WORK
The Life of the Mind
Arendt's unfinished final masterwork — a projected trilogy on thinking, willing, and judging — whose completed volumes appeared posthumously in 1978 and provide the philosophical foundation for her distinction between thinking and cognition.
The Life of the Mind was Arendt's attempt to give the vita contemplativa the systematic treatment she had given the vita activa in The Human Condition. She planned three volumes — on thinking, willing, and judging — corresponding to the three mental activities she considered irreducible. She completed the first two before her death in December 1975; the third existed only as lecture notes, later published as Lectures on Kant's Political Philosophy (1982). The work developed the distinction between thinking and cognition that became central to the Arendt simulation's diagnosis of the AI age, and extended her earlier concept of thoughtlessness into a positive account of what thinking is and what it accomplishes.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The book's origin lay in the Eichmann controversy. Arendt had identified Eichmann's thoughtlessness as the mechanism of his evil, and she wanted to articulate more rigorously what thinking was such that its absence could have such consequences. The resulting work
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