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Tamas Pataki

Tamas Pataki

Tamas Pataki is honorary senior fellow at the University of Melbourne (School of Historical and Philosophical Studies) and honorary fellow of Deakin University. He studied philosophy at the University of Melbourne and psychoanalysis at University College, London University. He has been a lecturer in philosophy at RMIT, the University of Tasmania, and the University of Melbourne. He co-edited, with Michael Levine, Racism in Mind (2004) and is the author of Against Religion (2007), numerous journal articles and book chapters on the philosophy of mind, and many popular pieces and reviews.

Tamas Pataki reviews 'Frontiers of Justice: Disability, nationality, species membership' by Martha C. Nussbaum

May 2007, no. 291 01 May 2007
Tamas Pataki reviews 'Frontiers of Justice: Disability, nationality, species membership' by Martha C. Nussbaum
The concept of justice, like all the fundamental philosophical concepts – meaning, truth and so on – is perplexing. Justice has something to do with the distribution of ‘goods’ or benefits and ‘bads’ or burdens. Retributive justice aims to inflict a just burden – punishment – on the delinquent, or to take something away (‘make the offender pay’). Corrective justice, in the form ... (read more)

Tamas Pataki reviews 'Beyond Belief: Skepticism, science and the paranormal' by Martin Bridgstock

April 2010, no 320 01 April 2010
Tamas Pataki reviews 'Beyond Belief:  Skepticism, science and the paranormal' by Martin Bridgstock
Scepticism in the ordinary understanding is a doubting disposition, a healthy questioning mistrustfulness of extravagant or suspect claims to knowledge. Philosophical scepticism incorporates the attitude, but is more comprehensive in its objects. A philosophical sceptic may doubt the possibility of all knowledge, as the ancient Pyrrhonists did, or question our ability to obtain specific but fundam ... (read more)

Tamas Pataki reviews 'Writings on an Ethical Life' by Peter Singer

May 2001, no. 230 01 May 2001
Tamas Pataki reviews 'Writings on an Ethical Life' by Peter Singer
Peter Singer occupies a distinguished position at the Centre for Human Values at Princeton University and is frequently described as the most influential of living philosophers. The front cover of this new selection of his writings couples him with Bertrand Russell and, in some respects, the comparison is sensible. Both philosophers have written clearly and simply on issues that are of interest no ... (read more)

Tamas Pataki reviews 'Messy Morality: The Challenge of Politics' by C.A.J. Coady

June 2009, no. 312 01 June 2009
Tamas Pataki reviews 'Messy Morality: The Challenge of Politics' by C.A.J. Coady
Apologists for torture often defend their walk on the dark side by invoking putative imperatives, such as protecting their communities from great evils. The paradigm is the ‘ticking bomb’ situation, where pre-empting catastrophe hangs on extracting information from uncooperative terrorists. The merging of combatants and innocents in modern warfare has highlighted the terrible dilemmas of ‘co ... (read more)

Tamas Pataki reviews 'My Israel Question' by Antony Loewenstein

October 2006, no. 285 01 October 2006
Tamas Pataki reviews 'My Israel Question' by Antony Loewenstein
When I started reading My Israel Question, the Israel Defence Force Chief of Staff had just vowed to ‘turn back the clock in Lebanon by twenty years’; and the demolition was underway. Beirut’s airport, major roads, bridges, power generation facilities and other civilian infrastructure had been bombed, and villages and densely populated suburbs were being reduced to rubble. In a report some w ... (read more)

'Against Religion' by Tamas Pataki

February 2006, no. 278 01 February 2006
'Against Religion' by Tamas Pataki
Shortly before the federal elections of October 2004, Treasurer Peter Costello delivered an address entitled ‘The Moral Decay of Australia’ to 16,000 members of the Assemblies of God at the Sydney Hillsong Church. For his main theme, Costello invoked ‘the Judeo-Christian-Western tradition’, the core of which, according to him, was the Ten Commandments. He lamented that few people could rec ... (read more)

Tamas Pataki reviews 'The Joy of Secularism: 11 Essays for How We Live Now' edited by George Levine

December 2011–January 2012, no. 337 24 November 2011
The war of religion currently being fought with fusillades of paperbacks and feuilletons has taken a new turn. It started with an ambuscade by the ‘new’ atheists – also known as ‘militant’ or ‘Darwinian’ atheists – Richard Dawkins, Sam Harris, and the ubiquitous Christopher Hitchens (may he remain so). They were quickly joined by many sympathisers sharing the belief that peace, sec ... (read more)