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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260605T001937Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20140605T050000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20140605T130000
SUMMARY:Extremes and Extremism
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TZID:Europe/London
LOCATION:University of Sussex\, Brighton\, United Kingdom
DESCRIPTION:<p>Studies in Social and Political Thought Annual Conference June 5th 2014.<br> University of Sussex.<br> <br> Theme: Extremes and Extremism<br> <br> Keynote Speaker: Prof. Andrew Bowie<br> <br> <br> Extremes and Extremism of many different forms have become central questions<br> of social and political thought in the past few years. Often a way to<br> discredit an opponent or social movement\, to be in the extreme has carried<br> with it many loaded connotations. The rise of both the far right and far<br> left have challenged the liberal consensus of political pragmatism. Taken<br> together with the &lsquo\;war on terror&rsquo\; and the perceived necessity of austerity\,<br> governments have sought ever more extreme measures. The recent NSA and GCHQ<br> revelations demonstrate the lengths governments are willing to go in the<br> name of national security. Austerity legislation in many countries has been<br> seen as an attack on the most vulnerable. The reactions to these measures\,<br> in the wake of the financial crisis\, have included mass protest\, political<br> gains for parties on the margins and a huge increase in state sponsored<br> violence.<br> <br> To say that we live in times of extremity appears to be a way of shifting<br> meaning and understanding into pre-existing intellectual discourse. To for<br> example label the Assad regime in Syria as extreme does not aid greater<br> understanding but perhaps merely pushes discourse into ideology. To counter<br> terrorist organisations by describing them as forms of extremism does not<br> illuminate but rather makes opaque the reasons behind such organisations.<br> <br> Extremes and extremism cannot only be seen in terms of the obviously<br> political\; philosophically the idea of the extreme is well documented and<br> can be seen in writes as diverse as the Stoics\, Nietzsche and Marxism. It<br> could also be argued that economic theories such as Hayek could be<br> understood in extreme terms.</p>\n<p>http://www.sussex.ac.uk/cspt/index.php and </p>
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