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What Is "Totalitarian" Today? Arendt after the Climate Breakdown
Journal article   Peer reviewed

What Is "Totalitarian" Today? Arendt after the Climate Breakdown

Larry Alan Busk and DePaul University
Philosophy today (Celina), Vol.67(1), pp.35-49
12-01-2023

Abstract

Arts & Humanities Philosophy
This article reconsiders Hannah Arendt's account of "totalitarianism" in light of the climate catastrophe and the apparent inability of our political-economic system to respond to it adequately. In the last two chapters of The Origins of Totali-tarianism, Arendt focuses on the "ideology" of totalitarian regimes: a pathological denial of reality, a privileging of the ideological system over empirical evidence, and a simultaneous feeling of total impotence and total omnipotence-an analysis that maps remarkably well onto the climate zeitgeist. Thus, while Arendt used the concept of "totalitarianism" to foreclose alternatives to liberal capitalist democracy, the climate impasse suggests that the totalitarian label more properly belongs to the prevailing system itself.

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