A multipolar world isn't a dark put in this plot we're already in one just a fact yeah. A kind of monotonic insistence on this is democracy versus autocracy it's going to alienate a lot of powers in the first place. I think over the next few months we're about to see a fork in the road in Europe whereby if the Ukrainians really do well on the battlefield, there will be triumphalism about success of democracy and that will be true for Europe.
The great dilemmas of geopolitics are not battles of good against evil, where the choices are clear. They are contests of good against good, where the choices are often painful, incompatible and fraught with consequence. That’s the argument that political scientist Robert Kaplan who's joined here in conversation by political philosopher John Gray. Together they discuss how the insights of the Greek tragedians – Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides – as well as Shakespeare and modern philosophers and classic authors can help us understand the central subjects of international politics: order, disorder, rebellion, ambition, loyalty to family and state, violence, and the mistakes of power. And they explored how viewing events through a tragic lens could guide the West’s strategy for dealing with Russia and China today.
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