Bios politikos and bios theoretikos in the phenomenology of Hannah Arendt

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Abstract

Hannah Arendt frequently referred to herself as a phenomenologist in that she wished to reveal how action, in the Greek sense of praxis, engenders a public space of appearances or of phenomenality. The life of the Greek city-state, of the polis, was made possible through this activity, this bios politikos. However, beginning with Plato and continuing right down to Hegel and Heidegger, there has been a sustained attempt to cover up and conceal the specific phenomenality of the bios politikos in favour of the bios theoretikos, involving the substitution of poiesis and theoria for the life of praxis. At the roots of this concealment of the active life is a misunderstanding of the true nature of the theoretical and its highest form, namely, thinking. © Routledge 1996.

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Taminiaux, J. (1996). Bios politikos and bios theoretikos in the phenomenology of Hannah Arendt. International Journal of Philosophical Studies, 4(2), 215–232. https://doi.org/10.1080/09672559608570832

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