You need to be logged in to carry this out. If you don't have an account, feel free to create one. |
COOKIES: By using this website you agree that we can place Google Analytics Cookies on your device for performance monitoring. |
University of Cambridge > Talks.cam > CMS Colloquia > NATO: Hobbes to Trump - Motion and Emotion - Can Mathematicians help?
NATO: Hobbes to Trump - Motion and Emotion - Can Mathematicians help?Add to your list(s) Download to your calendar using vCal
If you have a question about this talk, please contact hodsec. Commander James Bergeron, Chief Political Advisor, Allied Maritime Command, NATO will be giving a lecture at 5.30pm in MR2 on Thursday 23rd February 2017. In his lecture, “NATO: Hobbes to Trump – Motion and Emotion – Can Mathematicians help?”, Jim Bergeron confronts challenges that two ‘masters’ of emotion – Putin and Trump – present for the NATO Alliance, with reference to key debates on the relation between science and political theory from Aristotle to Hobbes. Tickets are now available on a ‘first come first served’ basis. Commander Bergeron will deliver his seminar in MR2 where the first block of 140 seats are available at the following link: The remainder of the tickets will be for MR3 /MR4 and B1.19 where the seminar will be live streamed. A wine reception will follow in Central Core for ticketed guests. This talk is part of the CMS Colloquia series. This talk is included in these lists:
Note that ex-directory lists are not shown. |
Other listsEngineers Without Borders - Training Social Anthropology Post-Doc Seminar Electronic Structure Discussion Group Mathworks Molecules and genes in Alzheimer's Engineering Safe AI seminar groupOther talksCANCELLED DUE TO STRIKE ACTION Recent advances in understanding climate, glacier and river dynamics in high mountain Asia Aspects of adaptive Galerkin FE for stochastic direct and inverse problems Breast cancer - demographics, presentation, diagnosis and patient pathway Barnum, Bache and Poe: the forging of science in the Antebellum US International Women's Day Lecture 2018: Press for Progress by Being an Active Bystander |