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Amor mundi: explorations in the faith and thought of Hannah Arendt

Hingham, MA: distributors for the U.S. and Canada Kluwer Academic Publishers (1987)

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  1. Hannah Arendt.Maurizio Passerin D'Entreves - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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  • Amor Mundi: Reading Arendt Alongside Native American Philosophy.Justin Pack - 2021 - Sophia 60 (2):277-286.
    What is the significance of Arendt considering the title Amor Mundi for what we now are familiar with as The Human Condition? Read alongside Native American philosophers, it is clear that The Human Condition does not explain what it is like to love the world. Instead, it is a powerful genealogy of world alienation and earth alienation in the Western tradition. In other words, The Human Condition shows how Western thought lost and/or undermines amor mundi. By comparing and contrasting Arendt (...)
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  • Pragmatic Pluralism: Arendt, Cosmopolitanism, and Religion.Saul Tobias - 2011 - Sophia 50 (1):73-89.
    Pragmatic pluralism denotes a particular approach to problems of international human rights and protections that departs from conventional cosmopolitan approaches. Pragmatic pluralism argues for situated and localized forms of cooperation between state and non-state actors, particularly religious groups and organizations, that may not share the secular, juridical understandings of rights, persons, and obligations common to contemporary cosmopolitan theory. A resource for the development of such a model of pragmatic pluralism can be found in the work of Hannah Arendt. Arendt's early (...)
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  • Oedipal fragments: Reconsidering the significance of Oedipus for James Bernauer and Michel Foucault.Corey McCall - 2021 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 47 (8):947-959.
    This essay reconstructs James Bernauer’s reading of Foucault’s critique of psychoanalysis in his essay “Oedipus, Freud, Foucault” in order to assess the role that Foucault’s critique of psychoanaly...
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  • Jesuits and Jews, and the way we dare to think: A Jesuit’s reflections on James Bernauer’s Jesuit Kaddish.Francis X. Clooney - 2021 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 47 (8):1001-1012.
    This essay explores James Bernauer’s Jesuit Kaddish as an extended reflection on the centuries-long troubled relationship between Jesuits and Jews, with attention to egregious instances of moral fa...
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  • Arendt and the Theological Significance of Natality.Mavis Louise Biss - 2012 - Philosophy Compass 7 (11):762-771.
    In her 1958 book The Human Condition, Hannah Arendt points to the potential of human action to initiate new beginnings, a capacity she calls natality, as the source of political renewal that could save the modern age from ruin. The question of the relationship between natality and theological concepts is one of the most perplexing points of dispute in the Arendt scholarship of the last two decades. The overall function of the concept of natality in Arendt’s thought has been variously (...)
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