All Thinkers

Simone Weil

Simone Weil (1909-1943) was a French philosopher, political activist, and mystic. She was born in Paris into a secular Jewish family of considerable intellectual distinction — her brother André became one of the greatest mathematicians of the twentieth century. She was educated at the École Normale Supérieure, where she studied alongside Simone de Beauvoir, graduating first in her class. She taught philosophy in several provincial schools but was also committed to a different kind of knowing: she worked for a year in a Renault car factory to experience industrial labour from the inside, went to the front during the Spanish Civil War, and worked as an agricultural labourer. She developed a profound mystical Christian spirituality while remaining outside the institutional church. She died in 1943 at the age of thirty-four in England, where she had gone to work for the Free French government in exile. The immediate cause of her death was tuberculosis, but she had refused to eat more than the ration allowed to people in occupied France. She left behind an extraordinary body of writing, much of it published posthumously, covering philosophy, theology, political theory, labour, affliction, and attention.

Origin
France
Lifespan
1909-1943
Era
20th century
Subjects
Philosophy Ethics Mysticism Political Philosophy Labour
Why They Matter

Weil matters as one of the most original and most demanding thinkers of the twentieth century, whose work cuts across the standard divisions of academic philosophy in ways that remain unsettling and generative. Her concept of attention — the capacity to give your full, receptive presence to another person or situation without imposing your own needs or desires on it — is one of the most important and least understood ideas in ethics and epistemology. Her analysis of affliction — the specific form of suffering that crushes the soul, not merely the body — remains one of the most honest accounts of what extreme suffering actually does to human beings. Her political philosophy, which addressed the specific forms of oppression in industrial labour and in colonialism with unusual directness and rigour, anticipated much of what later thinkers developed. And her understanding of attention as the foundation both of moral life and of genuine intellectual work connects philosophy, ethics, and spirituality in a way that few thinkers have managed.

Key Ideas
1
Attention: the foundation of love and justice
Weil's most important concept is attention: the capacity to give your full, receptive presence to another person or situation without imposing your own needs, desires, or preconceptions. True attention is rare and difficult: most of what we call attention is actually a form of projection, reading our own concerns into what we are looking at rather than genuinely seeing it. Weil argued that attention was the foundation of genuine love — love that sees the other as they actually are rather than as we need them to be — and of genuine justice, which requires seeing the person in front of you clearly enough to know what they actually need.
2
Affliction: suffering that destroys the soul
Weil distinguished between ordinary suffering, which is painful but does not destroy the self, and what she called affliction: a combination of physical pain, social degradation, and psychological crushing that destroys the capacity for human connection and eventually for meaning. Affliction is what slavery, industrial degradation, and certain forms of poverty produce: not just physical suffering but the destruction of the person's sense of their own worth and their ability to connect with others. This is a crucial distinction for understanding what genuine justice requires: it is not enough to relieve physical suffering if the deeper damage of affliction remains.
3
The needs of the soul: rootedness and uprootedness
In her book The Need for Roots, written just before her death as a plan for the reconstruction of post-war France, Weil argued that the soul has genuine needs — for rootedness, order, community, freedom, obedience, responsibility, equality, security, and truth — that must be met for human beings to flourish. Uprootedness — being severed from community, tradition, and meaningful work — was in her analysis the most dangerous of all afflictions. She saw the destruction of rootedness through industrial capitalism, colonialism, and totalitarianism as the defining problem of her era.
Key Quotations
"Attention is the rarest and purest form of generosity."
— Waiting for God, posthumously published 1951
Weil is making a claim about what genuine generosity consists in. Material generosity — giving money, giving time — is valuable but does not require you to genuinely see the other person. Attention, the capacity to give your full receptive presence to another, is rarer and more demanding: it requires setting aside your own concerns and genuinely opening yourself to what the other person is experiencing. This is the form of generosity that love most fundamentally requires and that justice depends on.
"The capacity to give one's attention to a sufferer is a very rare and difficult thing; it is almost a miracle; it is a miracle."
— Waiting for God, posthumously published 1951
Weil is emphasising how genuinely difficult attention is in the context of suffering. Most of what we offer to those who are suffering is not attention but deflection: platitudes, solutions, comparisons to our own experience, discomfort at the suffering itself. Genuine attention to another person's suffering — being fully present with what they are actually going through rather than what we need their suffering to be — is, she argues, almost miraculous in its rarity. This is both an observation about human nature and a demand: justice requires this kind of attention.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Ethical Thinking When introducing the concept of attention as the foundation of caring for others
How to introduce
Ask: when someone is telling you about a problem they have, what are you actually doing in your mind? Are you genuinely listening, or are you thinking about what you will say next, comparing their situation to yours, or deciding how to solve it? After discussion, introduce Weil's concept: she argues that genuine attention — setting aside all your own concerns and truly opening yourself to what the other person is experiencing — is the rarest form of generosity and the foundation of genuine care. Ask: how often do you experience being genuinely attended to? What is different about that experience?
Learning How to Learn When discussing how to develop genuine understanding rather than surface-level performance
How to introduce
Introduce Weil's argument about education and attention: the point of a difficult school exercise is not to produce the right answer quickly but to develop the capacity for attention by genuinely struggling with the problem. Ask: what is the difference between working on a problem to understand it and working on a problem to get the answer? What does each kind of work develop in you? Connect to metacognition: Weil argues that the discipline of attention — really staying with a problem rather than giving up or finding a shortcut — is itself one of the most important things school can develop.
Further Reading

Waiting for God (1951, Putnam), Weil's most accessible collection, brings together her major essays on attention, affliction, and love and is the best starting point.

For a biography

Francine du Plessix Gray's Simone Weil (2001, Viking) is readable and reliable.

For her factory experience

The diaries from her factory year are available in Formative Writings (1987, University of Massachusetts Press).

Key Ideas
1
Factory work and the degradation of the human person
Weil worked for a year in a Renault car factory, not as an observer but as a labourer, and the experience transformed her. She found that factory work as it was organised under industrial capitalism was degrading not only physically but spiritually: it required the suppression of thought, the reduction of the person to a machine-like function, and the erasure of the individual in favour of productivity. Her factory notebooks are one of the most honest accounts ever written of what industrial labour actually does to the human person. She argued that genuinely just work would require reorganising production to preserve and develop the humanity of workers, not merely pay them more.
2
Force and the reduction of persons to things
Weil's essay on the Iliad, which she called a poem of force, argued that Homer's great poem was really about the effects of force — military and political power — on human beings. Force, in her analysis, turns people into things: it reduces the living person to an object, a body to be used and discarded. This happens to both the victim and the perpetrator: the person who uses force and the person who is subjected to it are both diminished by it. She saw this insight as the central moral teaching of the Iliad and as a key to understanding the political violence of her own era.
3
Colonialism and the destruction of culture
Weil wrote with unusual directness about French colonialism at a time when most French intellectuals were silent or complicit. She argued that colonialism was a form of uprootedness inflicted on colonised peoples: the destruction of their traditions, their ways of life, and their connections to the land and to their communities. She argued that genuine respect for human beings required respecting their cultural roots — that a culture was not simply a set of practices that could be replaced by better Western ones but something essential to the humanity of the people who lived within it. This anticipated the arguments of Fanon, Césaire, and Ngugi.
Key Quotations
"The great human crime is to take individuals as a means rather than an end."
— Various writings
Weil is expressing in her own terms the Kantian principle of treating persons as ends in themselves rather than as means. But she gives it a specifically political content: the great crime she has in mind is not individual moral failure but systematic social arrangements — slavery, industrial capitalism, colonialism — that organise human beings as instruments for production, profit, or power rather than as ends in themselves. This connects her analysis of affliction, of force, and of factory work into a single political indictment.
"Whoever does not know the empire of force, and does not know how to resist it, is swept away, ruined, enslaved, or put to death by it."
— The Iliad, or the Poem of Force, 1940
Weil is warning about the power of force — military and political power — over human life and human dignity. She wrote this essay in 1940, as France fell to Nazi Germany. Her analysis of the Iliad as a poem about what force does to human beings was also an analysis of what was happening in her own era. The warning is both historical and practical: those who do not understand force and develop the capacity to resist it will be destroyed by it. This requires both clear perception and the cultivation of genuine inner strength.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Resilience When discussing what genuine suffering does to people
How to introduce
Introduce Weil's distinction between ordinary suffering and affliction: the combination of physical pain, social degradation, and psychological crushing that destroys the person's capacity for connection and meaning. Ask: why is this distinction important? If we only address the physical suffering — give people food, shelter, medical treatment — without addressing the deeper damage of affliction, have we done enough? Connect to Farmer's structural violence: both argue that the deepest forms of suffering are not only physical but involve the destruction of dignity and the capacity for human connection.
Metacognition When examining the difference between genuine attention and its counterfeits
How to introduce
Introduce Weil's argument that most of what we call attention is actually projection: we are reading our own concerns onto what we are looking at rather than genuinely seeing it. Ask: can you think of examples of this in your own experience? When you look at a problem, do you see it as it is or as you expect it to be? Connect to confirmation bias and the Semmelweis reflex: both are failures of attention in Weil's sense, instances where the observer sees what they expect rather than what is there. Ask: what practices might help develop genuine attention?
Citizenship When examining the needs of communities that have been uprooted
How to introduce
Introduce Weil's argument that rootedness — connection to community, tradition, and place — is one of the deepest human needs, and that uprootedness is one of the most dangerous forms of affliction. Ask: can you think of communities in your country or the world that have been uprooted — severed from their traditions, their land, or their communal ways of life? What are the effects? Connect to Menchú's account of what colonialism destroys, to Kimmerer on species loneliness, and to Anzaldúa on the borderlands condition. Ask: what would genuine respect for the need for rootedness require of political and economic policy?
Further Reading

The Need for Roots (1943, Routledge) is her most sustained political work. The Iliad, or the Poem of Force is available freely in translation and can be read alongside Homer. For the connection to education: her essay Reflections on the Right Use of School Studies with a View to the Love of God, collected in Waiting for God, is the most direct statement of her educational philosophy.

Key Ideas
1
Decreation: the self that steps aside
One of Weil's most distinctive and most difficult concepts is what she called decreation: the process by which the self steps aside, reduces its own imposition on reality, in order to allow genuine attention to what is actually there. Decreation is not self-destruction or nihilism but the removal of the ego's constant pressure to make everything about itself, to interpret everything in terms of its own needs and desires. This stepping aside of the self is, for Weil, both a spiritual discipline and an epistemological one: you cannot genuinely see another person, or genuinely understand a problem, as long as your own ego is in the way.
2
Attention and education
Weil argued that the development of attention was the primary purpose of genuine education. Not the accumulation of information or the development of skills, but the cultivation of the capacity to give genuine, receptive presence to what is in front of you. She wrote that every school exercise, done correctly, was an exercise in attention: the student who struggles honestly with a Latin translation or a geometry problem, not to produce the right answer quickly but to genuinely understand, is developing the capacity for attention that is the foundation of both intellectual and moral life. This argument connects philosophy, education, and ethics in a way that resonates with the metacognition tradition.
3
The supernatural virtue of justice
Weil argued that genuine justice was not the product of calculation or rules but of a quality of attention that was in some sense supernatural: it required a level of genuine openness to the other person that went beyond what ordinary human nature could sustain without effort and grace. The question that characterised genuine justice was what she called the eternal question: What are you going through? Not a rhetorical question but a genuine inquiry, requiring genuine attention and genuine willingness to hear the answer. This question, asked honestly and attended to carefully, was for Weil the foundation of all genuine ethical and political life.
Key Quotations
"To be rooted is perhaps the most important and least recognised need of the human soul."
— The Need for Roots, 1943
Weil is making a claim about human nature that challenges both individualist liberalism and abstract universalism: human beings are not rootless rational agents who can flourish equally in any cultural context. They need roots — connections to community, tradition, history, and place — without which the soul withers. This insight, though Weil developed it in a European context, connects to Anzaldúa's analysis of uprootedness, Menchú's account of what colonialism destroys, and Kimmerer's argument about species loneliness: all describe the damage done when human beings are severed from their deep connections to place and community.
"If we know the art of reading, every work of great literature has this lesson to give: only attention is the path to wisdom."
— Waiting for God, posthumously published 1951
Weil is connecting her concept of attention to the practice of reading and to education. Great literature teaches attention not because it is about attention but because reading it well requires practising attention: genuinely opening yourself to the work, suspending your own concerns, allowing the text to show you something you did not already know. This is different from reading for information or for entertainment: it is reading as a spiritual and intellectual discipline, as a practice of genuine openness to another's vision of the world.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Ethical Thinking When examining Weil's question as the foundation of justice
How to introduce
Introduce Weil's claim that the foundation of genuine justice is the question: What are you going through? — asked genuinely, attended to carefully, with willingness to hear the answer. Ask: what is the difference between this question asked genuinely and the same question asked as a social formula? Connect to the difference between Lugones's arrogant perception and loving perception: both describe the difference between seeing another person through your own categories and genuinely attending to who they actually are. Ask: what would it mean to organise social institutions around this kind of attention?
Research Skills When examining what it means to genuinely understand rather than merely to know
How to introduce
Introduce Weil's distinction between genuine understanding, which requires sustained, receptive attention, and the accumulation of information, which can be done without genuine engagement. Ask: in your own experience, what is the difference between knowing something and understanding it? When have you genuinely understood something rather than just being able to reproduce the right answer? Connect to Kierkegaard's argument that the most important truths cannot be transmitted but must be personally appropriated, and to Epictetus's argument that philosophy is only real when it changes how you live.
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

Weil was primarily a religious mystic whose work is only relevant to religious contexts.

What to teach instead

While Weil developed a profound mystical spirituality, her philosophical contributions are fully separable from their religious framing. Her concept of attention has been applied in educational psychology, ethics, and philosophy of mind without reference to her theology. Her political analysis of affliction, factory labour, and colonialism is politically rigorous and does not require religious commitment to evaluate. Her concept of rootedness has been influential in communitarian political philosophy. Many secular thinkers have found her work deeply useful precisely because her observations about attention, affliction, and human need are grounded in direct experience rather than in theological doctrine.

Common misconception

Weil's self-denial and extreme asceticism were forms of self-destruction.

What to teach instead

Weil's choices to work in factories, go to the Spanish front, and refuse to eat more than the occupied French ration were motivated by a consistent principle: she could not accept a privileged position separated from the suffering of those she was committed to. Whether one agrees with her choices or not, they were philosophically consistent expressions of her core commitments rather than self-destructive irrationality. She was genuinely trying to live in accordance with her principles, which included not accepting comfort that was unavailable to the people whose situation she was analysing.

Common misconception

Weil's concept of attention is simply about concentration or focus.

What to teach instead

Weil's attention is not primarily about concentration — the effortful focusing of the mind — but about receptivity: the capacity to genuinely open yourself to what is in front of you without imposing your own concerns. She explicitly distinguished this from the kind of muscular concentration that forces itself onto a problem. True attention was more like a patient waiting, a negative capability — the capacity to remain in uncertainty and ambiguity without grasping for resolution. This makes her concept both more demanding and more useful than simple concentration.

Common misconception

Weil was a marginal figure in twentieth-century philosophy.

What to teach instead

Weil died at thirty-four before most of her major works were published. But her influence has been extensive and growing: T.S. Eliot edited and introduced her work in English, Albert Camus edited her for Gallimard, and she has influenced thinkers as diverse as Iris Murdoch, Gillian Rose, Simone de Beauvoir, and contemporary philosophers of ethics and education. The philosopher Iris Murdoch drew heavily on Weil's concept of attention in developing her moral philosophy. The education theorist Nel Noddings's ethics of care is deeply influenced by Weil. She is now recognised as a major figure in twentieth-century philosophy.

Intellectual Connections
In Dialogue With
Simone de Beauvoir
Weil and de Beauvoir were contemporaries who studied together and represent contrasting approaches to the same mid-twentieth-century moment. Both were politically engaged, both were concerned with freedom and oppression, both wrote philosophy that was grounded in attention to actual lived experience. But de Beauvoir worked within existentialism and feminist philosophy, while Weil developed a distinctive mystical and political philosophy outside existing traditions. De Beauvoir was critical of Weil's asceticism; Weil would likely have found de Beauvoir's existentialist freedom too abstract.
In Dialogue With
María Lugones
Weil's concept of attention and Lugones's concept of loving perception are closely related: both describe the capacity to genuinely see another person as they are rather than through the filter of your own categories and needs. Lugones frames this as world-travelling; Weil frames it as a spiritual and moral discipline. Both argue that this genuine seeing is rare, demanding, and foundational to both love and justice. Both also argue against arrogant perception, the reduction of the other to your own categories.
Complements
Paul Farmer
Weil's distinction between affliction and ordinary suffering provides philosophical depth for Farmer's concept of structural violence. Both argue that the deepest forms of suffering involve not only physical pain but the destruction of dignity, connection, and the capacity for meaning. Farmer describes this in terms of the political economy of disease; Weil describes it in terms of the phenomenology of suffering. Both insist that justice must address the deeper damage rather than only providing material relief.
In Dialogue With
Søren Kierkegaard
Both Weil and Kierkegaard are concerned with the difference between genuine engagement with the most important questions — genuine faith, genuine attention, genuine selfhood — and its counterfeits: the comfortable performance of religion or philosophy without genuine transformation. Both see the cultivation of genuine interiority as the most important and most difficult human task. Both also use indirect or counter-intuitive arguments: Weil argues that decreation, the reduction of the self, is the path to genuine vision; Kierkegaard argues that despair, honestly faced, is the beginning of genuine selfhood.
In Dialogue With
Gloria Anzaldúa
Both Weil and Anzaldúa argue that genuine insight requires a kind of dissolution of the ordinary boundaries of the self — Weil through decreation, Anzaldúa through the in-between consciousness of the borderlands. Both also insist on the importance of attending to what has been suppressed or marginalised: Weil to affliction and the needs of the soul, Anzaldúa to the shadow beast and the suppressed dimensions of identity. Both connect this attention to genuine creativity and genuine political engagement.
In Dialogue With
Frantz Fanon
Weil's analysis of how force reduces persons to things, and her insistence on taking seriously the suffering of colonised peoples at a time when most French intellectuals were silent, anticipates Fanon's systematic analysis of colonial violence and its psychological effects. Both argue that colonialism does not merely exploit people materially but damages their souls — their capacity for self-determination, dignity, and genuine human connection. Weil's framework of uprootedness and affliction provides a philosophical language for what Fanon analyses in psychoanalytic and political terms.
Further Reading

For philosophical engagement

Iris Murdoch's The Sovereignty of Good (1970, Routledge) develops Weil's concept of attention in moral philosophy.

For the mystical dimension

Miklos Vetö's The Religious Metaphysics of Simone Weil (1994, SUNY Press) is the most rigorous treatment.

For Weil and politics

Peter Winch's Simone Weil: The Just Balance (1989, Cambridge University Press) examines her political thought.

For her reception

Lawrence Blum and Victor Seidler's A Truer Liberty: Simone Weil and Marxism (1989, Routledge) examines her relationship to the socialist tradition.