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Full Description
This book is about conscience and moral clarity. It asks how some people keep their judgment steadfast even when many around them are swept away by conspiracy theories, moral panics, and murderous ideologies-or, on a smaller scale, by immersion in a corrupt and corrupting workplace culture. It asks about the surprising fragility of common sense, including moral common sense, and it asks where morality fits into a meaningful human life. Beyond this, the book asks about legal accountability for crimes committed when moral judgment fails on a vast and deadly scale. Hannah Arendt addressed all these questions in a profound and original way. Drawing on her published works, letters, diaries, and notes, David Luban offers clear accounts of Arendt's contributions to moral philosophy and international law, showing how her ideas about judgment and accountability remain crucially important to the moral and legal life of our century.
Contents
Introduction: Hannah Arendt, the philosopher of judgment; Part I. Adolf Eichmann and the Banality of Evil: 1. Arendt in Jerusalem; 2. Did Arendt get Eichmann wrong?; Part II. The Moral Philosophy: 3. Judgment in dark times; 4. The Socratic moral propositions: thinking and judging; 5. Conscience and the banality of evil; Part III. Common Sense and Moral Breakdown: 6. The flight from common sense; 7. Common sense and plurality; Part IV. Arendt Before Jerusalem: Ethics in The Human Condition: 8. The curious case of the missing morality; 9. The problem of futility in The Human Condition: Part V. Arendt and International Law: 10. Statelessness, human rights, and humanity; 11. The idea of international criminal law; 12. The crime against the human status: Lemkin and Arendt; 13. The promise and peril of identity as politics; 14. Doing justice; 15. Thoughtlessness as culpability; Conclusion: taking stock.



