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Conservatism and Liberalism

  • Professor Andy Hamilton, Durham University
  • Tuesday 29th November, 4 pm - 5.30 pm, ARC/014
  • Production team: tbc

Interview

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Talk synopsis

The received view of philosophical conservatism – leading exponent Burke – regards it as an "approach to human affairs which mistrusts both a priori reasoning and revolution, preferring to put its trust in experience and in the gradual improvement of tried and tested arrangements".[1]  It treats revolutionary Jacobinism as conservatism's polar opposite and historic contender; conservatives reject its political rationalism, which attempts to reconstruct society from abstract principles or general blueprint, without reference to tradition.  Thus far the received view is correct.  However, in the work of Oakeshott, MacIntyre, the received work makes the unwarranted assumption that political rationalism is also integral to liberalism and social democracy – an assumption resting on Max Weber's widely influential view of the Enlightenment rejection of tradition.  This paper argues that liberalism and Burkean conservatism lie on a continuum, and that they are analogous in having rationalist and pragmatic forms, the latter represented by Mill.  A synthesis of liberal, socialist and conservative values is possible. 

Professor Andy Hamilton

Andy Hamilton teaches Philosophy at Durham University, specialising in aesthetics, philosophy of mind, political philosophy and history of 19th and 20th century philosophy, especially Wittgenstein.  His monographs are Aesthetics and Music (Continuum, 2007), The Self in Question: Memory, the Body and Self-Consciousness (Palgrave, 2013), and Routledge Philosophy Guidebook to Wittgenstein and On Certainty (2014).  He also teaches aesthetics and history of jazz at Durham, and published Lee Konitz: Conversations on the Improviser's Art (University of Michigan Press, 2007). 

 Directions and Parking

Please see the University campus map for the location of ARC/014 which is in the Alcuin Research Resource Centre. The building is opposite the Alcuin Teaching Block (Seebohm Rowntree Building) reception. The room is on the ground floor at the far end from the main entrance, around the corner, behind the lift. The closet public car park is Campus North car park. Parking costs £1 per hour and you can pay using coins or via a mobile phone via the RingGo parking. For information on public transport to the University please see the Travel and Transport webpages.

Admission: is by free ticket only. Please book below.

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