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Hannah Arendt e l’antropologia filosofica
Pansera, Maria Teresa
2008
Abstract
Hannah Arendt sets out to achieve a definition of “the human condition” that is based
neither on the results of the scientific knowledge pursued by anthropology nor on the
elaborations of philosophical thought as proposed by Husserl and Heidegger, but rather
on an understanding of the original and authentic meaning of “human action.” In searching
for an answer to the question “Who is man?,” in attempting to define his identity, Arendt
bases her investigation on a phenomenological analysis of the conditions of human
existence, of the activities closely connected with it, and of the spaces in which these activities
take place.This formulation, with which Arendt opens her work The Human Condition,
solicits a comparison with German philosophical anthropology, in particular with
that of Arnold Gehlen, especially with regard to the concept of “action.”
Series
Etica & Politica / Ethics & Politics
X (2008) 1
Publisher
EUT Edizioni Università di Trieste
Source
Maria Teresa Pansera, "Hannah Arendt e l’antropologia filosofica", in: Etica & Politica / Ethics & Politics, X (2008) 1, pp. 58-74.
Languages
it
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