Laurie Taylor

Laurie Taylor

Laurie Taylor is president of the Rationalist Association and a commissioning editor of New Humanist magazine. He presents Thinking Allowed on BBC Radio 4 and has made numerous television and radio programmes, including the interview series In Confidence for Sky. He was a Professor of Sociology at the University of York and the author of books on criminiology and parenthood. He has more honorary degrees than you could shake a very large stick at.

Articles by Laurie Taylor

Laurie Taylor cartoon by Martin Rowson

My final resting place

As an atheist, Laurie Taylor will not be joining the angels. But will a loophole grant him entrance to that mysterious place, Limbo?

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The art of the blag

Laurie Taylor's entry to Birkbeck University required the deployment of a key skill for getting by in life: the blag.

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Remember me?

Calling up long-lost friends, especially during a pandemic, is a pastime with its perils for Laurie Taylor.

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Saints alive!

As a schoolboy, Laurie Taylor was enjoined to pray for a miracle. Unfortunately, his "success" was mired by discovering David Hume.

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Inside jokes

What does a dyslexic, agnostic, insomniac do at night? Laurie Taylor has been collecting jokes since he was seven years old. Now he's stuck in the house, they're all coming out.

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Ways of seeing John Berger

Marxist, novelist, art historian, farmer, philosopher, artist, object of reverance, provocateur: Laurie Taylor looks at the 85-year-old polymath from every angle

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Small illustration for article

Suffer the little children

The Catholic Church not only allowed priests to destroy hundreds of young lives, it blamed the victims and covered up the crimes for decades. For Laurie Taylor it’s personal

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Jonathan Miller

Only joking

Introducing our recent public debate on humour at London’s Royal Society of Arts, Laurie Taylor discovered that laughter can be a serious business

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Secret openings

You don't have to be religious to experience inexplicable moments of epiphany, argues Laurie Taylor

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Blind faith

Does it derive from delusion or derangement, irrationality or something deeper? Laurie Taylor explores the meaning of belief

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Not waving, but dying

"Down a bit lower. That's it. Now, look at the camera. And now look puzzled. That doesn't look like 'puzzled'. Really puzzled. Hold it. Now, can you get even lower?"

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