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DTSTAMP:20260605T173939Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20220128T184500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20220128T201500
SUMMARY:Thomas Hobbes: Conscience and the Commonwealth
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TZID:Europe/London
LOCATION:Malmesbury\, United Kingdom
DESCRIPTION:<p><strong>Thomas Hobbes: Conscience and the Commonwealth</strong><br><br>For Hobbes\, the conscience and opinions of individuals were some of the most dangerous phenomena in the commonwealth\; they were among the chief causes of its dissolution and demise.&nbsp\; Writing in the midst of wars driven\, at least in part\, by disagreement over religious and political ideas\, Hobbes was acutely aware of the problems posed by intellectual as well as military conflict.&nbsp\; In this talk\, I will explore Hobbes's response to this situation\, showing how he sought to create consensus and neutralise the power of individual conscience.&nbsp\; Hobbes's solution was radical and innovative\, generating controversy among his contemporaries.&nbsp\; And his ideas are still debated\, especially by those keen to find in Hobbes' writing the intellectual resources to deal with present day questions of religious liberty and state power.<br><br><strong>Professor Sarah Mortimer</strong> is Associate Professor of Early Modern History at Oxford and a tutor at Christ Church.&nbsp\; She has written articles on Hobbes and Grotius\, and her most recent work is&nbsp\;Reformation\, Resistance\, and Reason of State (1517-1625): the Oxford History of Political Thought volume 6&nbsp\;(Oxford\, 2021).</p>\n<p>This is the third of four talks from the Thomas Hobbes of Malmesbury Society</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Rhiannon Parry;CN="Alan Marshall, FRHistS":
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