Tag: War
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Calulus, Guarantees, and the Remainder of Freedom: A Davos Ukrainian Breakfast as an Event of Alliance Reasoning
The recorded discussion staged as a “Ukrainian Breakfast” at Ukraine House on the margins of the World Economic Forum at Davos offers a compact laboratory for examining how contemporary Euro-Atlantic public reasoning tries to hold together heterogeneous registers: humanitarian witnessing, alliance management, legal-financial constraint, technocratic reconstruction, and strategic coercion. Its governing ambition, as the sequence…
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Instruments of Order Under Pressure: Alexander Stubb’s Values-Based Realism and the Re-Specification of Europe at Davos 2026
The recorded session stages Finnish President Alexander Stubb at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, as a a compact, highly mediated instance of public geopolitical reasoning in which a head of state and a policy-intellectual moderator attempt to render “order” thinkable under conditions of accelerated volatility. The central problem-space is articulated as a transition…
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Procedures of Autonomy: NATO Integration, European Capability, and the Public Grammar of Defense at Davos 2026
The recorded session titled “Can Europe Defend Itself?” stages a concentrated test of what “defense” means when it is spoken in the same breath as alliance law, industrial capacity, fiscal mobilization, health sovereignty, and the management of intra-alliance conflict. Its governing ambition is practical—assessing Europe’s ability to sustain security under conditions of strategic uncertainty—yet its…
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Ending Europe’s Groundhog Day: Zelenskyy at Davos and the Critique of Actionless Order
The event can be read as an attempt to convert a familiar diplomatic lament into a diagnostically organized indictment of European agency. The speech treats political paralysis as a repeatable form of life, and then tests that claim by moving across disparate crises—Greenland, Iran, Venezuela, frozen assets, sanctions, tribunals, maritime oil flows—so that “Europe” appears…
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The Outside Within: Kant’s Unjust Enemy as an Institution of Peace Through Exclusion
Petar Bojanić’s lecture intervenes in a persistent fault-line of modern practical philosophy: the way juridical language, political theology, and strategic reasoning converge upon a figure—the “unjust enemy”—that promises to secure peace by authorizing destruction. Its distinctive scholarly contribution lies in a reconstruction that is simultaneously genealogical and diagnostic: it treats hostis iniustus less as a…
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War as Self-Conscious Negativity: Contradiction, Mediation, and the Practical Work of Drawing Limits
Yuval Kremnitzer’s lecture intervenes in a familiar moral certainty—war’s futility—by converting that certainty into a determinate philosophical problem: the mismatch between war’s overwhelming gravity and the thinness of the concepts and speech-forms through which modern publics try to grasp it. Its distinctive contribution lies in treating this mismatch as more than a rhetorical discomfort. The…
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Welt und Zeit—The End of a War, 21:00—24. February 2025
In the wake of my previous contemplations and explorations in In the Wake of Thought, where the stirring question of thought’s perpetual unfolding demanded ever deeper considerations of human agency and temporal unfolding, it becomes necessary now to gather the threads of ontology, history, and politics in a new tapestry titled Welt und Zeit (World…
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Blood and Iron: The Rise and Fall of the German Empire 1871-1918
Blood and Iron: The Rise and Fall of the German Empire 1871–1918 by Katja Hoyer offers an intensely detailed analysis of a pivotal epoch in European history, where the relentless currents of power, identity, and realpolitik converged to shape the German Empire from its inception in 1871 to its demise amidst the chaos of the…
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I Will Show You How It Was: The Story of Wartime Kyiv
I Will Show You How It Was: The Story of Wartime Kyiv by Illia Ponomarenko is a sprawling, unflinchingly intimate immersion into a conflict that most would prefer to keep at arm’s length. It is the book that punctures the neat categories of “us and them,” “invader and invaded,” and “hero and villain,” forcing readers…