Thursday, February 19, 2026

Arendt, The Human Condition, Sections 31, 31, (33 and 34), 35 and 36

 Arendt, The Human Condition, Sections 31, 31, (33 and 34), 35 and 36


Questions:

  1. How or why are faculties of forgiving and promising contingent upon or tied to plurality? Why is forgiving (or promising?) unpredictable? (p.g 237)

  2. Sect. 31→ Ruling others and ruling oneself, how or in what ways can the care of the self, governmentality, and pastoral power in Foucault be connected to Arendt’s discussion of ruling or action as “rule”? Especially in her reading of “ruling” as making in Plato?

  3. Relation of ruling to fabrication (of city-state)?

  4. Critique of idea theory in politics, what is the relation to the critique of the mathematization of science?

  5. What is the relationship between mathematization critique and Arendt's concern with worldlessness, or alienation? Are these two separate points? Concern with modern science and earth alienation? 

  6. Section 31→ The substitution of acting for making: How should we understand Arendt’s critique of Aristotle and her celebration of the polis as the exemplary of the realm of action? Contradiction or no?

  7. Tracking the decoupling of ruling and beginning in “archein,” what is this?

  8. (256): Is there something we can say in regard to a transition from sovereign to biopower in Arendt’s account of the stages of alienation (family/ home to society and state)


  • Do we want to invite the pragmatist discussion?

  • Nope

  • Status of forgiveness as disclosive and possible for Arendt: interesting that Arendt says that no one can forgive himself, and the dependency of others as ontological (plurality) for the possibility of action

  • Comparing to Nietzsche and promising

  • Moving to a discussion of freedom: (237), Arendt sees forgiveness as essential for freedom, how?

  • Domination and freedom, domination becomes ubiquitous in the modern age, wherein the wanting to overcome plurality and action result in arbitrary domination of all others.

  • (259): Return of the notion of the idea, Arendt seems to have an issue with “idea” as distinct from event, which are never unprecedented. Why is that?

  • Having an idea is never unprecedented? 

  • Very hard to get a grasp on this, especially because what Arendt means by “idea” may or may not be what she is attributing to Plato’s sense of “idea,” but again, how would we agree to this premise that ideas are never unprecedented?

  • Maybe it’s not that deep… Maybe idea means something that “comes and goes” but isn’t acted upon, doesn’t enter the realm of objectivity until it is instantiated in an event or deed.

  • Comparing and contrasting Arendt and Foucault. Arendt seems so interested in redemption given the mourning or nostalgia for a political action that has been foreclosed, so this book could not be written today.

  • How did this become our present?

  • Both Foucault and Arendt as tracking how deep and layered our present has become. 

  • If Arendt is trying to uncover the piles of sediment to see what has been lost, then Foucault is looking is looking at the cloth that was doing the covering.

  • Wondering if we can still have principles and rules, and still have indeterminacy for Arendt, or unpredictability (essential for action, or tantamount to it).





Thursday, February 12, 2026

Arendt - The Human Condition §§ 24, 25, 29, 30

 Questions: 

1) Connection between meaning and commonsense / common world? 

2) Consequences of making speech the paradigm of humanity? Relationship to disability and assumption of abled speaking human subject.

3) Arendt's views of the labor movement and what this examples does for her broader argument? (216)

4) Distinctions between force, power, strength, and their relationship to tyranny (202)

5) What is speech in relation to action or deed? (178)


Discussion: 

  • Recap - how do the pragmatists feel about Arendt's critique of instrumental rationality? 
    • Are pragmatists really utilitarians? 
    • Anthropocentric utilitarianism is its greatest in Kant (155)
      • The Problem is the inability to distinguish between means and ends
      • Pragmatists have a more pluralistic notion of use - not just desire-satisfaction
    • She is right to recognize that modern philosophers have an issue with instrumentalism 
  • Speech versus sign-language - "action seems a not very efficient substitute for violence, just as speech, from the viewpoint of sheer utility, seems an awkward substitute for sign language" (179)
    • At the very least, non-verbal conceptual acts need to be disclosure
    • "A life without speech and without action [...] it has ceased to be a human life because it is no longer lived among men" (176).
  • Why are labor and work not a part of the public realm, while speech and action are? 
    • Does this show the problems inherent in speech/action?
    • For the labor movement, she criticizes the conflation as well 
      • But this might be important - they didn't have the capacity to act in this deeper sens
  •  Action and speech are not just necessary for politics, but also for existential life - for getting to the who/subject not the what/object - dependent upon a conception of disclosure
  • Lots of uses of words which are not speech 
    • "mere talk" 
    • See "mere appearance" (219) of the slaves in public compared to her earlier notion of slaves as instrumentum vocale (121) - so mere appearance and mere words are not speech/action
    • Non-verbal conceptual disclosures are action - can one act and not speak? 
  • Power - as opposed to force/violence - relates to speech/action 
    • "Power is actualized only where word and deed have not parted company, where words are not empty and deeds have not brutal, where words are not used to veil intentions but to disclose realities ..." (200)
    • Power as more than "potentiality in being together" (201) - disperses when no longer together
    • Violence is not action
    • Power is persuasive - it gives reasons (?)
  • Violence cannot reproduce power  (202) 
    • Once can exert it against power but it collapses the being together of speech/action
    • Relation to Arendt's criticism of the French Revolution
    • Isolation - cannot act and speak together
  • Should we view speech/action as justification? 
    • Probably not (the pragmatists are reading too much Sellars into this). 
    • But speech/action as a rupture; intangible; novelty 
  • Uncontrollability and boundlessness of action (191) 
  • Strength is indivisible; located in individual (201)
  • Power is NOT Foucauldian - it is an emergent property that can disperse and vanish
  • Strength connects to individuals - copes with violence but not power
    • "Power corrupts when weak band together in order to ruin the strong" (201)
  • Courage - risk, rupture, novelty, mimesis 
  • Significance of action is retrospective - only when we generate myths and lore
  • Poetry is a move from remembrance to memory 
    • New happens against certainty - appears in the guise of a miracle
    • Do we ignore the underlying labor when you look to great moments of history?
  • Need to recover the polis without going back




Thursday, February 5, 2026

Arendt The Human Condition Chapter IV Work

 Questions:

1. General question on homo faber and animal laborans: are these positions, identities, standpoints, perspectives, values, etc.?

2. Can we get clear on some distinctions Arendt makes in the chapter on “work”, especially §20: automation and natural process; operation vs. product; tool vs. machine? I am particularly interested in figuring out how this turn towards automation and the machine has led to the “loss of faculty to distinguish clearly between means and ends in terms of human behavior” (145) and why this faculty is so important for Arendt. 

3. Want to clear up what’s wrong with means-end reasoning vis-a-vis action (i.e. Politics) (p.156-157)

4. Clear up instrumentality of tools vis-a-vis homo faber and animal laborans (p. 144; 156). 

5. Does Marcuse’s one-dimensional man map on to Arendt’s critique of means-end reasoning?

6. Clear up her usage of “use objects” and commodities; how does she map these distinctions (consumption/piece of work/commodities)?

7. Durability as use objects vs commodity? (P. 163)

Discussion:

1. Help clarify other questions by starting here. At one point she’s uses standpoint; Kantian background. In a Kantian critique, developing different standpoints of reasoner/knower. What is interesting is she is also phenomenological that, even though there are standpoints, they are contrary to a Kantian standpoint which would assume neutrality. All of these standpoints hold weight (influence from Heidegger). You buy into standpoint and it is weighty. Social positions would be interesting because in a way she is addressing class, although she doesn’t want to address this in a Marxist sense. These standpoints als o reflect social class positionalities. Who gets to be a homo faber? Who is traditionally an animal laborans? There is a language of ‘mastery’ that feels like a classical imperialist form of writing. What are the patterns underlying these standpoints—who gets to be what—that Arendt is not addressing? She is very aware of freedom but the problem of distribution is not addressed. There is a sense of transcendental analysis but it is interesting to see how there is sociopolitical issues (e.g. class, identities) happening in the story as well. 

Animal laborans are people who labor and homo faber are people who work; but these are not fixed or essential identities. Important to think about the structures of society (e.g. racial or gendered structure) that are not being told here. 

The logic of the homo faber, the moment of instrumentalization; this becomes the dominating view. Arendt critiques this, you need meaning which is a different kind of play; if you only have homo faber, then utility saturates the entirety of society. 

(P. 154) “This perplexity, inherent in all consistent utilitarianism, the philosophy of homo faber par excellence…” Could we read this as Arendt turning this distinction on its head? 

(P. 155-156) Utility cannot be the only standard. Once the world is built, you can not let utility or homo faber logic to be the dominating one.

(P. 159) Reference to Marx 

Animal laborans operates on necessity and homo faber operates on meaning to means and ends, creativity in a social sense, etc.

Need to break down the ideas happening in the concepts. What is the argument she is making here?

(P. 144) “The same instruments, which only lighten the burden…” Homo faber makes the tools that animal laborans uses to work. That act of invention, making tools and instruments, relies on means-end reasoning. 

(P. 145) “The frequent complaints…factual situation of laboring.” If you are laboring, you’re going to use the tools at your disposal to make things easier and tools are constituting human life from the bottom up. This section feels important; next page talks of losing this faculty. The inability to distinguish between means and ends stems from labor. When you make something, like food, you’re going to consume it; the very means is the ends. Labor is circular and necessary; where exactly are the means and where exactly are the ends? Homo faber has this distinction because they’re not predicated on this necessity. 

(P. 146) Repetitiveness and monotony of labor such that the laborer is able to zone out while laboring. There is this idea that laboring is related to the machine and automation. It seems at moments she is raising homo faber and at other times she is saying there is a means-end distinction between homo faber and animal laborans. 

We’ve always had automated, repetitive work; tools are extensions but machines automate body. Distinction between animal laborans that can only look at material produced by work, not as the end of some practice, but only as the thing that can satisfy their needs. On the other point, the homo faber can only see the product as satisfying the end of the practice but they can’t find the inherent meaning in it.

Action creates ends but doesn’t have an end. The problem with our society is an ability to critique the ends in our society. This is not homo faber (action?)

(P. 151) There’s a sense in which homo faber is in control, makes the world. Animal laborans is an earth in a Heideggerian sense, with earth as natural, cyclical, things like soil; world is artificial, we make it. The work of art creates the world; but would the work of art be an action? From the standpoint of work, the homo faber will look at Van Gogh from perspective of exchange value.

(P. 152; 154) Basic functions and machines replace utility of the world.  Homo faber as unable to distinguish between meaning and utility and utility replaces meaning. The problem with homo faber, and instrumental reason, colonizes, it becomes the logic of a society. The problem is not having different spheres, we need them all, but the problem is when one dominates the others. It is a labor society that is mechanic; machines come out of homo faber but do the work of animal laborans.

Homo faber seems like reference to Aristotelian and essential functions; how does this relate to two distinctions mentioned earlier?

(P. 153) Fabrication process and homo faber; “The trouble with the utility standard…” She says earlier this is something that comes from a notion of animal laborans. Perhaps one; this process collapses into necessity and on the other hand it collapses in utility and we lose the ability to distinguish between means and ends. Meaning is what stops the chain; meaning can never be an end. You need a meaning but it doesn’t respond to the logic of means and ends. 

When she says utilitarian, she is not referring to Mill’s utilitarianism, she includes Kant in this; it is related to the notion of utility. 

Arendt’s discussion of transcendentals and who fulfills these categories; in her examples of Ancient Greece, women and slaves are animal laborans. Homo faber as identified with early capitalism/modernity. This reasoning grew as capitalism grew is the historical punch she’s making. 

(P. 162) On the last public realm; relation to Hegel’s explanation of the market as a place of recognition where we, in some sense, become equal to each other. There is a dark side; the problem is not the issue it was colonized by the logic of value. This is an index of labor taking over work. Production to productive goods to conspicuous consumption.

(P. 163) “Commercial society, or capitalism in its earlier stages…” The loss of distinction between means and ends. There’s a sense in a which you consume so you produce and produce so you consume. Transition from use things to exchange objects. Attempts for homo faber and animal laborans to locate value in something objective outside of itself.

(P. 164) This is what action will give us. But is this positive? (P. 166) and “loss of intrinsic worth…inherent in the very concept of value itself.” 

Value is not something that exists in isolation; but there is something other than value that is generated that we haven’t quite addressed yet. Is it that people no longer value the polis but something else? Does she want something private or something not dependent on this public realm? Is that what art is? 

(P. 165) “Confusion in classical economics” related to value/worth. She is problematizing the exchange market. Anything can be exchanged for anything and so everything becomes fungible.


Friday, January 30, 2026

Arendt, The Human Condition Chapter 3 "Labor" Sections 13, 14, 17

 Arendt, The Human Condition Chapter 3 “Labor” Sections 13, 14, 17


Questions:

  1. Pg 132: Connection between AI and “waste economy.” Where are all these aspects of life where automation (today) is rendering away tangibility in work?

  2. How is history operating in the text, if at all? Locke, Smith, and Marx do understand civilization in relation to labor (and wealth). So, since Arendt underplays this relation here, how should we think about civilization in Arendt’s account?

  3. Pg 127-128: When Arendt talks about playfulness/ hobbies. What do we make of this? 

  4. What does Arendt mean by the world? E.g., p 97, “Without a world into which…” If the world is what brings people together, then should we understand it aside from just physicality or objects?

  5. “Metabolic rift,” vis-a-vis labor and waste, what is this? (99)

  6. P. 109: How do classical distinctions between productive/ unproductive and skilled/unskilled labor map onto her categorical distinctions? (i.e. labor, work, action)

  7. What is Arendt doing with the zoe/ bios distinction?


Discussion

  • We’re going to start with the labor/work distinction by way of a parlor game, i.e., going to see what sort of “activities” belong in each category. 

  • Seems like a lot of things that come under “labor” are what would be particular to social reproduction, though Arendt doesn’t discuss gender in this text.

  • At the level of civilization, we can see that who gets to be assigned different categories is gendered as well. 

  • (99): regenerating life processes produce new labor power (c.p. Marx), and she discusses the repetitive aspect of laboring. Unlike working, where something is finished, it moves into the common world.

  • Part of the argument seems to be that things that used to be work have fallen into the category of labor. Where, things that can be commodified have now made life’s reproductive activities and the cycles of regeneration. 

  • So, some activities can mean different things, however, depending on their relation to capital. 

  • There is a worry then about this work/labor distinction because it doesn’t seem to track the blurriness or the “how” that an activity is situated in relation to capital, especially given the gendering that isn’t being extricated. 

  • Worry that there is an overcorrection of work at the expense of labor.

  • Seems like she may have a naturalistic view of labor, which would be departing from late Marx, where the society determines.

  • Could be following the early Marx

  • Passage on 101: Hercules and the stables, is labor, or the danger of it, really just its monotony, its “relentless repetition?” 

  • Ultimately, Arendt isn’t giving any delineation between the “activity” as subjectively versus objectively meaningful, but maybe that’s not the point. The point being that we are accustomed to seeing most things today as labor, whereas otherwise we could view some activities as work. 

  • Transcendental condition of labor is actually work, that is, need or require work and its products to sustain birth and death. 

  • Perhaps Arendt wants a normative conception of the subject of the vitae activa, and in articulating this distinction of activities, she is affirming a world wherein we all partake in each aspect of these: labor, work, action.

  • That capitalism expropriates time, connected to Arendt’s account of “laborification” as pushing aside possibilities for time or temporality that overflows or disrupts chrononormativity and cyclical time.

  • Maybe her concern isn’t that we aren’t all equal in inhabiting all three spaces, but that none of us are currently free to. Not so much that she’s worried about equality, but about freedom. 

  • Okay so there is now another can of worms: What is Arendt’s conception of freedom? Freedom from labor?

  • No, that’s impossible really, since labor is necessary for the human condition. 

  • Going back to the automation question…something interesting about fertility and what it would mean to automate labor as a sphere.

  • Parlor Game: is exercise labor or work?

  • Also worth bringing up Benjamin’s worry about art and mechanical, mass reproduction. The problem isn’t so much that art is subsumed, but that perception is changed. Like a form of subjectivation. 

  • Under what conditions does an action become labor, work, or action? The trichotomy maps conditions, not kinds of action.

Thursday, January 15, 2026

Arendt, The Human Condition, Ch. 2 and 3

1. What is Arendt's distinction between private property and wealth?

2. How is Arendt understanding "privacy/privative"? 

3. How does Marx's distinction between productive and unproductive labor map on to Arendt's account of labor? Also, what is "labor-power" for Arendt? (pp. 87-89).

4. What kind of continuity or discontinuity do we get with Arendt's account of modernity? (e.g., the secularization of political concepts) (p. 64).

5. Dissolution of private space --> depth/hiddenness that is lost? What is the "darkness"? Is it normative? How do we square this with her method? (p. 71).

Private property not in the economic sense, but something more like "a space of one's own." Where one protects oneself from others. That's why Arendt is reluctant about the abolition of private property and maybe wants to disassociate the abolition of wealth (inequality?) with the abolition of private property (contra Marx?). 

Why does Arendt equivocate private property with hiddenness? In other words, why "hidden" and not something like "unavailable" or "un-regardable"? In the public realm, you're in this space of constant accountability; the private sphere is the way to hide away from that -- something which the public cannot penetrate. e.g., even slaves were not without property (pp. 61-62).

Private property was also tied to place, and place was identified with family (p. 61). Also tied to citizenship, if you were relinquished of your property then you'd be relinquished of your citizenship. Slaves still held "personal or private possessions" even if they did not private property in the sense of a place of their own. The working class is the craftsmen; the laboring class was the slave.

The point is that modernity/Marxism conflates property and wealth. There's also sacredness associated with private property, wealth was never concerned sacred in antiquity. It was considered bad to entirely expend one's private property in pursuit of wealth because you're giving up political freedom. Private property as the means of political freedom; making slaves do the labor for you.

Have y'all read Benjamin Constant's essay on the distinction between ancient liberty and modern liberty? For the ancients, freedom is the ability to act and speak in public; for the modern, liberty is the right to do what I want in their privacy.

Hiddenness in the sense of retreat vs. hiddenness in the sense of hidden-away (e.g., slaves and women). Slaves and women as living "laborious life," laborious because devoted to bodily functions (e.g., production and reproduction) (pp. 72-73).

For example, people nowadays talk about their domicile/homes as an investment, rather than as a place of existential significance (where one dwells and lives one life). 

Marx, Smith, Locke (e.g.,) are unable to make a distinction between property and wealth; private property as the basis of wealth accumulation, rather than as a place of hiddenness. 

Arendt's idiosyncratic vocabulary can make it hard to track her critiques of other authors (e.g., Locke, Smith, Marx) who don't use those concepts in the same way(?).

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

Wtr Term Readings: Arendt's 'The Human Condition'

We will focus on Hannah Arendt's The Human Condition this term -- we will read selections from this book during weeks 1 through 6 and then in weeks 7 through 9 we will focus on comparing Arendt's and Foucault's historical methods.

Week 1

Ch. I (Introduction)

§1 = 11 pages

Ch. II (Public and Private)
§§ 4-6 = 28 pages

Week 2

Ch. II (Public and Private)

§§ 8-10 = 21 pages

 +

Ch. III (Labor)

§11 = 14 pages

Week 3

No Meeting

 

Week 4

Ch. III (Labor)

§§ 13, 14, 17 = 23 new pages

Week 5

Ch. IV (Work)

§§ 18, 20, 21, 22 = 28 pages

Week 6

Ch. V (Action)

§§ 24, 25, 29, 30 = 26 page

Week 7

Ch. V (Action)

§§ 31, 32 = 16 pages

 +

Ch. VI (Modern Age)

§§ 35, 36 = 20 pages

Week 8

Ch. VI (Modern Age)

§§37-41 = 26 pages

Week 9

Ch. VI (Modern Age)

§§42-45 = 32 pages

Week 10

Tentative/Cancel?

Essay on Foucault and Arendt by tbd

(See also this recent special issue of Journal of Philosophy of Historyhttps://brill.com/view/journals/jph/18/3/jph.18.issue-3.xml?srsltid=AfmBOooK18torb3hvUVfY0A4g9IlPr53_MBAvdgWtJ9vfQLrTYNz2icv)

Week Exam

Tentative