LSE - Small Logo
LSE - Small Logo

 

‘Hell is other people’, noted Jean Paul Sartre—rather rudely, it might seem to an outside observer. But is the pursuit of philosophical understanding an inherently solitary pursuit by its nature? From Augustine to Kant, philosophy has cherished the image of the deep thinker immersed in solitudinous reflection. But how does solitude differ from loneliness? And in an age of increasing social atomization, can we think about our lonely condition in ways that might allow us to overcome it? We explore the idea of loneliness as an aesthetic and socio-political phenomena, as well as an existential question.

 

Speakers
John Burnside
Professor in Creative Writing, St Andrews University
Poet and novelist, winner of both the Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize and the Whitbread Poetry Award

Barbara Taylor
Professor of Humanities, Queen Mary, University of London

James Warren
Professor of Ancient Philosophy, University of Cambridge

 

Chair
Shahidha Bari
Fellow, The Forum
Senior Lecturer in Romanticism, Queen Mary, University of London

Quick accessibility map here. Full access information for the New Academic Building in general, and the Sheik Zayed Theatre in particular, available here.

 

All welcome  |  Free to attend  |  First come, first served at the door

Coming up at the Forum


7 December 2021

Moritz Schlick

Moritz Schlick

With David Edmonds, Maria Galavotti, and Cheryl Misak

Calendar »

Subscribe to the podcast

Join the mailing list

Podcast Archive

The Forum on Social Media

BPS/SWIP Good Practice Scheme

The Forum for Philosophy subscribes to the British Philosophical Association/Society for Women in Philosophy (UK) Good Practice Scheme