Talking Politics: HISTORY OF IDEAS
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Hannah Arendt’s The Human Condition (1958) is a remarkably prophetic book. At its heart is an analysis of the relationship between labour, work and action, set against a time of rapid technological change. Arendt worried about the power of computers, believed in the capacity of people to reinvent themselves through politics and despaired of the influence of Thomas Hobbes. Was she right?
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History of Ideas Q and A
Shklar on Hypocrisy
Nozick on Utopia
Rawls on Justice
De Beauvoir on the Other
Schumpeter on Democracy
Schmitt on Friend vs Enemy
Luxemburg on Revolution
Nietzsche on Morality
Butler on Machines
Douglass on Slavery
Bentham on Pleasure
Rousseau on Inequality
Q & A with David
Fukuyama on History
MacKinnon on Patriarchy
Fanon on Colonialism
Hayek on the Market
Weber on Leadership
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TALKING POLITICS