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CONCEPT

The Social Question

Arendt's name — from <em>On Revolution</em> — for the urgent problem of material deprivation whose subordination of political action to administration she diagnosed in the French Revolution and traced into modern democratic politics.
In On Revolution (1963), Arendt distinguished between two revolutionary traditions: the American, which she saw as focused on political freedom and the founding of institutions, and the French, which was overwhelmed by what she called the social question — the urgent need to address poverty, hunger, and material suffering. The French Revolution's failure, in her telling, was that the social question's urgency crowded out the space for genuine political action, reducing politics to administration and paving the way for both terror and reaction. The AI discourse, the Arendt simulation argues, is suffering a similar subordination: the urgent questions of displacement, inequality, and redistribution crowd out the deeper political question of what kind of beings the technology is reshaping us into.

In The You On AI Field Guide

Arendt's argument was not that material suffering does not matter. It was that material suffering cannot be addressed politically without first securing the space for politics itself — the public realm where plural persons can deliberate

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