“We talk about four fundamental forces,” a physicist recently said to me, “but I think there are only two: good and evil” — a surprising statement from a scientist. Underneath this statement is the understanding that free will is in conflict with everything we know about the nature of the universe, which makes the experience of freedom fundamental to our humanity. Our choices — always with a moral value — give meaning to reality because we were shaped by impartial forces and chance.
Whether our cosmic helplessness stops us or moves us depends on how we view freedom and how we use our power. “The smallest act in the most limited circumstances,” Hannah Arendt wrote in The Human Condition, “contains the potential for boundlessness, because one action, and sometimes one word, can change every situation.”
Arendt’s rigorously reasoned and determined defiance of helplessness and “the stubborn humanity of her fierce and complex creativity” blossoms in We Can Change the World: Hannah Arendt’s Lessons in Love and Disobedience (public library) — Lyndsey Stonebridge’s erudite and passionate celebration of what Arendt demonstrated for generations and continues to demonstrate for us: “determined and splendid goodwill, refusing to accept the compromised terms upon which modern freedom is offered and holding out for something new.”
Stonebridge, who has been studying Arendt for three decades, writes:
Hannah Arendt is a creative and complex thinker; she writes about power and terror, war and revolution, exile and love, and, above all, about freedom. Reading her is never just an intellectual exercise, it is an experience.
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She loved the human condition for what it was: terrible, beautiful, perplexing, amazing, and above all, exquisitely precious. And she never stopped believing in a politics that might be true to that condition. Her writing has much to tell us about how we got to this point in our history, about the madness of modern politics and about the awful, empty thoughtlessness of contemporary political violence. But she also teaches that it is when the experience of powerlessness is at its most acute, when history seems at its most bleak, that the determination to think like a human being, creatively, courageously, and complicatedly, matters the most.
She also lived in a “post-truth era,” she too observed the fragmentation of reality in a shared world, and she saw clearly that the only path to freedom is the free mind. Whether she was writing about love and how to live with the fundamental fear of loss or about lying in politics, she was always teaching her reader, as Stonebridge notes, not what to think but how to think — a motto culminating in her final gift to the world: The Life of the Mind.
In agreement with George Saunders’s beautiful argument for the bravery of uncertainty and his insistence that possibility is a matter of trying to “remain permanently confused,” Stonebridge writes:
Having a free mind in Arendt’s sense means turning away from dogma, political certainties, theoretical comfort zones, and satisfying ideologies. It means learning instead to cultivate the art of staying true to the hazards, vulnerabilities, mysteries, and perplexities of reality, because ultimately that is our best chance of remaining human.
Having “escaped from the black heart of fascist Europe and its crumbling nation states,” having witnessed the horrors of the Holocaust and the rise of totalitarian regimes around the world, Arendt never stopped thinking and writing about what it means to be human — an example of what she considered the “unanswerable questions” fueling our “capacity to ask all the answerable questions upon which every civilization is founded.”
Celebrating Arendt as a “conservationist” who “traveled back into the traditions of political and philosophical thought in search of new creative pathways to the present,” Stonebridge reflects:
Fundamental questions about the human condition are not beside the point in dire political times; they are the point. How can we think straight amidst cynicism and mendacity? What is there left to love, to cherish, to fight for? How can we act to best secure it? What fences and bridges do we need to build to protect freedom and which walls do we need to destroy?
In my long experience with Arendt’s ideas, I have often been worried by how accurately her criticism of political oppression applies to the control of consumerist society, even though Arendt did not openly talk about that. In this part from Stonebridge, one could easily substitute "Nazism," "totalitarianism," and "the Holocaust" with "late-stage capitalism" and feel the same truth sting.
Nazism was undoubtedly tyrannical, and self-evidently fascist in its gray-black glamour, racist mythology, and disregard for the rule of law. However, Arendt argued that modern dictatorship had an important new feature. Its power reached everywhere: not a person, an institution, a mind, or a private dream was left untouched. It squeezed people together, crushing out spaces for thought, spontaneity, creativity — defiance. Totalitarianism was not just a new system of oppression, it seemed to have altered the texture of human experience itself.
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The moral obscenity of the Holocaust had to be recognized, put on trial, grieved, and addressed. But it could not be made right with existing methods and ideologies… You cannot simply will this evil off the face of the earth with a few good ideas, let alone with the old ones that allowed it to flourish in the first place. You have to start anew.
This belief that “we are free to change the world and to start something new in it” animated Arendt’s life, a freedom she saw not in what she called reckless optimism (the darker side of Rebecca Solnit’s idea of hope as an act of defiance), but in action as the heart of the pursuit of happiness — what Stonebridge so keenly sees as “the determination to exist as a fully living and thinking person in a world among others.” She writes:
Freedom cannot be forced; it can only be experienced in the world and alongside others. It is on this condition that we are free to change the world and start something new in it.
Echoing Albert Camus’s assertion that “real generosity toward the future lies in giving all to the present,” she adds:
Learning to love the world means that you cannot be pleasantly indifferent about its future. But there is a wisdom in knowing that change has come before and, what is more, that it will keep on coming, often when you least expect it; unplanned, spontaneous, and sometimes, even just in time. That, for Hannah Arendt, is the human condition.
Couple We Are Free to Change the World — an excellent read in its entirety — with James Baldwin on the paradox of freedom, John O’Donohue on the transcendent terror of new beginnings, and Bertrand Russell on the key to a free mind, then revisit Arendt on how we invent ourselves and reinvent the world, the power of being an outsider, and what forgiveness really means.