Arendtian principles
Muldoon, J
Date: 24 February 2016
Journal
Political Studies
Publisher
Sage Publications
Publisher DOI
Abstract
This article addresses the crucial role political principles play in Hannah Arendt’s account of
political action and judgment. It proposes a new interpretive framework for understanding their
political logic and the varied contexts within which they appear in Arendt’s work. Principles
can be understood according to three distinct ...
This article addresses the crucial role political principles play in Hannah Arendt’s account of
political action and judgment. It proposes a new interpretive framework for understanding their
political logic and the varied contexts within which they appear in Arendt’s work. Principles
can be understood according to three distinct perspectives from which they inspire, guide and
organise political action. Reading Montesquieu alongside Kant, Arendt claims that principles
operate according to a logic of exemplarity. Political action carries within itself and exemplifies a
more general principle, which nevertheless cannot be determined as a rule. It does not establish
a universal law according to which future action could be determined, but it does attempt to
embody and exemplify a more general standard against which future action could be judged.
Arendt argues that attending to the importance of principles in politics offers new possibilities for
returning to the past and transforming contemporary practices.
Social and Political Sciences, Philosophy, and Anthropology
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
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