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Hannah Arendt, 1906-1975

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Hannah Arendt, 1906-1975 Hannah Arendt was born in 1906 in Hanover and died in New York in 1975. In 1924, she went to Marburg University to study with Martin ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Hannah Arendt, 1906-1975


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Hannah Arendt, 1906-1975
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  • Hannah Arendt was born in 1906 in Hanover and
    died in New York in 1975.
  • In 1924, she went to Marburg University to study
    with Martin Heidegger, with whom she had a brief
    but intense love-affair. After a year of study in
    Marburg, she moved to Freiburg University. In the
    spring of 1926 she went to Heidelberg University
    to study with Karl Jaspers. She completed her
    doctoral dissertation, entitled Der Liebesbegriff
    bei Augustin under Jaspers's supervision in
    1929.
  • She was forced to flee Germany, and after a brief
    stay in Prague and Geneva she moved to Paris
    where for six years (193339) she worked for a
    number of Jewish refugee organizations. In 1936
    she separated from her first husband, Günther
    Stern, and started to live with Heinrich Blücher,
    whom she married in 1940.).
  • In 1941 she was forced to leave France and moved
    to New York with her husband and mother.
  • Taught at Princeton, Berkeley and Chicago, but
    was most closely associated with the New School
    for Social Research, where she was a professor of
    political philosophy until her death in 1975.
  • Origins of Totalitarianism (1951)
  • The Human Condition (1958)
  • Eichmann in Jerusalem (1961)
  • On Revolution 1961)
  • Between Past and Future (1972)
  • Men in Dark Times (1975)
  • The Life of the Mind (Thinking Willing) 1975
  • (

6
Arendt Basic Concepts
  • Recall the cave in Plato
  • Appearance is bad or lesser
  • Arendt wants to contest this
  • Redeem appearance and action
  • What is the experience of the political like
  • Cf introductory lecture
  • We are conditioned

7
What are the basic concepts of human life? The
Human Condition
  • 1. Labor Humanity as animal laborans
  • Unfree realm of necessity
  • 2. Work Humanity as homo faber
  • The making of our world
  • 3. Action Humanity as zoon politikon
  • The realm of beginning the realm of freedom

8
  • A manifestation of action is speech
  • 'Action is the public disclosure of the agent in
    the speech deed'. (cf remarks about Eichmann and
    speech)

9
reminder
  • The political and politics (recall first class)
  • Political is what is a simultaneous answer to the
    questions What am I? and What are we?
  • Not economics, religion, psychology, love
  • Not a necessarily permanent part of the human
    condition (?)

10
  • For HA FREEDOM is exclusively located it he
    political realm
  • THE RISE OF THE SOCIAL
  • The tendency to think of the public realm as a
    large household that need to be taken care of.
  • Rule by nobody (bureaucracy)
  • rise of statistics as kind of equality
  • different form of equality in modern world
  • WHAT THEN DOES PUBLIC MEAN
  • Everything that appears in public can be seen and
    heard
  • The world is in common (shared by all and
    separating each from each
  • Have something in common (ordinary, vulgar and
    together)
  • for something to be in common it must transcend
    one generation (must be immortal
  • this means a multiplication of perspectives THE
    ONLY WAY FOR ME TO GET OUTISDE OF MY PERSPECTIVE
    IS FOR ME TO SHARE YOURS (EXTENDED SELF)
  • what then does private mean
  • PROPERTY
  • Mastery over necessities is consequence of having
    property and the privateprivacy is here the
    precondition for there being a public (

11
Truth and Politics
  • Political thought is representative. I form an
    opinion by considering a given issue from
    different viewpoints, by making present to my
    mind the standpoints of those who are absent
    that is I represent them. This process of
    representation does not blindly adopt the actual
    views of those who stand somewhere else, and
    hence look upon the world from a different
    perspective this is a question neither of
    empathy, as though I tried to be or to feel like
    somebody else, nor of counting noses and joining
    a majority but of being and thinking in my own
    identity where actually I am not. The more
    peoples standpoints I have present in my mind
    the stronger will be my capacity for
    representative thinking. (PHA 556)

12
Eichmann in Jerusalem
  • Background of the case
  • Details of the Final Solution cooperation of
    some of the leaders of various Jewish ghettoes
    (313ff)
  • Eichmann
  • Not particularly anti-semitic
  • Showed no evidence of remorse as he was doing his
    job. HA"He did his duty... he not only obeyed
    orders, he also obeyed the law."

13
Arendt has the judges say
  • Just as you supported and carried out a policy
    of not wanting to share the earth with the Jewish
    people and the people of a number of other
    nations, as though you and your superiors had any
    rights to determine who should and should not
    inhabit the world, we find that no one, that is,
    no member of the human race, can be expected to
    want to share the earth with you. This is the
    reason and the only reason that you must hang.
    (375)

14
Why?
  • Eichmann repudiates an essential fact of human
    life men not Man live on the earth and inhabit
    the world. (Human Condition, p.7)
  • Only in the presence of others do human beings
    exist as human and not as animate things.
  • This is because humans can ACT, i.e. bring new
    things of states of affairs into the world.
  • For acts to be real, others must acknowledge and
    remember them.

15
  • Thus the Nazis threaten the possibility condition
    of human beings.
  • When are featherless bipeds Plato not human?

16
BUT
  • Is Arendt not saying the same thing (no one will
    want to share the earth with you) to Eichmann as
    she says he was doing?
  • The counter cannot be that Eichmann did something
    wrong
  • Arendt asserts that Eichmann did what he did out
    of respect for the law of his land. As did many
    many others.

17
In some sense he was un lucky
  • You told your story in terms of a hard-luck
    story, and knowing the circumstances, we are, up
    to a point, willing to grant you that under more
    favorable circumstances it is highly unlikely
    that you would have ever come before us or before
    any criminal court. It was nothing more than
    misfortune that made you a willing instrument in
    the organization of mass murder. (375)

18
Her response
  • Eichmanns crime was formal
  • An attempt to destroy the space between people
  • An attempt to control who will see what they did.
  • Interfere with the past and future
  • Orwell he who controls the present, controls
    the past he who controls the past, controls the
    future
  • Arendt relates a conversation held by French
    premier Clemenceau after World War I

19
WE think that intention is important and reject
the claim that
  • A great crime offends nature, so that the very
    earth cries out for vengeance that evil violates
    a natural harmony which only retribution can
    restore that a wronged collectivity owes a duty
    to the moral order to punish the criminal. (373)
  • She criticizes the Israeli court for assuming
    that the law expresses only what every mans
    conscience would tell him anyway.

20
  • But were these not the grounds on which Eichmann
    was brought to trial and condemned?

21
  • NB we are echoing Schmitt on law and that which
    is not law
  • By nature Arendt means only the formal
    conditions that make human life possible.
  • Who then is the victim?
  • Not primarily the Jews (or Communists, or Poles,
    or gypsies, or homosexuals, or mentally retarded
  • The victim is mankind in its entirely.
  • The court ignores this

22
  • Eichmann thus kills not individuals beings, but
    the Being that is human.
  • IF the crime is formal, why is Eichmann
    responsible
  • Standard notions of responsibility
  • Eichmann DID something
  • She reminds the judges of Sodom and Gomorrah
    (374)
  • Eichmann transcends the realm of human affairs

23
In passing
  • She notes that Karl Jaspers said it should have
    been an international tribunal (366-368)
  • Arendt technical issues make this difficult but
    the Israel court could have waived its right to
    carry out the sentence.

24
Problem remains
  • For what is he punished?
  • She rejects that his death can relieve anyone of
    the consequences of his actions
  • That it would take away the pain of those who
    died and the trauma of those who survived
  • That it would be a warning to anti-Semites
  • That it is a history lesson or a reminder of the
    existence of anti-Semitism
  • That is is a demonstration of Jewish/Israeli
    might
  • That it might relieve the guilt of the German
    people

25
Thus
  • His death is not a punishment
  • Which is what we do to human beings
  • His death does not restore his humanity
  • The limit of the law?
  • Are there implications for capital punishment?

26
To her critics
  • I do not love a collective (e.g. The Jewish
    people) (392)
  • Radical evil vs banality of evil
  • Modernity (396)
  • Neither depth nor demonic
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