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The Outdoor Condition: Reading Arendt on a Warming Planet
Summary
This article examines whether Hannah Arendt's political thought remains relevant to the contemporary planetary crisis, using a distinction between outdoor and indoor environments to analyze three types of artificial adaptation to a warming planet. The author draws on Arendt's account of embodied human experience to explore how environmental awareness may be narrowing. While not directly about microplastics, the philosophical framework addresses broader questions about how humans relate to environmental change and artificial materials in their surroundings.
Abstract Is Hannah Arendt's political thought relevant to the contemporary planetary situation? This article draws on The Human Condition and some of Arendt's ancient and modern sources to answer this question, using a phenomenological distinction between outdoors and indoors to make sense of three likely types of artificial adaptation to a warming planet. Arendt's account of the importance of the “body-bound senses” of an “earth-bound creature” need not result in the problematic fetishization of immediate rather than mediated knowledge, or of an “earthly nature” supposedly prior to and independent of the human artifice, but can draw attention to the narrowing of human beings’ “angle of receptivity” to a surprising and unpredictable reality. This perspective, however, also discloses the limits of Arendt's work in the face of ecological transformations that are simultaneously planetary in scale and highly unequal in their consequences.
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