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Hannah Arendt’s Ethics

✍ Scribed by Deirdre Lauren Mahony


Publisher
Bloomsbury Publishing
Year
2018
Tongue
English
Leaves
243
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


The vast majority of studies of Hannah Arendt's thought are concerned with her as a political theorist. This book offers a contribution to rectifying this imbalance by providing a critical engagement with Arendtian ethics. Arendt asserts that the crimes of the Holocaust revealed a shift in ethics and the need for new responses to a new kind of evil. In this new treatment of her work, Arendt's best-known ethical concepts – the notion of the banality of evil and the link she posits between thoughtlessness and evil, both inspired by her study of Adolf Eichmann – are disassembled and appraised. The concept of the banality of evil captures something tangible about modern evil, yet requires further evaluation in order to assess its implications for understanding contemporary evil, and what it means for traditional, moral philosophical issues such as responsibility, blame and punishment. In addition, this account of Arendt's ethics reveals two strands of her thought not previously considered: her idea that the condition of 'living with oneself' can represent a barrier to evil and her account of the 'nonparticipants' who refused to be complicit in the crimes of the Nazi period and their defining moral features. This exploration draws out the most salient aspects of Hannah Arendt's ethics, provides a critical review of the more philosophically problematic elements, and places Arendt's work in this area in a broader moral philosophy context, examining the issues in moral philosophy which are raised in her work such as the relevance of intention for moral responsibility and of thinking for good moral conduct, and questions of character, integrity and moral incapacity.

✦ Table of Contents


Cover......Page 1
Half-Title......Page 2
Series......Page 3
Dedication......Page 4
Title......Page 5
Contents......Page 6
Acknowledgements......Page 8
List of Abbreviations......Page 9
Introduction: Hannah Arendt and Ethics after Auschwitz......Page 10
Philosophy and politics......Page 11
Ethics and politics......Page 12
Arendt’s ethics......Page 14
Hannah Arendt and ethics after Auschwitz......Page 19
Arendt on Eichmann......Page 28
The Eichmann controversy......Page 36
Was Arendt wrong about Eichmann?......Page 49
Banality: One form of evil......Page 54
Neiman on Arendt......Page 61
Intention......Page 72
Responsibility......Page 76
Moral luck......Page 81
Concluding remarks......Page 83
Arendt on thinking and morality......Page 94
Thinking: A particular kind of process......Page 97
Thinking as destructive......Page 100
Thinking as dialogue......Page 101
Conversation: A model for Arendt’s notion of thinking?......Page 103
Thinking, reality and the other......Page 105
The moral relevance of thought......Page 112
Is thinking a moralizing activity?......Page 113
Does the thinking process lead one to moral truth?......Page 117
Thinking as destructive, aimless and without result......Page 120
Can evil be an object of thought?......Page 125
Characterizing the dialogue of thought......Page 133
Ability to think and responsibility......Page 138
Morality and politics; thinking and judging......Page 140
Concluding remarks......Page 145
Reflections on meta-ethical positions in Arendt’s work......Page 155
Arendt on living with oneself......Page 169
Can living with oneself be an ultimate moral standard?......Page 170
Is living with oneself the same as thinking?......Page 184
Does everyone live with him- or herself or only a select few?......Page 187
Does the notion of living with oneself undermine the thinking thesis?......Page 188
Character, integrity and living with oneself......Page 190
4 Nonparticipation......Page 199
Individual (moral) guilt and collective (political) responsibility......Page 205
Moral incapacity......Page 207
The morally unthinkable......Page 213
Conclusion......Page 218
Bibliography......Page 223
Index......Page 231
Copyright......Page 243

✦ Subjects


Hannah Arendt, Ethics, Philosophy


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