Responsibility and Judgment is an indispensable investigation into some of the most troubling and important issues of our time.
Introduction by Jerome Kohn
A Note on the Text
Prologue
I. RESPONSIBILITY
Personal Responsibility Under Dictatorship
Some Questions of Moral Philosophy
Collective Responsibility
Thinking and Moral Consideration
II. JUDGMENT
Reflections on Little Rock
The Deputy: Guilt by Silence?
Auschwitz on Trial
Home to Roost
Hannah Arendt was born in Hanover, Germany, in 1906, fled to Paris in 1933, and came to the United States after the outbreak of World War II. She was editorial director of Schocken Books from 1946 to 1948. She taught at Berkeley, Princeton, the University of Chicago, and The New School for Social Research. Arendt died in 1975.
“With Eichmann in Jerusalem Hannah Arendt wrote the 20th century's
most important - and controversial - work on the problem of evil,
and the least understood. The publication of Responsibility and
Judgment is thus a particularly welcome event. For readers who know
Arendt, the autobiographical reflections or the discussions of
personal responsibility under dictatorship will be of great
interest in understanding the background of Eichmann in Jerusalem
or The Life of the Mind. For readers who don't, essays such as
"Auschwitz on Trial" will provide a superb introduction to her
views - and a chance to probe, without hearsay or slander, one of
the great thinkers of our time.”
-- Susan Neiman, author of Evil in Modern Thought: An Alternative
History of Modern Philosophy
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