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Forum for Philosophy

November 18th, 2008

The Individual Society: does the West have the balance right?

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Estimated reading time: 5 minutes

Forum for Philosophy

November 18th, 2008

The Individual Society: does the West have the balance right?

0 comments

Estimated reading time: 5 minutes

John Cottingham / David Willetts / Jean-Christophe Peaucelle

6.30-8pm | Tuesday 18 November 2008
Hong Kong Theatre, Clement House

Speakers
John Cottingham, Professor of Philosophy at the University of Reading
David Willetts MP, Shadow Secretary of State for Innovation, Universities and Skills and has been the MP for Havant since 1992
Jean-Christophe Peaucelle, Head of European affairs at the new French Ministry of Immigration, Integration, National Identity and Co-Development, as such one of the main negotiators of the European Pact on Migration.

Chair
Daniel Johnson, editor of Standpoint

To many people, the contemporary emphasis on the individual in politics is responsible for loosening the web of duties and relationships that is crucial to civil life and flourishing communities. Of course, the emphasis is typically intended as an ontological as much as a moral one. The reference to the individual aims to give politics a secure foundation in reality, and, so the argument goes, the real foundations of human forms of life are individuals and their families, not societies.

In the forms of life characteristic of the West today have we got the balance between the individual and society right? Why do we find it so hard to agree the boundaries of personal freedom and collective responsibility? And is the West indeed guilty of privileging the individual at the expense of society? In this panel discussion the Forum for European Philosophy is collaborating with the new culture and politics magazine Standpoint to explore a fundamental question about the Western image of the individual and its implications for our lives with others.

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