All Thinkers

Hannah Arendt

Hannah Arendt (1906-1975) was a German-American political philosopher. She was born into a Jewish family in Hanover, Germany, and studied philosophy under Martin Heidegger and Karl Jaspers. When the Nazis came to power in 1933 she fled Germany, was briefly interned in France, and eventually reached the United States in 1941, where she spent the rest of her life. Her experience as a Jewish refugee from Nazi Germany shaped all of her thinking: she wanted to understand how the totalitarian regimes of the twentieth century, Nazi Germany and Stalinist Russia, had been possible, and what they revealed about the fragility of political freedom and human dignity. Her most important books are The Origins of Totalitarianism (1951), The Human Condition (1958), and Eichmann in Jerusalem (1963). She was a professor at the University of Chicago and the New School for Social Research in New York. She died in 1975, mid-sentence at her typewriter, working on her final book.

Origin
Germany / United States
Lifespan
1906-1975
Era
20th century
Subjects
Political Philosophy Totalitarianism Ethics Democracy Philosophy Of Action
Why They Matter

Arendt matters because she thought more carefully than almost anyone else about the conditions that make political freedom possible and the conditions that destroy it. Her analysis of totalitarianism showed that the most extreme forms of political evil in the twentieth century were not produced by uniquely evil people but by systems that destroyed the capacity for independent thought and political action. Her concept of the banality of evil, drawn from her observation of the trial of Adolf Eichmann, showed that terrible things can be done by ordinary people who simply stop thinking: who follow orders, accept the system, and refuse to take personal moral responsibility for their actions. This insight is deeply uncomfortable and deeply important: it suggests that the capacity to resist political evil is not a special gift of heroic individuals but a practice of thinking and judgment that anyone can cultivate or fail to cultivate. Her work on public life, political action, and the importance of genuine plurality in political communities remains essential for anyone thinking about democracy.

Key Ideas
1
The banality of evil
Arendt coined this phrase while reporting on the trial of Adolf Eichmann, a senior Nazi official who had organised the logistics of the Holocaust. She expected to see a monster. Instead she saw a bureaucrat: an ordinary, rather unimpressive man who said he had simply followed orders and done his job. Arendt's insight was not that Eichmann was not responsible for what he had done, but that his evil was not the product of demonic wickedness. It was the product of thoughtlessness: the failure to think seriously about the moral implications of his actions, the failure to see the people he was organising to kill as human beings rather than as a logistical problem. Evil on a massive scale, she argued, can be produced by ordinary people who simply stop thinking.
2
Thinking as a moral and political act
Arendt argued that genuine thinking, the willingness to examine your assumptions, to question what you are doing and why, and to take moral responsibility for your actions, is not just an intellectual activity but a moral and political one. The failure to think, to simply follow orders, accept the prevailing view, or refuse to examine what you are participating in, is not neutral: it makes you complicit in whatever system you are part of. Thinking, in Arendt's sense, requires a willingness to be alone with your conscience, to hold yourself accountable to your own judgment rather than always deferring to authority.
3
The public realm and political action
Arendt distinguished between different kinds of human activity. Labour produces the necessities of biological life. Work makes durable objects. Action is something different: it is the capacity to begin something new, to appear in public among others and contribute to the shared world. The public realm, the space in which people come together as equals to discuss, debate, and act on shared concerns, is where genuine political life happens. Arendt believed that the destruction of the public realm, either by totalitarian regimes that eliminate free speech and assembly or by the reduction of politics to administration and consumption, was one of the most serious threats to human freedom.
Key Quotations
"The sad truth is that most evil is done by people who never make up their minds to be good or evil."
— The Life of the Mind, 1978
Arendt is stating the core insight of the banality of evil in its most direct form. The most destructive actions in history were not usually committed by people who made a conscious choice to be evil. They were committed by people who simply did not think carefully about what they were doing, who followed the system, deferred to authority, and avoided asking the difficult moral questions. This insight is uncomfortable because it implies that the capacity for great harm does not require unusual wickedness, only the ordinary human tendency to avoid difficult moral thinking.
"The smallest act in the most limited circumstances bears the seed of the same boundlessness, because one deed, and sometimes one word, suffices to change every constellation."
— The Human Condition, 1958
Arendt is making a point about the unpredictability and power of genuine action. When we act in the world, we set in motion chains of events and responses that we cannot fully predict or control. A single act or word can change the situation entirely. This unpredictability is what makes genuine political action both risky and full of possibility. It means that no situation is ever completely fixed: a single person, acting with genuine courage and judgment, can begin something that changes everything.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Ethical Thinking When discussing moral responsibility and following orders
How to introduce
Present the Eichmann case: a man who said he was just following orders and doing his job, but whose job was organising the murder of millions of people. Ask: is following orders a moral excuse? Can you be responsible for harm you cause when you are simply doing what you are told? Introduce Arendt's concept of the banality of evil: terrible things can be done by ordinary people who simply stop thinking about the moral implications of their actions. Ask: what would it take to refuse? What does genuine moral responsibility require?
Citizenship When introducing what genuine political participation means
How to introduce
Introduce Arendt's distinction between the social and the political. The social is about managing needs and following norms. The political is about appearing in public, among people who are genuinely different from you, and debating and deciding on shared concerns. Ask: does politics in your country feel more like administration, managing social and economic life, or more like genuine public debate and decision-making? What would genuine political life look like in your school or community?
Further Reading

The best starting point is Arendt's essay The Crisis in Education, freely available online, which introduces her ideas about thinking, responsibility, and the relationship between generations in accessible form. For a biographical introduction: Elisabeth Young-Bruehl's Hannah Arendt: For Love of the World (1982, Yale University Press) is the most thorough biography. The documentary film Hannah Arendt (2012, directed by Margarethe von Trotta) dramatises the controversy around Eichmann in Jerusalem.

Key Ideas
1
Totalitarianism: a new form of government
Arendt argued that totalitarianism, as practised by Nazi Germany and Stalinist Russia, was not just a more extreme version of tyranny or dictatorship. It was something genuinely new in history: a form of government that aimed to transform human nature itself, to produce people who were incapable of independent thought or spontaneous action, and who existed only as instruments of an ideological movement. Previous tyrannies limited and controlled their subjects; totalitarianism sought to eliminate the very capacity for individuality and independent judgment. This is why it was so much more destructive than previous forms of oppression.
2
Plurality: the condition of political life
Arendt argued that plurality, the fact that human beings are all different from each other and see the world from different perspectives, is not a problem for political life but its essential condition. Politics exists because we are different: if we were all the same, with identical perspectives and interests, there would be nothing to discuss or decide together. Genuine political life requires that different perspectives can be heard, that disagreement is possible, and that no single group can claim to represent the truth for everyone. Totalitarianism destroys plurality by forcing everyone into a single ideological perspective. Any political system that silences some voices or insists on unanimity is moving in a totalitarian direction.
3
The right to have rights
Arendt observed, through her own experience as a stateless refugee, that human rights without political membership are almost meaningless. When you have no state to which you belong, no political community that recognises you as a member, you have no one to enforce your rights and no political standing from which to claim them. She called the right to belong to a political community the right to have rights: the foundational condition without which all other rights are empty. This insight is directly relevant to the situation of refugees, stateless people, and undocumented migrants, and raises fundamental questions about how the international community should respond to those who have no political home.
Key Quotations
"The most radical revolutionary will become a conservative the day after the revolution."
— On Revolution, 1963
Arendt is making an observation about the tension between founding and preserving in political life. Revolutions are acts of beginning: they create something new. But once the new order is established, the task becomes preserving what was created rather than continuing to create. The revolutionary energy that created the new order often becomes the conservatism that defends it. Arendt was interested in how political communities could maintain the vitality and plurality of their founding moment rather than allowing it to calcify into rigid institutions.
"Power corresponds to the human ability not just to act but to act in concert. Power is never the property of an individual; it belongs to a group and remains in existence only so long as the group keeps together."
— On Violence, 1970
Arendt distinguishes power from violence. Violence is the use of force by one person or group to impose their will on others. Power is something different: it is the capacity that arises when people act together in pursuit of shared goals. A government that rules through violence alone has lost power in Arendt's sense: it is exercising force against a population, not acting with its support and participation. Genuine political power requires the ongoing consent and active participation of those governed. This distinction is important for understanding both democracy and its failures.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Civic Media and Democracy When discussing threats to democratic public life
How to introduce
Introduce Arendt's concern about the erosion of the public realm. She worried about anything that prevents genuine plurality of voices in public life. Ask: what threatens the genuine plurality of political voices today? Concentration of media ownership? Social media echo chambers? Governments suppressing dissent? Economic inequality that makes some voices count much more than others? Ask: what conditions are necessary for a genuinely plural public realm in which different perspectives can be heard?
Critical Thinking When discussing the relationship between thinking and moral responsibility
How to introduce
Introduce Arendt's argument that thinking is a moral act. Ask: can you think of examples where people have done harmful things not out of malice but out of a failure to think carefully about what they were doing? In your own life, are there things you do routinely that you have not examined carefully? What would it mean to take thinking seriously as a moral responsibility rather than as just an intellectual exercise?
Global Studies When discussing refugees, statelessness, and human rights
How to introduce
Introduce Arendt's concept of the right to have rights, developed from her own experience as a stateless refugee. Ask: what does it mean to have human rights in theory but no political community to enforce them? Connect to contemporary situations of refugees and stateless people. Ask: does Arendt's analysis suggest that the human rights framework, as it currently exists, is adequate to protect the most vulnerable people? What would be needed to make it adequate?
Further Reading

Eichmann in Jerusalem (1963, Viking Press) is the most accessible of Arendt's major works and develops the banality of evil argument through a specific case. The Human Condition (1958, University of Chicago Press) is her most systematic work and develops her political philosophy including the concepts of action, plurality, and the public realm. For a short overview of her whole philosophical project: Dana Villa's Politics, Philosophy, Terror (1999, Princeton University Press) is the most accessible scholarly introduction.

Key Ideas
1
Judgment: seeing from another perspective
Arendt developed a philosophy of political judgment drawing on Kant's aesthetic theory. She argued that good political judgment requires the ability to think from the perspective of others: to imaginatively consider how a situation appears from positions different from your own. This is not the same as agreeing with everyone or abandoning your own view: it is the capacity to form an enlarged mentality, to test your judgments by considering them from multiple perspectives. This capacity for enlarged thinking is what distinguishes genuine political judgment from mere preference or ideology.
2
The social and the political
Arendt made a controversial distinction between the social, the realm of economic needs, household management, and conformity to norms, and the political, the realm of genuine freedom and action. She worried that modern society had allowed the social to colonise the political: that questions of economic management, welfare, and social conformity had replaced genuine political debate about the shape of the common world. When politics becomes primarily about the management of economic life rather than about the meaning and direction of a shared world, political freedom is diminished. This argument remains contentious but raises important questions about what politics is actually for.
3
Natality: the power to begin
One of Arendt's most original philosophical contributions is her concept of natality: the human capacity to begin something new, to act in ways that were not determined by what came before. Every human being is born into a world that already exists, but each birth also introduces something new: a unique person who can act, speak, and begin new chains of events that could not have been predicted. Arendt saw this capacity for new beginnings as the foundation of political hope. Even in the most oppressive circumstances, the arrival of new people with new perspectives means that the future is never completely determined by the past.
Key Quotations
"Education is the point at which we decide whether we love the world enough to assume responsibility for it."
— Between Past and Future, 1961
Arendt is making a profound claim about what education is ultimately for. We educate young people not primarily to prepare them for the job market or to transmit cultural knowledge, though these matter. We educate them to introduce them to a world that existed before them and that will continue after them, and to cultivate in them the love for that world and the sense of responsibility for it that will lead them to preserve and renew it. Education is the act through which one generation says to the next: this is the world we have made; we give it to you and trust you with it.
"No punishment has ever possessed enough power of deterrence to prevent the commission of crimes. On the contrary, whatever the punishment, once a specific crime has appeared for the first time, its reappearance is more likely than its initial emergence could ever have been."
— Eichmann in Jerusalem, 1963
Arendt is making an argument about the limits of deterrence as a response to political crime. The Holocaust was possible not because the potential perpetrators had not been deterred from murder by the threat of punishment, but because an entire system had been constructed that made mass murder seem normal, necessary, and legitimate. The lesson of totalitarian crime is not that punishments need to be more severe, but that the conditions of thoughtlessness, ideological conformity, and erosion of moral responsibility that made the crime possible need to be understood and resisted.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Research Skills When discussing how to form independent judgment on complex issues
How to introduce
Introduce Arendt's concept of enlarged thinking: the capacity to form judgments by considering how a situation appears from perspectives different from your own. Ask: when you encounter a complex political or ethical issue, how do you go about forming a judgment? Do you seek out perspectives that differ from your own? How many different viewpoints can you genuinely consider before forming a view? Connect to the source evaluation and perspective-taking activities in the Research Skills topic.
History When studying the Holocaust, totalitarianism, or political violence
How to introduce
Before studying the Holocaust or other instances of mass political violence, introduce Arendt's framework. Ask: how do we explain the participation of ordinary people in extraordinary evil? Arendt's answer: the destruction of independent thinking and moral judgment through ideological conformity, bureaucratic organisation, and the removal of the individual's sense of personal responsibility. Ask: what conditions in society today might be moving in the direction of this kind of thoughtlessness? What practices of thinking and judgment resist it?
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

The banality of evil means that Eichmann and people like him were not responsible for their actions.

What to teach instead

Arendt argued exactly the opposite: Eichmann was fully responsible for his actions, and this is what she argued at his trial. The point of the banality of evil is not that ordinary people are excused from responsibility when they follow orders. It is that the capacity for evil does not require unusual wickedness, only the ordinary failure to think. This makes ordinary people more responsible, not less: we cannot excuse ourselves by pointing to our ordinariness. The requirement to think, to examine what we are participating in, is a moral requirement on everyone.

Common misconception

Arendt's analysis of totalitarianism is only relevant to Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union.

What to teach instead

Arendt deliberately identified the structural features of totalitarianism, including the destruction of independent thought, the elimination of genuine political plurality, the reduction of people to instruments of an ideological movement, and the erosion of the public realm, as dangers that could appear in different historical contexts. She believed that the conditions for totalitarianism could emerge wherever public life is systematically degraded, independent thinking is discouraged, and people are reduced to their economic function rather than being recognised as political actors.

Common misconception

Arendt was opposed to social justice because she separated the social from the political.

What to teach instead

Arendt's distinction between the social and the political was philosophical, not a political programme. She was not arguing that social and economic issues should be excluded from politics. She was arguing that when politics becomes only about the administration of social and economic life, it loses the quality of genuine freedom and plurality that makes it political. She believed strongly in the importance of political equality and in the right of all people to participate in public life. Her concern was that modern societies were reducing politics to management, which she saw as a threat to genuine political freedom for everyone.

Common misconception

Arendt's concept of power is simply another word for authority or force.

What to teach instead

Arendt explicitly distinguished power from violence and force. For Arendt, power is what emerges when people act together: it is a collective capacity that exists only as long as a group acts in concert. A government that must rely on violence to maintain its position has already lost power in her sense: it is using force because it has lost the genuine collective support that constitutes power. This distinction has important implications: it suggests that the strength of genuinely democratic governments rests not on their ability to coerce but on the genuine participation and support of their citizens.

Intellectual Connections
In Dialogue With
Thomas Hobbes
Hobbes argued that without a powerful sovereign, human life would be a war of all against all, and that political order requires the concentration of power in a sovereign authority. Arendt's analysis of totalitarianism can be read as a response to this tradition: the most extreme form of concentrated power produced not order but the most destructive political violence in history. Arendt argues for a different understanding of political power as something that arises through collective action rather than being concentrated in a sovereign.
In Dialogue With
Paulo Freire
Both Arendt and Freire place thinking, genuine critical reflection, at the heart of human freedom and political life. Freire argues that the banking model of education produces people who accept the world as given rather than questioning it. Arendt argues that the failure to think produces people who follow orders without moral reflection. Both believe that genuine education must cultivate the capacity and the courage to think independently, and that this capacity is essential for resisting oppression.
In Dialogue With
Frantz Fanon
Both Arendt and Fanon were concerned with the conditions of political freedom and the violence that threatens it. Fanon analysed colonial violence and its psychological effects on the colonised. Arendt analysed totalitarian violence and its destruction of the public realm. Both saw political violence as fundamentally destructive of the conditions in which genuine human freedom and dignity could exist. Their analyses of different forms of political violence illuminate each other.
Complements
Antonio Gramsci
Both Arendt and Gramsci are concerned with how power operates through cultural and ideological means rather than only through force. Gramsci analyses hegemony: how dominant groups make their worldview seem like common sense. Arendt analyses the destruction of independent thinking in totalitarian systems. Both see the battle for minds and the cultivation of critical thinking as central to political life. Their analyses are complementary: Gramsci is more focused on class and economic power, Arendt on political freedom and the public realm.
Influenced By
Socrates
Arendt returned to Socrates throughout her career as a model of genuine thinking. She valued the Socratic practice of questioning, the willingness to examine assumptions and to hold yourself accountable to your own judgments, as the essential practice of thinking that she believed was a moral and political necessity. She saw the Socratic refusal to follow orders that conflicted with his own moral judgment, even at the cost of his life, as the paradigm of the kind of moral thinking she was calling for.
In Dialogue With
B.R. Ambedkar
Both Arendt and Ambedkar were deeply concerned with the gap between formal political rights and genuine political membership. Arendt's concept of the right to have rights addresses the situation of those excluded from political community. Ambedkar's distinction between political democracy and social democracy addresses the situation of those who have formal rights but lack the social conditions that make those rights real. Both argue that political equality on paper is not the same as genuine political freedom in practice.
Further Reading

The Origins of Totalitarianism (1951, Harcourt) is Arendt's foundational work and remains one of the most important political texts of the twentieth century. The Life of the Mind (1978, Harcourt), her unfinished final work, develops her philosophy of thinking and judgment.

For engagement with her legacy

Seyla Benhabib's The Reluctant Modernism of Hannah Arendt (1996, Sage) is the most thorough scholarly treatment of her political philosophy.

For her contemporary relevance

Roger Berkowitz's Artifacts of Thinking (2017) examines her work in relation to current political challenges.