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David Armitage - The Dark Side of Enlightened Cosmopolitanism: Civilisation and Civil War

Lectures in Intellectual History

Release Date: 03/14/2018

Christopher de Bellaigue - Christopher de Bellaigue - "Suleyman the Magnificent and the 16th-century race for empire"

Lectures in Intellectual History

This lecture was delivered at the University of St Andrews on 31 January 2024. 

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Ariane Fichtl - “Overcoming the biopolitical dynamic of enslavement to achieve Immediate Emancipation” show art Ariane Fichtl - “Overcoming the biopolitical dynamic of enslavement to achieve Immediate Emancipation”

Lectures in Intellectual History

This lecture was delivered at the University of St Andrews on 24 January 2024. 

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Tim Stuart-Buttle - Tim Stuart-Buttle - "Behind the Curtain: Hobbes and the politics of recognition"

Lectures in Intellectual History

This lecture was delivered at the University of St Andrews on 17 January 2024. 

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Richard Whatmore - Richard Whatmore - "The End of Enlightenment (book launch)"

Lectures in Intellectual History

This talk was given at Toppings in St Andrews on December 7, 2023. 

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Jesse Norman - Jesse Norman - "Ambition, revenge, truth, fiction - The Winding Stair"

Lectures in Intellectual History

The barely known story of the 30-year rivalry between Francis Bacon and Edward Coke is a fascinating case study in late-Elizabethan-Jacobean court politics. But it can also be a means by which to explore the limits of historical truth, and the uses of fiction. Jesse Norman is a Visiting Research Fellow at St Andrews, a Fellow of All Souls and a Member of Parliament (UK).  This lecture was given on the 17th of November 2023 at the University of St Andrews. 

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Vassilios Paipais - Vassilios Paipais - "Between Pacifism and Just War: Oikonomia and Eastern Orthodox Political Theology"

Lectures in Intellectual History

This lecture was given at the University of St Andrews on 15 November 2023. 

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Adam Sisman - Adam Sisman - "The Perils of Biography"

Lectures in Intellectual History

Adam Sisman in conversation with Richard Whatmore. Recorded on 8 November 2023. 

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Alan Kahan - Alan Kahan - "Three Pillars and Four Fears: A History of Liberalisms

Lectures in Intellectual History

This lecture was delivered on 11 October 2023 at the University of St Andrews. 

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James Harris - “Hobbes and Rousseau on ‘the act by which a people is a people’” show art James Harris - “Hobbes and Rousseau on ‘the act by which a people is a people’”

Lectures in Intellectual History

This lecture was delivered on 5 April 2023 at the University of St Andrews. 

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Brian Young - Brian Young - "Utilitarianism and the universities in Victorian England: the brothers Grote in nineteenth-century thought"

Lectures in Intellectual History

This lecture was delivered at the University of St andrews on March 15, 2023. 

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Modern cosmopolitanism traces its routes back to the Enlightenment. In its individual and collectivist strains, it has become programatically pacifist by virtue of many of its central defining features. Under such a regime of cosmopolitanism, one might imagine the Kantian goal of perpetual peace. Kant’s conception of cosmopolitanism was progressive and developmental, but also fundamentally conflicted. Its motor was that famous unsocial sociability, which compelled humans to seek peace even as they experienced destructive forms of competition. The connection between cosmopolitanism on one hand and peace on the other, therefore, is neither essential or natural; it is contingent and accidental despite the strong connection between modern contemporary cosmopolitanism and peace. Only recently have scholars acknowledged that cosmopolitanism might indeed have something to say about war, or that war might shed light on its limits and possibilities. Is contemporary cosmopolitanism theoretically robust enough to face the challenges of unconventional warfare in the 21st century? And if cosmopolitanism defines transnational borders as morally arbitrary, what can it tell us about conflicts that occur within such borders, that is to say about civil war? In this lecture, David Armitage pursues these and other important questions.