

#1348
Mentioned in 32 episodes
The Human Condition
Book • 1958
In 'The Human Condition,' Hannah Arendt provides a comprehensive account of how human activities have been understood throughout Western history.
She contrasts the 'vita activa' (active life) with the 'vita contemplativa' (contemplative life) and identifies three primary human activities: labor, work, and action.
Arendt discusses how these activities have evolved and been affected by changes in Western history, emphasizing the importance of action in disclosing human identity and creating a 'space of appearances' through speech and deeds.
The book addresses issues such as diminishing human agency, political freedom, and the paradox of increased human powers without corresponding control over their consequences.
She contrasts the 'vita activa' (active life) with the 'vita contemplativa' (contemplative life) and identifies three primary human activities: labor, work, and action.
Arendt discusses how these activities have evolved and been affected by changes in Western history, emphasizing the importance of action in disclosing human identity and creating a 'space of appearances' through speech and deeds.
The book addresses issues such as diminishing human agency, political freedom, and the paradox of increased human powers without corresponding control over their consequences.
Mentioned by















Mentioned in 32 episodes
Mentioned by 

in a discussion of public and private life in the digital age.


Eugene Wei

274 snips
11: Eugene Wei - Amusing Each Other to Death
Mentioned by ![undefined]()

as a book he led a discussion on to explore what it means to be human in a technological era.

Jeff Giesea

62 snips
EP 338 Jeff Giesea on Dionysian Futurism, Reading Great Books in the AI Era, and Rebalancing Generational Power
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, who refers to Hannah Arendt's definition of work as the condition that creates the conditions for life.

Alexander Manu

54 snips
A Once In A Lifetime Career Reset Is Coming | Alexander Manu
Mentioned by 

as Arendt's book outlining her distinction between human condition and human nature and the importance of political action.


Roger Berkowitz

41 snips
Hannah Arendt and the Crisis of Truth | Interview: Roger Berkowitz
Mentioned by 

as one of the books he is giving away to new subscribers of New Polity Magazine.


Marc Barnes

36 snips
AI Writing and the Collapse of a Literate Culture
Mentioned by 

in relation to her work on labor and work.


Tim Jackson

34 snips
S1 Ep105: The Care economy: bringing wellbeing back into our politics
Mentioned by 

, her book writes the human condition, by its very nature is unworldly.


Marci Shore

31 snips
Class 25: From Modernity to Post-Modernity
Mentioned by 

, who wrote her college thesis on Hannah Arendt's work and its relevance to contemporary issues.


Lina Khan

27 snips
LINA KHAN Talks FTC, Monopolies, Biden
Mentioned by ![undefined]()

as one of Hannah Arendt's works.

Lyndsey Stonebridge

25 snips
Lyndsey Stonebridge on the Life and Mind of Hannah Arendt
Mentioned when citing Hannah Arendt's description of utopian hubris as a homogenizing destruction of plurality.

22 snips
The Ambiguity of Utopia



