A Great Lover…
His hobby was to fly aeroplanes. He loved his wife a lot, but also maintained a distance with her. He was one of the greatest French authors of the 20th Century!
Koushik Das (born on May 16, 1976 in Kolkata) is a career journalist. Based in the Indian capital of New Delhi, Koushik writes mainly about foreign policies and current geopolitical issues, and rarely about other topics. His own political ideas are highly influenced by Antonio Gramsci, Louis Althusser, Michel Foucault, Michael Oakeshott and others. English philosopher and political theorist Oakeshott (Dec 11, 1901-Dec 19, 1990) says that “in political activity, men sail a boundless and bottomless sea. There is neither harbour for shelter nor floor for anchorage, neither starting-place, nor appointed destination. But we have to keep afloat”. (Rationalism in Politics, 1962) As a student of Political Science, Koushik loves to share his views on issues, which have great impacts on his thought process (and also on India, South Asia and of course on the global community), with his readers through his website – Boundless Ocean of Politics. By doing so, he tries to keep himself afloat. You will find some of his articles in https://inserbia.info/today/ (https://inserbia.info/today/author/kou_das13_i/), as he has been trying to assess the global geopolitics since 2003. You can also mail him at kousdas@gmail.com
His hobby was to fly aeroplanes. He loved his wife a lot, but also maintained a distance with her. He was one of the greatest French authors of the 20th Century!
Song Xinning, the Director of the Confucius Institute at Vrije University in Brussels, has recently been expelled and banned from all 26 Schengen nations in Europe for eight years, on […]
Mind is a beautiful servant, but a dangerous master...
Friedrich August von Hayek (May 8, 1899 – March 23, 1992), the Austrian-British Economist and Philosopher best known for his defence of Classical Liberalism, had once said that History is […]
“When the power of love overcomes the love of power the world will know peace.”
I walk in a space of gratitude...
A team of researchers has claimed that all modern humans might have descended from people in what is now Botswana. According to a research paper published in The Nature, the […]
“I just don't want to feel so bad anymore…”
At least 60 people were killed in Baghdad last week. This time, it was not a terror attack, but clashes between anti-Government protesters and the Police that claimed those innocent […]
US President Donald Trump announced on October 27 that Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the leader of the violent Jihadist group Islamic State (IS), had died during an overnight raid led by the US forces in Syria, along with the news of his likely successor with nom de guerre Abu Hassan al-Muhajir getting killed by the American airstrike, while reportedly getting smuggled across Northern Syria. The question now arises naturally: Will these deaths make the world a safer place?