Enjoyed our discussions of Wittgenstein and Arendt yesterday in CoPhi. Every time we talk about "Witty" (as an unimpressed student dubbed him long ago) I find less to pass over in silence.
And every time we talk about Arendt lately, I shudder to realize the rhyming echo of banality in our time with that in hers. So many have been so silent and passive in the face of so much outrage. Her early crush Heidegger said "only a god can save us now." I'll never say that. But it may well be that only an engaged and enlightened next generation can save democracy. That headline yesterday ("Voters See Democracy in Peril, but Saving It Isn’t a Priority") was not, in that regard, very encouraging.
I missed this when it was released. A student yesterday said she didn't watch it because it has subtitles. That's not encouraging either.
"In refusing to be a person Eichmann utterly surrendered the single most defining human quality: that of being able to think; and consequently he was no longer capable of making moral judgements..."
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