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  1. We Feel Our Freedom.Linda M. G. Zerilli - 2005 - Political Theory 33 (2):158-188.
    Critics of Hannah Arendt's Lectures on Kant's Political Philosophy argue that Arendt fails to address the most important problem of political judgment, namely, validity. This essay shows that Arendt does indeed have an answer to the problem that preoccupies her critics, with one important caveat: she does not think that validity is the all-important problem of political judgment--the affirmation of human freedom is.
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  • Thinking from underground.Max Deutscher - 2010 - In Danielle Celermajer Andrew Schaap (ed.), Power, Judgment and Political Evil. Ashgate. pp. 27-38.
    Arendt is a philosopher despite herself, and this paper uses the resources of her <<The Life of the Mind>> to develop her comparison of thinking as a 'departure' from the world with the fore-doomed attempt by Orpheus to bring from underground into the light of day. The paper investigates how thinking, though we 'lose' it in the speech and writing that makes it public, still can have the delicate power that Arendt attributes to it.
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  • (1 other version)The Human Condition: More than a guide to practical philosophy.Ingeborg Nordmann - 2007 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 74 (3):777-796.
    A political philosophy that no longer wants to be a philosophy inevitably runs into contradictions. The productive transparency of Arendt's philosophical experiment becomes visible, however, if we avoid simple mappings to Aristotle, Kant and Heidegger in order to emphasize the point and counterpoint of Arendt's message. The connections she draws, unusual in the world of philosophical thinking, have an obvious and a hidden side. The hidden side can be frequently found in the nuances, and these will be pursued inasmuch as (...)
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  • 8. Judging - the Actor and the Spectator.Richard J. Bernstein - 1986 - In Philosophical profiles: essays in a pragmatic mode. Cambridge [Cambridgeshire]: Polity Press in association with B. Blackwell, Oxford. pp. 221-237.
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  • Thinking and judging.Dana R. Villa - 1999 - In Joke Johannetta Hermsen & Dana Richard Villa (eds.), The judge and the spectator: Hannah Arendt's political philosophy. Leuven, Belgium: Peeters.
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  • (1 other version)The Human Condition: More Than a Guide to Practical Philosophy.Ingeborg Nordmann - 2007 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 73:777-796.
    A political philosophy that no longer wants to be a philosophy inevitably runs into contradictions. The productive transparency of Arendt's philosophical experiment becomes visible, however, if we avoid simple mappings to Aristotle, Kant and Heidegger in order to emphasize the point and counterpoint of Arendt's message. The connections she draws, unusual in the world of philosophical thinking, have an obvious and a hidden side. The hidden side can be frequently found in the nuances, and these will be pursued inasmuch as (...)
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