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Mistaken Identities: The Conflict Over Culture, Class, Gender and Nation

Identities divide us, but they also unite us and fulfil our need for a sense of collective belonging. Join us as these two great thinkers explore one of the most complex and controversial issues of our times.

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Race, religion and identity are being talked about as never before. While minority groups raise their voices for recognition and inclusion, others feel that their
culture is being eroded. In these increasingly febrile times, Intelligence Squared brought together two of the world’s most prominent thinkers to debate the issues that are polarising our society.

Kwame Anthony Appiah, Professor of Philosophy at New York University, unpicked the very notion of identity. He argues that our outdated prejudices taint the way we understand concepts of race, class, nationality and sexuality. Race, he claims, is a fiction based on Victorian-era pseudoscience. Appiah urges us to question and rethink our assumptions in order to build a more tolerant and accepting society. But how helpful is this viewpoint to those who face the reality of racism and feel the brunt of discrimination on a daily basis?

In conversation with Appiah was John Gray, one of Britain’s most provocative and original commentators. In contrast to Appiah, Gray argues that categories like race are not just ‘mistakes’; they come about as the result of concrete political situations which cannot just be wished away by a philosopher in his ivory tower. Gray also contends that liberals who seek to undo traditional notions of identity have become even more dogmatic, intolerant and illiberal than the conservatives whom they criticise. In their hypocrisy, they have created a new hierarchy of identity which privileges ethnicity, gender and sexuality over nation and religion.


Speakers

Chair

Ritula Shah

Journalist and Broadcaster


Presenter of Calm Classics on Classic FM. She was previously the main presenter of the World Tonight, BBC Radio 4’s main evening news programme.
Featuring

Kwame Anthony Appiah

Professor of Philosophy at NYU


Professor of Philosophy and Law at New York University and President of the PEN American Center. Grandson of a British chancellor of the exchequer and nephew of a Ghanaian king, he spent his childhood in both countries, before studying philosophy at Cambridge University. He is author of seminal works on philosophy and culture, including In My Father’s House, The Honor Code and the prize-winning Cosmopolitanism. His new book is called The Lies That Bind: Rethinking Identity. He is chair of the judges for the 2018 Man Booker Prize. He lives with his husband in New York and New Jersey.

John Gray

One of the UK’s most popular political philosophers whose latest book is The New Leviathans: Thoughts After Liberalism


One of the UK’s best known and most popular philosophers. Between 1998 and 2007 he was Professor of European Thought at the London School of Economics, and since 2008 he has been Emeritus Professor there. He has published over twenty books, including Gray’s Anatomy: Selected Writings; The Silence of Animals: Thoughts on Progress and Other Modern Myths, Seven Types of Atheism and Feline Philosophy. He writes regularly for The New Statesman. His new book is the The New Leviathans: Thoughts After Liberalism.