A swift scan of Postmodern Thought supplies opinions enough to swan your
way through any dinner party. Nietzsche rehabilitated? Of course. Haraway’s hot
pursuit of the cyborg side of life? No problem. A sound stretch on postmodern
approaches to science is flawed only by the absence of Social Text’s supreme
irritant, physicist Alan Sokal. Edited by Stuart Sim, published by Icon in its
Critical Dictionary series, £14.99, ISBN 187416665X.
More from Âé¶¹´«Ã½
Explore the latest news, articles and features

Life
Has the answer to life's origins been hiding in our cells all along?
Features

Health
Sperm have been made magnetic to allow IVF inside the body
News

Health
The social media ban is an experiment – here’s how it will be studied
News

Technology
Inside the start-up aiming for a giant leap in robot intelligence
News
Popular articles
Trending Âé¶¹´«Ã½ articles
1
Has the answer to life's origins been hiding in our cells all along?
2
Vaping after quitting smoking is linked to lung cancer
3
How to sparkle in conversation with strangers
4
We may have finally solved cosmology's chicken-or-the-egg problem
5
Inside the start-up aiming for a giant leap in robot intelligence
6
Q-Day could destroy bitcoin – and our retirement savings
7
The looming El Niño could be bad – but much worse is to come
8
Toy universe shows that time could be a quantum illusion
9
Fully autonomous drones have killed human soldiers for the first time
10
Quantum computer quickly mines cryptocurrency while using less energy