
Moral Maze What is education for?
18 snips
Apr 9, 2026 Guest
Chris Bonello
Guest
Jess Wade

Guest
Julian Baggini
Guest
Maxwell Marlow

Guest
Giles Fraser
Guest
Carmody Grey

Guest
Tim Stanley
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Mona Siddiqui
Chris Bonello, former teacher and autism campaigner, speaks on how schools can marginalise neurodivergent students. Jess Wade, Imperial professor and diversity campaigner, examines barriers to STEM for women and minorities. Julian Baggini, philosopher, questions excessive quantification of education. Maxwell Marlow, policy director, argues for market-focused allocation. Panelists debate intrinsic cultural values versus economic utility.
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Education Shifted From Flourishing To Return On Investment
- Education is being reframed from cultivating citizens and human flourishing to producing economic returns and employable graduates.
- Michael Buerk sets the episode by noting 4,000 humanities courses closed and students treated as consumers, shifting value to measurable salary outcomes.
The Semicolon PhD Symbol Of Knowledge For Its Own Sake
- Giles Fraser recalls sitting next to a PhD on the history of the semicolon to exemplify curiosity-driven scholarship.
- He defends knowledge for its own sake and worries universities become glorified job centres.
Apply Market Signals To Balance Course Supply
- Use market signals and price mechanisms to allocate education funding so society produces needed STEM graduates alongside humanities students.
- Maxwell Marlow argues for treating some tertiary education as training and increasing philanthropy and marketisation to fund intrinsic courses.
