 4th May 2007
 * Should festivals pay all speakers the same? - Margaret Drabble objects to Clinton's six-figure festival fee, but the literary marketplace is rarely on an even keel - 2nd May 2007
 *  A sense of community - What difference has 10 years of Blair made to the way we see each other? - 1st May 2007
 * Hegel, shmegel - John Reid may have stunned his parliamentary critics into submission by quoting the German philosopher, but was it any better than political Kant - 25th April 2007
 * This is what civilisations is really about - Relativism has made liberal openness appear weak, empty and repugnant compared with the clarity of dogma - 14th April 2007
 * The Dutch philosopher who's spending a week in a barrel - 5th April 2007
 * Career goals - Up to half a million refused asylum seekers are living in the UK, destitute with no legal means of support. We should let them work - 28th March 2007
 * Why can't I thank the people who helped my book? - Lengthy acknowledgments in books are there for the simple reason that lots of people helped them into being. In most cases, anyway... - 16th March 2007
 * The shadow of his former self - Jean Baudrillard, the French philosopher who told us that everything is mere simulacrum, is dead. But his ideas have a life of their own - 7th March 2007
 * Free doesn't mean unfair - Some dissenters claim the fair trade movement is about do-gooders up to no good. They are wrong - 5th March 2007
 * Kant or cant? - Philosophy is being taught in nurseries in Scotland - apparently, with impressive results. Let's hope they include a class on scepticism - 5th February 2007
 * How racist is Britain? - Events on Big Brother have ignited a fierce debate about Britain and racism. While researching his new book about the British psyche, philosopher Julian Baggini spent six months living in Rotherham, Yorkshire. Here, he explains why he doesn't believe most white Britons are racists - even though he heard racist language almost everywhere he went - 23rd January 2007



News & updates:

 * Julian Baggini's articles of faith are a nonstarter - Jonathan Chaplin: If debate is to be opened up between believers and atheists, it's back to the drawing board for these 'articles of 21st-century faith' - 25th November 2011



References:


Links:

 * 'Bad Moves' - archive of defunct column at Butterflies and Wheels.com
 * New Statesman articles
 * The Philosophers' Magazine
 * Wikipedia biog.