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The Life of the Mind  By  cover art

The Life of the Mind

By: Hannah Arendt
Narrated by: Laural Merlington
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Publisher's summary

Considered by many to be Hannah Arendt's greatest work, published as she neared the end of her life, The Life of the Mind investigates thought itself, as it exists in contemplative life. In a shift from her previous writings, most of which focus on the world outside the mind, this work was planned as three volumes that would explore the activities of the mind considered by Arendt to be fundamental. What emerged is a rich, challenging analysis of human mental activity, considered in terms of thinking, willing, and judging.

This final achievement, presented here in a complete one-volume edition, may be seen as a legacy to our own and future generations.

©1971 Hannah Arendt; copyright 1977, 1978 by Harcourt, Inc. (P)2018 Tantor

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love the book, Hannah is a master.

but listen to it at 1.5x speed and thank me later. apparently the pronunciations and accents are atrocious, but she said Husserl in a way that made me laugh, so she's alright by my measure.

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Thought-provoking and well-executed

I'm very happy that Arendt's last work is available as an audiobook. It gave me a chance to "prelisten" to the book as a whole before focusing on particular places with a print version. Laural Merlington does an excellent job overall, and just has some trouble with pronunciation of German and Latin. It would be a tall order, I think, to expect her to read fluently not only English and French, but also German, Latin, and Ancient Greek that come up throughout the book.

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Well Read, Articulate and Expressive

I enjoyed this book, reading several times over the last few weeks and thinking about all the authors I have read and she has read of people who think and those surrounding them who take their work and try to publish what they think they must mean and as in the end she discusses how that work as they find the empty page and try to assemble words and ideas here and there and I am reminded even until know one still understands Hitlers Meanings in his book, in his speech’s, his writings because he was very well read. So when does society decided whom to publish and who not too. As Hannah discusses Nietzsche did not write Will to Power but didn’t mention that his sister did and in those writings are changes in meaning, understanding even from as she discusses KJV to who knows what. Many times I find in my daily discussions I say things that no one understands because they do not read which you to will find once you start reading more and more. Do you know that the whole world was deceived and I ask you to think why do NOT virus’s jump species, which is BIO 101, and yet the whole world was believing the Wuhan Blood mixture caused …. READ MORE! READ MORE, READ and educated yourselves and THINK on what you read.

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Being is more interesting than Nothing

I love an author who assumes the reader really wants to understand. In the end there is no more interesting topic than 'Being'. There's been a 2500 year conversation going on among incredibly smart people concerning Being, and Hannah Arendt summarizes and amplifies that conversation and this book allows people like me to peek in on what really smart people think about the topic.

Parmenides starts the conversation when he rejects 'nothing', makes the all the 'one', and equates Being as thinking. Heraclitus makes Being as becoming (he's the one who says you never cross the same river once). Arendt leans towards Being as thinking and even states that she is not interested in Being as knowledge in the style of Titus Lucretius (he wrote my favorite book, 'On the Nature of Things').

Arendt will say she is not a philosopher. She does not want to interpret the world by thinking about it; she wants to experience the world and shape it. Overall, this book read like a series of Great Courses on Western Philosophy throughout the ages, but with a tight narrative provided by a brilliant explicator.

Most of my favorite authors are mentioned in this book: Kant, Wittgenstein, Plato, Aristotle, Schopenhauer, Heidegger, Nietzsche, Hegel, Aquinas, Augustine, Spinoza, Plotinus, Lucretius, Thucydides, Herodotus, Bergson (she really likes Bergson and his 'lived time', I haven't actually read Bergson, but I have read 'The Physicist and the Philosopher' available on Audible), Husserl and so on. For each of the authors mentioned Arendt provides the context, the relevance and the connections necessary for her explications. One does not need to have had read those authors in order to follow what she is saying because she always seems to respect the intelligence of her reader and gives them just enough for them to follow the discourse.

Her second volume in this set is on Will. What does 'Will' even mean? She'll tell you. She'll make all the connections. She'll show how Schopenhauer makes Being as Will; after all, his book is titled 'Will and Representation as Idea' for a reason and Nietzsche will tweak it into 'will to power' and relate the last man standing and 'the eternal recurrence of the same' into Being as Will too. She does mention Spinoza in the story but doesn't explicitly state his 'conatus' (striving) as the Will immanent within everything as the 'one' substance of the universe making everything in the universe necessary but I think most readers will get the connection on their own.

She definitely favors the 'faculty of choice' for Will in the manner of Duns Scotus even at the price of contingency. A contingent world is not a necessary world; a necessary world is a world where time and chance determine ones fate through Grace alone. Gratitude and Socratic wonder give us our Will, at least Arendt says Scotus argues that contra Aquinas.

Augustine reworks St. Paul's 'salvation through faith not works' and brings in the Pagan metaphysics of Plotinus and defines the middle ages until St. Thomas Aquinas comes along and gets enshrined within Dante's 'Divine Comedy' while both leverage off of Aristotle who makes contemplation (thinking) of the divine the ultimate good and our ultimate purpose. Duns Scotus will politely disagree.

Arendt pointed out something to me that I had never connected previously by her quoting Jesus saying that we are not to be good since God is good alone, but rather we should think well ('if you so much as look at a woman with lust in your heart you have committed adultery') and behave properly ('do unto others'). All of this stuff is laid out in this book so that anyone can follow the multiple trains of thought as she lays them out.

She captures the essence of Nietzsche and Heidegger in relatively long sections of the book in such a way that any reader of this book who hasn't read them will want to read them. She said that Heidegger did not mention Nietzsche in 'Being and Time' by name. As Arendt says, in B and T Heidegger makes 'care' (German: Sorge) and its reliance on the future as filtered through our understanding of the past through our now the ontological foundation for Being (btw, Arendt explains Nietzsche and his 'Eternal Recurrence of the same' with the same temporal formulation; after Heidegger makes his 'turn' between his volume I and II of 'Nietzsche' as Arendt correctly points out he'll change 'care' to 'will' for the ontological foundation for Being, also his 'turn' involved changing the presumption inherent in the very fact that we are asking about the meaning of Being from Being as meaning since the posing of the question gives Being a foundation within itself ('a hermeneutical circle' of sorts).

At times, I felt that this book was as if I were listening to a great college professor who was giving a series of lectures that would stay with the student for life but all the while knowing I didn't have to take a test, and besides who among us don't love detailed explications of Kant's 'Critique of Pure Reason' or Hegel's 'Phenomenology of Mind'? I know I do, and if you do too you'll find this book as extraordinary as I did, and I would recommend you listen to 'The Bernstein Tapes' of each book freely available off the net.

The best way to see this book is as a review and explication of a 2500 year old conversation that has been going in the background of most peoples' lives involving some great thinkers and Arendt wants her readers to understanding why it is just as relevant today has it always has been. Our meaning and purpose are determined by what we believe to be true (Being=thinking) and how we believe we should act (Being=will), and this book will put each into understandable terms.


A bracketed aside: [I thought she was wrong when she said that Nietzsche's inversion of Plato was a return to Plato. She says that because she really doesn't like what she labels as nihilism and any part of Nietzsche or Heidegger that flirted with that she was going to be negative towards for obvious reasons (see her book 'The Origins of Totalitarianism' for clarification). I've been concurrently reading 'Heidegger: Thought and Historicity' by Christopher Fynsk and he seemed to think similarly as I did regarding Nietzsche's inversion of Plato. He actually also footnoted this book and cited Arendt to be the first to notice the tonal difference between Vol I and II of Heidegger's 'Nietzsche'. I noticed Arendt generously gave credit to somebody else within this book while the footnote in his book did not].

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High quality

Arendt's work is, like any good thinking, complex and worthy of serious consideration. The performer takes on the challenge and meets the demands for personality without performance nicely. One of my favorite audio books.

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A great book marred by shockingly poor narration

Hannah Arendt is one of the great German intellectuals of the 20th century and this is a wonderful introduction to her thought.
But I suggest reading it in book form rather than this audible version.
The narrator is unused to philosophical material, cannot pronounce the names of some of the world's great philosophers and is incapable of pronouncing non-English words in a comprehensible fashion. Heidegger is pronounced as "Hydecker", Paul Valery becomes Paul Velery (rhymes with celery) and the introductory quotes to each chapter in French, German and Latin are butchered completely beyond comprehension for a speaker of those languages. It is shocking that this could happen to such an important book.
Audible should re-record the foreign language parts with a narrator who can pronounce the words properly, preferably someone who speaks both German and French. This recording is potentially damaging to the reputation of all involved and I am sorry to say should be promptly corrected without regard to cost.

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Excellent Read ..

excellent book and reading . .classy intellectual and historical while informative . Seriously considering reading again But will more then likely move on to her “human condition”

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Need a better reader

An enlightening and challenging read but fulfilling. The reader, however, though deliberate and clear overall, could have been better at her Latin and German. This weakness was a distraction throughout. But I would rather have an Audible of this book than none at all. This narration was good enough to be helpful.

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Believe the reviewers about terrible reader

The narrator's non English pronunciation is so terrible as to be distracting. It is unbelievable that this performer was chosen to read Hannah Arendt, who is known for so many non English quotes and texts in her writing.

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A good read, if you've the patience

Hannah Arendt is the only philosopher whose writing I enjoy who takes a irrational approach that reminds me of the continentals. Her prose is dense, but beautiful. Unfortunately, it's also a little bit meandering, and sometimes a bit self-contradictory.

Still, I think the book is worth reading, if you have the patience to put it through the mental sieve to find the gems. I find most of it does slip through, and most of the gems are near the beginning.

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