24 research outputs found

    Social politics and freedom: Incorporating civil society into Arendt\u27s political thought

    Get PDF
    The possibility of human freedom has captivated philosophers throughout the ages, often leading them to conclude that freedom is a unique capacity of humanity, exemplifying our potential for politics, contemplation, and/or religious salvation. In the modern age, beginning with the political writings of Thomas Hobbes and John Locke, freedom has been understood (at least within the early liberal tradition and common discourse) as unhindered and individuated economic movement, motivated by self-interest and actualized most fully in institutions such as the consumerist free market. Yet, we find that the more we devote our actions to fulfilling our individual interests and needs, the more our actions become subservient to physical/emotional impulses, leaving one to wonder how freedom can be found in these apparently necessitated activities. Hannah Arendt’s political theory, which draws on her personal experience of totalitarianism in Europe and her understanding of Greek culture and thought, offers a profoundly different and, in my estimation, superior understanding of freedom. It is not in individual, economic action that we find human freedom, but rather in the discursive and action-based associations we form with others. Thus, freedom is an essentially political phenomenon, and depends upon the willingness of humans to form public identities through their communal interactions with one another

    Recognizing and Responding to Smug Managers

    No full text

    Explaining What We Omit

    No full text

    Good enough for equality

    No full text

    Against managerial vigilantism

    No full text

    Corporate Moral Credit

    No full text

    The virtues of relational equality at work

    No full text

    Against managerial vigilantism

    No full text
    corecore