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Dr Simon Glendinning

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Triple M\'s Weekend HuddleTriple M's Weekend HuddleWEEKEND HUDDLE | Ally Barrass on Tom's 150th, Proud Dad & Freo CEO Simon Garlick, Optus Stadium Upgrade Their Menu-Tom Barrass is celebrating a milestone 150th today in the Derby, so we get some insight from his sister Ally, what Tom is like as a person, and who's going to be louder today between the Barrass' and Waterman's -Simon Garlick's daughter kicking goals for Claremont, and his Dockers have been kicking goals too! Not being complacent, but ready for a biiiig Derby win today -Mouth's watering at 9am, Optus Stadium's newest celeb chef (and western Bulldogs tragic) Shane Delia talks the new menu, and what to expect at Optus as Biggie Smallz Kebabs hits...2024-07-2755 minRush Hour WA with Embers & KatieRush Hour WA with Embers & KatieWEEKEND HUDDLE | Ally Barrass on Tom's 150th, Proud Dad & Freo CEO Simon Garlick, Optus Stadium Upgrade Their Menu-Tom Barrass is celebrating a milestone 150th today in the Derby, so we get some insight from his sister Ally, what Tom is like as a person, and who's going to be louder today between the Barrass' and Waterman's -Simon Garlick's daughter kicking goals for Claremont, and his Dockers have been kicking goals too! Not being complacent, but ready for a biiiig Derby win today -Mouth's watering at 9am, Optus Stadium's newest celeb chef (and western Bulldogs tragic) Shane Delia talks the new menu, and what to expect at Optus as Biggie Smallz Kebabs hits...2024-07-2755 minGM Chamber : Chamber Live PodcastGM Chamber : Chamber Live PodcastPartners in Focus: JM Glendinning Insurance BrokersMatthew Stuttard, Managing Director - North West at JM Glendinning, talks to Simon Cronin, Communications Manager at Greater Manchester Chamber of Commerce, about the insurance industry, his own career path and how Chamber members can benefit from a Silent Review of their insurance. 2023-04-0519 min#InspiringSchoolsPodcast#InspiringSchoolsPodcastSeason 1, Episode 32 ~ Matt GlendinningIn this episode I discuss timeless Quaker values, becoming a viral internet sensation, and keeping the spotlight on diversity.2021-05-0623 minCorvus Corax PodcastCorvus Corax PodcastCorvus Corax Podcast #23 - StrukturalismusIn dieser Episode führe ich in das große Themenfeld des Strukturalismus anhand dessen Begründers, Ferdinand de Saussure, ein und zeige mit Rückgriff auf Roland Barthes wie der Strukturalismus praktisch in der Analyse angewendet werden kann, indem ich #AllLivesMatter und damit zusammenhängend #BlackLivesMatter einer semiologischen Analyse unterziehe.   Die Episode zu Foucault: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CDzAi1cqHOQ Quellen: Simon Glendinning - The Idea of Continental Philosophy Niels Brügger & Orla Vigso - Strukturalismus Philosophize This! Episode #115 Electric Didact - Intro to Semiotics Playlist (https://www.youtube...2020-07-0424 minLSE PodcastsLSE PodcastsEurope in the Time of Coronavirus: responding to the political and economic challenges of COVID-19 [Audio]Speaker(s): Professor Chris Anderson, Professor Simon Glendinning, Professor Waltraud Schelkle | Periods of crisis can strip politics back to its most basic forms, and the political reality is laid bare: who, if anyone, has the power to tell other people what to do. While the European Union has a considerable stake in the crisis, particularly in the Eurozone, it is national states which have been the politically primary actors in calling for lockdowns across Europe. Real coercive power still lies, it seems, with Europe’s nations. What repercussions has this reassertion of national political power had on public opinion across Eu...2020-06-091h 24Changing LivesChanging LivesLaugh Time with FloraMany people are reinventing themselves under lockdown.  So, when an email popped into my inbox 10 days ago inviting me to 15 minutes of smiling, laughing and connecting to boost my immune system and lift my mood for the rest of day, I thought 'Yes...that's exactly what we ALL need' so I made a podcast about it.  Flora Wellesley Wesley is a dancer, choreographer, teacher and writer and sits on the council of Equity (choreographers' seat).  She is also a founder member of Nora, a contemporary dance ensemble who make highly original work constantly challenging boundaries.  In this podcast we hear...2020-05-0516 minLSE PodcastsLSE PodcastsThe Rise of Modern EuropeWe explore questions concerning events and developments which have been thought fundamental to the history of a distinctively "modern" European world - the decline of magic and religion and the rise of science and technology. Such events and developments are not only to be thought in relation to the opening-up and holding sway of that world but also in relation to its threatening crises and exhaustion. In 1919, in the wake of the first world war of European origin, the French poet and essayist Paul Valery reflected on a European world which seemed alive suddenly to its own end: "We later...2020-04-1457 minFreud Museum London: Psychoanalysis PodcastsFreud Museum London: Psychoanalysis PodcastsFreud Out LoudCivilization and its Discontents: A Marathon Reading The Centre for Creative and Critical Thought at the University of Sussex together with the Freud Museum London are pleased to announce a marathon reading of Sigmund Freud’s classic text, Civilization and its Discontents, at the Freud Museum on Sunday 14 June. Civilization and Its Discontents, written in 1929, remains the definitive text on human destructiveness. As news of wars around the globe, appalling brutality, religious conflict and sexual violence continue unabated, the relevance of this work is undeniable. ‘Men are not gentle creatures’ Freud wrote, ‘but ...creatures whose instinct [is] aggr...2020-03-204h 06LSE PodcastsLSE PodcastsThe Rise of Modern Europe [Audio]Speaker(s): Professor Simon Glendinning, Dr Darian Meacham, Professor Helen Parish | We explore questions concerning events and developments which have been thought fundamental to the history of a distinctively "modern" European world - the decline of magic and religion and the rise of science and technology. Such events and developments are not only to be thought in relation to the opening-up and holding sway of that world but also in relation to its threatening crises and exhaustion. In 1919, in the wake of the first world war of European origin, the French poet and essayist Paul Valery reflected on a European...2020-03-0457 minLSE PodcastsLSE PodcastsWhat Has European Integration Ever Done For Us? [Audio]Speaker(s): Professor Esra Özyürek, Rossella Pagliuchi-Lor, Professor Waltraud Schelkle | Is integration in Europe truly inclusive, or are some marginalised by the very process that is meant to bring Europeans together? Esra Özyürek (@esragozyurek) is Professor in European Anthropology and Chair in Contemporary Turkish Studies. She received her BA in Sociology and Political Science at Boğaziçi University, Istanbul and her MA and PhD in Anthropology at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Before joining the LSE she taught at the Anthropology Department of University of California, San Diego. Professor Özyürek is a political anthropologist who seeks to...2020-02-191h 32LSE PodcastsLSE PodcastsLSE Festival 2019 | The Haunting of Neo-liberalism [Audio]Speaker(s): Professor Robert Eaglestone, Professor Simon Glendinning, Professor Maja Zehfuss | Marx famously wrote of the spectre of communism haunting Europe in the nineteenth century, and the end of the Cold War might be considered to mark its exorcism. But has communism really been laid to rest? Despite the fall of the Berlin Wall, Derrida certainly thought not. He argued that in the ‘new world disorder’, ideologies like neo-liberalism were enmeshed with communism, haunted by the spectre of communisms yet to come. Is Derrida’s analysis still applicable to the post-9/11 world? And have new spectres appeared in our midst? Robert...2019-02-2854 minLSE PodcastsLSE PodcastsA Short History of Europe [Audio]Speaker(s): Sir Simon Jenkins | Simon Jenkins discusses his latest book, A Short History of Europe and the lessons to be learned from European history. Simon Jenkins is a Guardian columnist, author and BBC broadcaster. Simon Glendinning (@lonanglo) is Head of the European Institute and Professor in European Philosophy. The LSE European Institute (@LSEEI) is a centre for research and graduate teaching on the processes of integration and fragmentation within Europe. In the most recent national Research Excellence Framework (REF 2014) the Institute was ranked first for research in its sector.2019-02-121h 24Latest 300 | LSE Public lectures and events | Audio and pdfLatest 300 | LSE Public lectures and events | Audio and pdfEurope in a Map: people and borders in times of change [Audio]Speaker(s): Professor Simon Glendinning, Professor Elspeth Guild, Dr Natascha Zaun | What does a map tell us about Europe? What does it leave out? Prominent scholars in law, philosophy and political science reflect on how the age of cross-border flows from within and without Europe pose questions of how to map Europe and its peoples with renewed force. Simon Glendinning (@lonanglo) is Professor of European Philosophy at LSE’s European Institute and Director of the Forum for European Philosophy. Elspeth Guild is Jean Monnet Professor ad personam at Queen Mary, University of London and Radboud University Nijmegen. Natascha Zaun is As...2018-05-021h 25The BeaconThe BeaconBeacon TT 2018, Week 1: "Kant on Brexit and European identity" - Prof. Simon GlendinningDiscussing the philosophical narratives around the European Union, Millie Radovic interviews Professor Simon Glendinning of the London School of Economics. A graduate of Oxford, Prof. Glendinning has focused much of his research on European Philosophy which he teaches at the European Institute of the LSE. Discussing how some of these enduring concepts, particularly Immanuel Kant’s ideas, relate to the EU today, Millie and Prof. Glendinning talk about what Kant may have said about Brexit, populism, and the notion of a European identity.2018-04-2800 minLatest 300 | LSE Public lectures and events | Audio and pdfLatest 300 | LSE Public lectures and events | Audio and pdfAcademic Freedom and the New Populism [Audio]Speaker(s): Professor Michael Ignatieff | A new ‘populism’ is evident in a variety of countries. Experts and expertise are attacked as standing in the way of the popular will. Universities are under new pressures from populist politicians. How should these pressures be resisted? Born in Canada, educated at the University of Toronto and Harvard, Michael Ignatieff (@M_Ignatieff) is a university professor, writer and former politician. His major publications are The Needs of Strangers (1984), Scar Tissue (1992), Isaiah Berlin (1998), The Rights Revolution (2000), Human Rights as Politics and Idolatry (2001), The Lesser Evil: Political Ethics in an Age of Terror (2004), Fire and Ashes: Succ...2018-02-081h 29Philosophy For Our TimesPhilosophy For Our TimesA Tribal World | Julie Bindel, Brendan O'Neill, Yasmin Alibhai-Brown, Simon GlendinningLooking for a link we mentioned? It's here: https://linktr.ee/philosophyforourtimesWe see community and society as good. Yet communities are also fortresses of privilege and conformity, as migrants know only too well. Is the tribe, from the football team to the nation, to be feared and contained? Or is finding our place in a larger group the core of what it is to be human? Author of Exotic England Yasmin Alibhai-Brown, editor of Spiked Brendan O'Neill, journalist Julie Bindel and director of the Forum for European Philosophy, Simon Glendinning, seek the truth about t...2017-02-2846 minPhilosophy for our times | The Institute of Art and Ideas PodcastPhilosophy for our times | The Institute of Art and Ideas PodcastA Tribal World | Julie Bindel, Brendan O'Neill, Yasmin Alibhai-Brown, Simon GlendinningWe see community and society as good. Yet communities are also fortresses of privilege and conformity, as migrants know only too well. Is the tribe, from the football team to the nation, to be feared and contained? Or is finding our place in a larger group the core of what it is to be human? Author of Exotic England Yasmin Alibhai-Brown, editor of Spiked Brendan O'Neill, journalist Julie Bindel and director of the Forum for European Philosophy Simon Glendinning seek the truth about the tribe.2017-02-2846 minPhilosophy For Our TimesPhilosophy For Our TimesA Tribal World | Julie Bindel, Brendan O'Neill, Yasmin Alibhai-Brown, Simon GlendinningLooking for a link we mentioned? It's here: https://linktr.ee/philosophyforourtimesWe see community and society as good. Yet communities are also fortresses of privilege and conformity, as migrants know only too well. Is the tribe, from the football team to the nation, to be feared and contained? Or is finding our place in a larger group the core of what it is to be human? Author of Exotic England Yasmin Alibhai-Brown, editor of Spiked Brendan O'Neill, journalist Julie Bindel and director of the Forum for European Philosophy, Simon Glendinning, seek the truth about t...2017-02-2846 minSpring 2016 | Public lectures and events | VideoSpring 2016 | Public lectures and events | VideoLiterary Festival 2016: One School, Two VisionsContributor(s): Professor Michael Cox, Professor Chandran Kukathas | A discussion of the competing utopian ideas of prominent LSE figures set in the context of the history of 20th century thought and literature, as well as in contemporary debates about politics across Europe. Friedrich Hayek, Karl Popper and Michael Oakeshott versus Harold Laski, RH Tawney and the founders of the School: the Webbs. What impact did their alternative visions have on British politics? Why did this debate have global significance? And who 'won' in the end? Michael Cox is Director of LSE IDEAS. Chandran Kukathas is Head of the Department of...2016-02-251h 31Spring 2016 | Public lectures and events | Audio and pdfSpring 2016 | Public lectures and events | Audio and pdfLiterary Festival 2016: One School, Two VisionsContributor(s): Professor Michael Cox, Professor Chandran Kukathas | A discussion of the competing utopian ideas of prominent LSE figures set in the context of the history of 20th century thought and literature, as well as in contemporary debates about politics across Europe. Friedrich Hayek, Karl Popper and Michael Oakeshott versus Harold Laski, RH Tawney and the founders of the School: the Webbs. What impact did their alternative visions have on British politics? Why did this debate have global significance? And who 'won' in the end? Michael Cox is Director of LSE IDEAS. Chandran Kukathas is Head of the Department of...2016-02-251h 31Spring 2015 | Public lectures and events | VideoSpring 2015 | Public lectures and events | VideoPhilosophy, the Public and Other SubjectsContributor(s): Professor Simon Glendinning | 50 years ago Professor Glendinning gave an inaugural lecture arguing for the abolition of inaugural lectures. His failure allows his son to return to this theme. Simon Glendinning (@lonanglo) is Professor of European Philosophy at LSE. The Forum for European Philosophy (@LSEPhilosophy) is an educational charity which organises and runs a full and varied programme of philosophy and interdisciplinary events in the UK.2015-02-101h 29Spring 2015 | Public lectures and events | Audio and pdfSpring 2015 | Public lectures and events | Audio and pdfPhilosophy, the Public and Other SubjectsContributor(s): Professor Simon Glendinning | 50 years ago Professor Glendinning gave an inaugural lecture arguing for the abolition of inaugural lectures. His failure allows his son to return to this theme. Simon Glendinning (@lonanglo) is Professor of European Philosophy at LSE. The Forum for European Philosophy (@LSEPhilosophy) is an educational charity which organises and runs a full and varied programme of philosophy and interdisciplinary events in the UK.2015-02-101h 29In Our TimeIn Our TimePhenomenologyMelvyn Bragg and guests discuss phenomenology, a style of philosophy developed by the German thinker Edmund Husserl in the first decades of the 20th century. Husserl's initial insights underwent a radical transformation in the work of his student Martin Heidegger, and played a key role in the development of French philosophy at the hands of writers like Emmanuel Levinas, Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir and Maurice Merleau-Ponty.Phenomenology has been a remarkably adaptable approach to philosophy. It has given its proponents a platform to expose and critique the basic assumptions of past philosophy, and to talk about...2015-01-2246 minIn Our TimeIn Our TimePhenomenologyMelvyn Bragg and guests discuss phenomenology, a style of philosophy developed by the German thinker Edmund Husserl in the first decades of the 20th century. Husserl's initial insights underwent a radical transformation in the work of his student Martin Heidegger, and played a key role in the development of French philosophy at the hands of writers like Emmanuel Levinas, Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir and Maurice Merleau-Ponty. Phenomenology has been a remarkably adaptable approach to philosophy. It has given its proponents a platform to expose and critique the basic assumptions of past philosophy, and to talk about everything from the...2015-01-2246 minIn Our Time: PhilosophyIn Our Time: PhilosophyPhenomenologyMelvyn Bragg and guests discuss phenomenology, a style of philosophy developed by the German thinker Edmund Husserl in the first decades of the 20th century. Husserl's initial insights underwent a radical transformation in the work of his student Martin Heidegger, and played a key role in the development of French philosophy at the hands of writers like Emmanuel Levinas, Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir and Maurice Merleau-Ponty.Phenomenology has been a remarkably adaptable approach to philosophy. It has given its proponents a platform to expose and critique the basic assumptions of past philosophy, and to talk about...2015-01-2246 minRSDS RADIO SOCIETÀ DEI SOGNIRSDS RADIO SOCIETÀ DEI SOGNIPhenomenologyMelvyn Bragg and guests discuss phenomenology, a style of philosophy developed by the German thinker Edmund Husserl in the first decades of the 20th century. Husserl's initial insights underwent a radical transformation in the work of his student Martin Heidegger, and played a key role in the development of French philosophy at the hands of writers like Emmanuel Levinas, Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir and Maurice Merleau-Ponty.Phenomenology has been a remarkably adaptable approach to philosophy. It has given its proponents a platform to expose and critique the basic assumptions of past philosophy, and to talk about everything...2015-01-2248 minSummer 2013 | Public lectures and events | Audio and pdfSummer 2013 | Public lectures and events | Audio and pdfPhilosophy Stand Up – No JokeContributor(s): Dr Gordon Finlayson, Dr Simon Glendinning, Professor Laurence Goldstein, Professor MM McCabe, Dr Kristina Musholt, Dr Lea Ypi | Six philosophers have ten minutes each to pitch their arguments to a live audience. No deviation, hesitation or repetition! Gordon Finlayson is senior lecturer in philosophy at the University of Sussex. Simon Glendinning is reader in European philosophy at the European Institute, LSE, and director of the Forum for European Philosophy. Laurence Goldstein is professor of philosophy at the University of Kent. MM McCabe is professor of ancient philosophy at King’s College London. Kristina Musholt is LSE fellow in th...2013-06-251h 38Summer 2013 | Public lectures and events | VideoSummer 2013 | Public lectures and events | VideoPhilosophy Stand Up – No JokeContributor(s): Dr Gordon Finlayson, Dr Simon Glendinning, Professor Laurence Goldstein, Professor MM McCabe, Dr Kristina Musholt, Dr Lea Ypi | Six philosophers have ten minutes each to pitch their arguments to a live audience. No deviation, hesitation or repetition! Gordon Finlayson is senior lecturer in philosophy at the University of Sussex. Simon Glendinning is reader in European philosophy at the European Institute, LSE, and director of the Forum for European Philosophy. Laurence Goldstein is professor of philosophy at the University of Kent. MM McCabe is professor of ancient philosophy at King’s College London. Kristina Musholt is LSE fellow in th...2013-06-251h 38LSE Review of BooksLSE Review of BooksLSE Review of Books | LSE Literary Festival 2013 | Academic Inspiration: Favourite fiction IIIn this special LSE Literary Festival series, the LSE Review of Books blog asked prominent LSE professors to read from their favourite works of fiction, building on the Academic Inspiration series on their blog, LSEReviewofbooks.com. In the second part of this series, we hear from Director of LSE IDEAS, Professor Odd Arne Westad, reading from Hunger, Director of the Centre for Economic Performance, Professor John Van Reenen, reading from the non-fiction essay The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte, Research Fellow at POLIS Dr Fatima El Issawi, reading from the poem The Messenger With Her Hair Long to the Springs...2013-06-1015 minPhilosophy BitesPhilosophy BitesSimon Glendinning on Philosophy's Two CulturesMost philosophers today self-identify as within an Analytic or a Continental tradition. Where did these two cultures of philosophy come from? What role does Continental Philosophy play for Analytic Philosophy? Simon Glendinning investigates these questions in conversation with Nigel Warburton in this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast.2013-05-2716 minSpring 2013 | Public lectures and events | VideoSpring 2013 | Public lectures and events | VideoLiterary Festival 2013: New Media and the Future of LiteracyContributor(s): Miranda Glover, Charles Leadbeater, Sam Riviere | Some people have been struck by the aphoristic potential of Twitter. Others see developments in new media as bringing the era of the literature to an end. This panel will explore the way new media impacts on traditional literary and philosophical forms of writing and reading. One question is about the *threat* of new media to classical literacy: fragmentation and overload in new media leading to the withering away of traditional literary, philosophical and poetic forms. Another question is about the *chance* that new media offers for new forms of cultural literacy...2013-03-021h 27Spring 2013 | Public lectures and events | Audio and pdfSpring 2013 | Public lectures and events | Audio and pdfLiterary Festival 2013: New Media and the Future of LiteracyContributor(s): Miranda Glover, Charles Leadbeater, Sam Riviere | Some people have been struck by the aphoristic potential of Twitter. Others see developments in new media as bringing the era of the literature to an end. This panel will explore the way new media impacts on traditional literary and philosophical forms of writing and reading. One question is about the *threat* of new media to classical literacy: fragmentation and overload in new media leading to the withering away of traditional literary, philosophical and poetic forms. Another question is about the *chance* that new media offers for new forms of cultural literacy...2013-03-021h 27LSE Review of BooksLSE Review of BooksLSE Literary Festival - Academic Inspiration: Favourite works of fiction II [Audio]Contributor(s): Odd Arne Westad, John Van Reenen, Fatima El Issawi, Simon Glendinning, Dominic Muir | In this special LSE Literary Festival series, the LSE Review of Books blog asked prominent LSE professors to read from their favourite works of fiction, building on the Academic Inspiration series on their blog, LSEReviewofbooks.com. In the second part of this series, we hear from Director of LSE IDEAS, Professor Odd Arne Westad, reading from Hunger, Director of the Centre for Economic Performance, Professor John Van Reenen, reading from the non-fiction essay The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte, Research Fellow at POLIS Dr Fatima...2013-03-0115 minLSE Review of Books | AudioLSE Review of Books | AudioLSE Literary Festival - Academic Inspiration: Favourite works of fiction II [Audio]Contributor(s): Odd Arne Westad, John Van Reenen, Fatima El Issawi, Simon Glendinning, Dominic Muir | In this special LSE Literary Festival series, the LSE Review of Books blog asked prominent LSE professors to read from their favourite works of fiction, building on the Academic Inspiration series on their blog, LSEReviewofbooks.com. In the second part of this series, we hear from Director of LSE IDEAS, Professor Odd Arne Westad, reading from Hunger, Director of the Centre for Economic Performance, Professor John Van Reenen, reading from the non-fiction essay The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte, Research Fellow at POLIS Dr Fatima...2013-03-0115 minLSE European Institute | VideoLSE European Institute | VideoMSc European Studies: Ideas, Ideologies and Identities [Video]Contributor(s): Dr Simon Glendinning | Dr Simon Glendinning of the European Institute talks about the Master's programme in European Studies: Ideas, Ideologies and Identities (formerly European Studies: Ideas and Identities).2012-12-1003 minEuropean InstituteEuropean InstituteMSc European Studies: Ideas, Ideologies and Identities [Video]Contributor(s): Dr Simon Glendinning | Dr Simon Glendinning of the European Institute talks about the Master's programme in European Studies: Ideas, Ideologies and Identities (formerly European Studies: Ideas and Identities).2012-12-1003 minSummer 2012 | Public lectures and events | Audio and pdfSummer 2012 | Public lectures and events | Audio and pdfHow to Watch the OlympicsContributor(s): David Goldblatt | Seventeen days, 12,000 athletes, 29 sports, 302 gold medals: this event will be your personal trainer for the back stories and culture of the modern Olympics. David Goldblatt is a writer, broadcaster and teacher. He is author of The Ball is Round: a global history of football and, with Johnny Acton, How to Watch the Olympics. Simon Glendinning is a reader in European philosophy in the European Institute, LSE and director of the Forum for European Philosophy.2012-06-251h 29Summer 2012 | Public lectures and events | VideoSummer 2012 | Public lectures and events | VideoHow to Watch the OlympicsContributor(s): David Goldblatt | Seventeen days, 12,000 athletes, 29 sports, 302 gold medals: this event will be your personal trainer for the back stories and culture of the modern Olympics. David Goldblatt is a writer, broadcaster and teacher. He is author of The Ball is Round: a global history of football and, with Johnny Acton, How to Watch the Olympics. Simon Glendinning is a reader in European philosophy in the European Institute, LSE and director of the Forum for European Philosophy.2012-06-251h 29Summer 2012 | Public lectures and events | VideoSummer 2012 | Public lectures and events | VideoPhilosophy and European UnionContributor(s): Dr Simon Glendinning | A look at the role of philosophy in launching the idea of a European Union with reference to Kant and Nietzsche. Simon Glendinning is reader in European philosophy in the European Institute, LSE and director of the Forum for European Philosophy.2012-06-191h 26Summer 2012 | Public lectures and events | Audio and pdfSummer 2012 | Public lectures and events | Audio and pdfPhilosophy and European UnionContributor(s): Dr Simon Glendinning | A look at the role of philosophy in launching the idea of a European Union with reference to Kant and Nietzsche. Simon Glendinning is reader in European philosophy in the European Institute, LSE and director of the Forum for European Philosophy.2012-06-191h 26Autumn 2011 | Public lectures and events | VideoAutumn 2011 | Public lectures and events | VideoDerrida and (the) EnglishContributor(s): Professor Rachel Bowlby, Professor Robert Eaglestone, Dr Sarah Wood | Marking the publication of Simon Glendinning's new book Derrida: a very short introduction, this discussion will explore Derrida's impact on English, both as a university discipline and as a national language. Rachel Bowlby is Northcliffe Professor of English at the Department of English, UCL. Robert Eaglestone is professor of contemporary literature and thought at the Department of English, Royal Holloway, University of London. Sarah Wood is senior lecturer at the School of English, University of Kent.2011-11-031h 27Autumn 2011 | Public lectures and events | Audio and pdfAutumn 2011 | Public lectures and events | Audio and pdfDerrida and (the) EnglishContributor(s): Professor Rachel Bowlby, Professor Robert Eaglestone, Dr Sarah Wood | Marking the publication of Simon Glendinning's new book Derrida: a very short introduction, this discussion will explore Derrida's impact on English, both as a university discipline and as a national language. Rachel Bowlby is Northcliffe Professor of English at the Department of English, UCL. Robert Eaglestone is professor of contemporary literature and thought at the Department of English, Royal Holloway, University of London. Sarah Wood is senior lecturer at the School of English, University of Kent.2011-11-031h 27Department of Philosophy, Logic and Scientific MethodDepartment of Philosophy, Logic and Scientific MethodProfile: Simon Glendinning [Video]Contributor(s): Dr Simon Glendinning | A profile of Dr Simon Glendinning, Reader in European Philosophy, European Institute.2011-10-1007 minDepartment of Philosophy, Logic and Scientific Method | VideoDepartment of Philosophy, Logic and Scientific Method | VideoProfile: Simon Glendinning [Video]Contributor(s): Dr Simon Glendinning | A profile of Dr Simon Glendinning, Reader in European Philosophy, European Institute.2011-10-1007 minDepartment of Philosophy, Logic and Scientific MethodDepartment of Philosophy, Logic and Scientific MethodThe Forum for European Philosophy [Video]Contributor(s): Dr Simon Glendinning | Simon Glendinning explains the role of the Forum For European Philosophy within the LSE.2011-08-0402 minDepartment of Philosophy, Logic and Scientific Method | VideoDepartment of Philosophy, Logic and Scientific Method | VideoThe Forum for European Philosophy [Video]Contributor(s): Dr Simon Glendinning | Simon Glendinning explains the role of the Forum For European Philosophy within the LSE.2011-08-0402 minSummer 2011 | Public lectures and events | VideoSummer 2011 | Public lectures and events | VideoUnfathomable EventContributor(s): Dr Simon Glendinning, Dr Amber Jacobs, Professor Nicholas Royle | Marking the publication of Nicholas Royle's new novel Quilt, this event will attempt to explore the dimensions and ascertain the depths of the 'unfathomable'. Simon Glendinning is reader in European philosophy at the LSE European Institute and director of the Forum for European Philosophy. Amber Jacobs is lecturer in the Department of Psychosocial Studies at Birkbeck, University of London. Nicholas Royle is professor of English at the University of Sussex.2011-05-101h 31Summer 2011 | Public lectures and events | Audio and pdfSummer 2011 | Public lectures and events | Audio and pdfUnfathomable EventContributor(s): Dr Simon Glendinning, Dr Amber Jacobs, Professor Nicholas Royle | Marking the publication of Nicholas Royle's new novel Quilt, this event will attempt to explore the dimensions and ascertain the depths of the 'unfathomable'. Simon Glendinning is reader in European philosophy at the LSE European Institute and director of the Forum for European Philosophy. Amber Jacobs is lecturer in the Department of Psychosocial Studies at Birkbeck, University of London. Nicholas Royle is professor of English at the University of Sussex.2011-05-101h 31Summer 2011 | Public lectures and events | Audio and pdfSummer 2011 | Public lectures and events | Audio and pdfUnfathomable EventContributor(s): Dr Simon Glendinning, Dr Amber Jacobs, Professor Nicholas Royle | Marking the publication of Nicholas Royle's new novel Quilt, this event will attempt to explore the dimensions and ascertain the depths of the 'unfathomable'. Simon Glendinning is reader in European philosophy at the LSE European Institute and director of the Forum for European Philosophy. Amber Jacobs is lecturer in the Department of Psychosocial Studies at Birkbeck, University of London. Nicholas Royle is professor of English at the University of Sussex.2011-05-101h 31Summer 2011 | Public lectures and events | VideoSummer 2011 | Public lectures and events | VideoUnfathomable EventContributor(s): Dr Simon Glendinning, Dr Amber Jacobs, Professor Nicholas Royle | Marking the publication of Nicholas Royle's new novel Quilt, this event will attempt to explore the dimensions and ascertain the depths of the 'unfathomable'. Simon Glendinning is reader in European philosophy at the LSE European Institute and director of the Forum for European Philosophy. Amber Jacobs is lecturer in the Department of Psychosocial Studies at Birkbeck, University of London. Nicholas Royle is professor of English at the University of Sussex.2011-05-101h 31Autumn 2010 | Public lectures and events | Audio and pdfAutumn 2010 | Public lectures and events | Audio and pdfResearch in the Humanities: The Very IdeaContributor(s): Dr Simon Glendinning | Simon Glendinning is reader in European philosophy at the European Institute, LSE, and director of the Forum for European Philosophy.2010-11-231h 30Autumn 2010 | Public lectures and events | VideoAutumn 2010 | Public lectures and events | VideoResearch in the Humanities: The Very IdeaContributor(s): Dr Simon Glendinning | Simon Glendinning is reader in European philosophy at the European Institute, LSE, and director of the Forum for European Philosophy.2010-11-231h 30Spring 2010 | Public lectures and events | VideoSpring 2010 | Public lectures and events | VideoLSE Literary Festival - Animating a Myth for our times: The Lawsuit of the Animals against HumanityContributor(s): Zeina Frangie-Eyres, Dr Simon Glendinning, Professor Marina Warner, Dr Mark Wright | An event that combines a story-telling of the 1000-year-old eco-fable The Animals' Lawsuit against Humanity with a panel discussion on the story's historical and literary origins; current biodiversity in the midst of species extinction; the philosophical relationship between humans; and animals and the need for a myth for our times.2010-02-131h 21Spring 2010 | Public lectures and events | Audio and pdfSpring 2010 | Public lectures and events | Audio and pdfLSE Literary Festival - Animating a Myth for our times: The Lawsuit of the Animals against HumanityContributor(s): Zeina Frangie-Eyres, Dr Simon Glendinning, Professor Marina Warner, Dr Mark Wright | An event that combines a story-telling of the 1000-year-old eco-fable The Animals' Lawsuit against Humanity with a panel discussion on the story's historical and literary origins; current biodiversity in the midst of species extinction; the philosophical relationship between humans; and animals and the need for a myth for our times.2010-02-131h 21Spring 2010 | Public lectures and events | VideoSpring 2010 | Public lectures and events | VideoModernity and the Meaning of LifeContributor(s): Dr Simon Glendinning, Dr Edward Skidelsky | This dialogue will examine the resources left to us to find meaning in our modern day lives. Simon Glendinning is a reader in European philosophy at the European Institute, LSE, and director of the Forum for European Philosophy. Edward Skidelsky is a lecturer in the Department of Sociology at the University of Exeter.2010-01-181h 30Spring 2010 | Public lectures and events | Audio and pdfSpring 2010 | Public lectures and events | Audio and pdfModernity and the Meaning of LifeContributor(s): Dr Simon Glendinning, Dr Edward Skidelsky | This dialogue will examine the resources left to us to find meaning in our modern day lives. Simon Glendinning is a reader in European philosophy at the European Institute, LSE, and director of the Forum for European Philosophy. Edward Skidelsky is a lecturer in the Department of Sociology at the University of Exeter.2010-01-181h 30