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Editorial

A textbook problem

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Letters & opinions
Letters & opinions
Joanna Bourke (“Life after life,” April) noted the
How parliament can stop Brexit
The people may have spoken, but Westminster will decide
Let them eat cake
What the royal wedding cake tells us about London’s hipster takeover
America’s age of rage
By making so many voters angry, Trump will succeed where Clinton failed—and get Democrats to vote
OU shouldn’t
Cuts are now biting on the one institution that has done the most for social mobility
Act your age
We shouldn’t be ashamed to call ourselves “middle aged” or “old”
Siblings at war
The children of disgraced former president Alberto Fujimori are battling each other to replace him
Doing God
Faith remains a stark dividing line in politics
Is it time to delete your Facebook account?
YES It was uncomplicated fun once, wasn’t it? A lovely
Cheating in sport
Extracts from memoirs and diaries, chosen by Ian Irvine
Main Features
CREATIVE DESTRUCTION
It’s time to rip up the old textbook, and build a new economics argues Howard Reed
TEN BIG BRAINS ON THE MOST PRESSING LESSON ECONOMICS HAS TO LEARN NEXT
TEN BIG BRAINS ON THE MOST PRESSING LESSON ECONOMICS
CLASSICAL MUSES: WHAT THE PAST MASTERS WOULD BE SAYING TODAY
CLASSICAL MUSES: WHAT THE PAST MASTERS WOULD BE SAYING
NEW THINKING AT THE OLD LADY
The Bank of England’s mild-mannered Chief Economist, Andy Haldane, is bringing in some most unlikely advisers—including potters, poets and percussionists
Brexit will erase your rights
The European Union Withdrawal Bill seeks to do something
BEST OF ENEMIES
Relations between North and South Korea are thawing, but young southerners may ensure Pyongyang is kept out in the cold
The coming abortion battle
Britain’s laws are not as liberal as you think. Now, five decades on from the landmark Abortion Act, campaigners believe it’s time to push for full decriminalization
Archbishop of Brexit
Can Jacob Rees-Mogg become Britain’s 55th prime minister—and Eton’s 20th? Sonia Purnell investigates
Inner-space travel
After more than 100 trips, I’ve learnt how psychedelic drugs can help us deal with the darker side of life. As long as you can cope with corpses playing jazz with human bones
Art & books
Crumbling monument
Thomas Jefferson was a slave-holder who urged permanent revolution. He doesn’t deserve to be called an American hero, argues Ferdinand Mount
In the gentrified ghetto
Frictionless cities are the bane of modern living, says Anna Minton
Glamorous butterfly
Whether he was conducting, composing or communicating, Leonard Bernstein was a stylish innovator, says Alexandra Coghlan
Serious nonsense
Edward Lear’s wild poetry is suffused with melancholy, finds Thomas Marks
Books in brief
Another year, another sonorously-titled masterwork
Recommends
In the planning for many years, this is a significant
Life
Leith on language
I was in Glasgow the other day, to talk about my book
Life of the mind
A walk in the rain with a 65-year-old relative. Climbing
Matters of taste
Paul Bocuse died in January at the age of 91 above
Wine
Is wine a natural product? For centuries, humans have
DIY investor
If you get sufficiently interested in investment to
Policy report: Trade
Brexit: we won’t get everything we seek
The government remains confident that it can strike
You can’t escape geography
Brexit has pushed trade policy to the forefront of
The big Brexit reveal
One of the more startling sights of the Brexit debate
Things to do this month
Events
The Prospect Book Club meets every third Monday of
Endgames
The generalist by Didymus
1 The Hebrew name for God written with four consonants
Enigmas & puzzles
Professor Neuron was tormenting his nephew Trifle with
Brief Encounter
Brief encounter
I have never thought about this before. It is fascinating