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The Bloomsbury Companion to Arendt

The Bloomsbury Companion to Arendt

Why totalitarianism aims to make humans unnecessary, and the public acts that can stop it.
by Peter Gratton 2020 909 pages
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Summary in 30 Seconds
Totalitarianism aims to eliminate human spontaneity and plurality, making people unnecessary. Its most unsettling insight is that ordinary, thoughtless individuals can commit atrocities. Modern life prioritizes labor and consumption over the political action that creates durable freedom. Genuine freedom depends on public spaces where diverse people speak and act together. Power arises from collective action, not violence; violence can only destroy power.
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🏛️political theory 🏴totalitarianism 📚continental philosophy 🔍phenomenology 🏙️public space ⚖️moral responsibility revolution 🗳️deliberative democracy 🎓philosophy students
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Key Takeaways

1. Arendt's critique of totalitarianism illuminates the human condition

"Nothing in the world—indeed nothing even beyond the world—can possibly be conceived which could be called good without qualification except a GOOD WILL."

Totalitarianism's ultimate evil. Arendt argues that totalitarianism represents a new form of government that seeks to make human beings superfluous. It aims to eliminate human spontaneity and plurality through terror and ideology. This "radical evil" attempts to eradicate the very conditions that make human life meaningful and political action possible.

Banality of evil. Through her analysis of Adolf Eichmann, Arendt introduces the controversial concept of the "banality of evil." She suggests that great evils can be committed by ordinary individuals who fail to think critically about their actions and blindly follow orders. This challenges traditional notions of evil as necessarily stemming from malicious intent.

Key aspects of totalitarianism:

  • Use of terror and ideology
  • Elimination of human spontaneity
  • Destruction of public and private realms
  • Creation of "superfluous" human beings

2. The vita activa: Labor, work, and action define human existence

"Action would be an unnecessary luxury, a capricious interference with general laws of behavior, if men were endlessly reproducible repetitions of the same model, whose nature or essence was the same for all and as predictable as the nature or essence of any other thing."

Three fundamental human activities. Arendt distinguishes between labor, work, and action as the core components of the human condition:

  • Labor: Biological processes and necessities of life
  • Work: Creation of artificial world of objects
  • Action: Political activity between people, creating human relationships

Hierarchy of activities. Arendt argues that modern society has elevated labor to the highest position, neglecting the importance of work and, most critically, action. This shift has profound implications for human freedom and political life.

Consequences of prioritizing labor:

  • Focus on consumption rather than durability
  • Loss of public realm for political action
  • Reduction of human beings to their biological functions

3. The rise of the social threatens genuine political action

"Society expects from each of its members a certain kind of behavior, imposing innumerable and various rules, all of which tend to 'normalize' its members, to make them behave, to exclude spontaneous action or outstanding achievement."

Blurring of public and private. Arendt contends that the modern age has seen the emergence of the "social" realm, which blurs the distinction between public and private life. This development threatens the existence of a genuinely political sphere where individuals can engage in free action and speech.

Conformity and behavior. The social realm promotes conformity and "behavior" rather than action. It reduces human beings to predictable, statistical entities, undermining the possibility for unique individual expression and political freedom.

Characteristics of the social realm:

  • Emphasis on economic concerns
  • Promotion of conformity and normalization
  • Erosion of distinct public and private spheres
  • Replacement of action with behavior

4. Revolution aims for new beginnings but often falls short

"What revolution has always meant since the seventeenth century: for a change to occur quickly enough for the living to witness it."

Revolutionary promise. Arendt sees revolutions as attempts to create new political beginnings and establish spaces of freedom. They represent the human capacity for natality – the ability to start something new in the world.

Revolutionary pitfalls. However, revolutions often fail to achieve their aims due to various factors:

Challenges faced by revolutions:

  • Confusion of liberation with freedom
  • Prioritization of social questions over political ones
  • Tendency towards violence and terror
  • Difficulty in institutionalizing revolutionary spirit

Contrasting revolutions. Arendt compares the American and French Revolutions, arguing that the American Revolution was more successful in establishing lasting political institutions, while the French Revolution became consumed by the "social question" and violence.

5. Thinking and judging are crucial for political responsibility

"The sad truth is that most evil is done by people who never make up their minds to be good or evil."

Importance of reflection. Arendt emphasizes the vital role of thinking and judging in political life. She argues that the failure to think critically about one's actions and the world can lead to participation in evil, as exemplified by Eichmann.

Judgment without banisters. In a world where traditional moral and political guideposts have broken down, Arendt advocates for a form of judgment based on Kant's concept of "enlarged mentality" – the ability to consider multiple perspectives.

Key aspects of political thinking and judging:

  • Willingness to engage in dialogue with oneself and others
  • Ability to imagine and consider diverse viewpoints
  • Resistance to ideological thinking and clichés
  • Courage to make judgments without absolute certainty

6. Truth and politics have a complex, often antagonistic relationship

"No one has ever doubted that truth and politics are on rather bad terms with each other, and no one, as far as I know, has ever counted truthfulness among the political virtues."

Tension between truth and politics. Arendt explores the inherent conflict between truth-telling and political action. While politics deals with opinions and persuasion, truth claims can appear tyrannical and anti-political.

Fragility of factual truth. Arendt is particularly concerned with the vulnerability of factual truths in the political realm. She argues that organized lying and the manipulation of facts pose significant dangers to political life.

Types of truth in relation to politics:

  • Rational truth (philosophical, scientific)
  • Factual truth (historical events, current realities)

Threats to truth in politics:

  • Organized lying and propaganda
  • Ideological thinking that distorts reality
  • Erosion of common factual ground for debate

7. Freedom requires public spaces for dialogue and appearance

"Freedom is actually the reason that men live together in political organization at all. Without it, political life as such would be meaningless."

Public realm as space of freedom. Arendt argues that genuine political freedom can only exist in public spaces where individuals can appear before others through speech and action. This "space of appearances" is essential for human plurality and political life.

Threats to public space. Modern developments have eroded these spaces of freedom:

Challenges to public political spaces:

  • Rise of the social and economic concerns in politics
  • Mass society and conformity
  • Totalitarian elimination of public realm
  • Privatization of formerly public matters

Importance of preservation. Arendt emphasizes the need to create and maintain these spaces of freedom for genuine politics to flourish.

8. Plurality and natality are fundamental to human political existence

"Plurality is the condition of human action because we are all the same, that is, human, in such a way that nobody is ever the same as anyone else who ever lived, lives, or will live."

Uniqueness and equality. Arendt's concept of plurality emphasizes that humans are both unique individuals and equal members of a common world. This plurality is the precondition for political life and meaningful action.

Natality as new beginnings. Natality, the human capacity to begin something new, is closely linked to plurality. Each birth represents the potential for new action and change in the world.

Implications of plurality and natality:

  • Rejection of totalizing ideologies
  • Emphasis on individual responsibility
  • Importance of preserving spaces for unique voices
  • Hope for political renewal and change

9. Violence and power are distinct and often opposing forces

"Power and violence are opposites; where the one rules absolutely, the other is absent."

Power as collective action. Arendt defines power as the ability of people to act in concert. It is based on agreement and does not require violence.

Violence as instrumental. In contrast, violence is a means to an end, often used when power is lacking. Arendt argues that violence can destroy power but cannot create it.

Key distinctions between power and violence:

  • Power: relational, based on numbers and agreement
  • Violence: instrumental, based on implements and strength

Consequences of conflating power and violence:

  • Misunderstanding of political dynamics
  • Overreliance on violent means in politics
  • Undermining of genuine political power

Human freedom and collective action, for Arendt, are rooted in power, not violence. True political change comes through the formation of power, not the application of force.

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