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    “There are no dangerous thoughts; thinking itself is dangerous.”

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Amor Mundi

What is most difficult, writes Arendt, is to love the world as it is. Loving the world means neither uncritical acceptance nor contemptuous rejection, but the unwavering facing up to and comprehension of that which is.

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Featured Article

Making Distinctions in Thinking About Racism

Roger Berkowitz 
Hannah Arendt is a thinker who insists that we make distinctions. One of Arendt’s most controversial distinctions is that between racism and what she alternatively will call “race thinking” in The Origins of Totalitarianism, and then "prejudice" in many of her later essays. In the wake of the shooting in Buffalo last week, John McWhorter made his own distinctions while trying to understand the place of racism in U.S. society. McWhorter argues that we use the word racism today to mean too many things. He states that we need to distinguish between different aspects of what we call racism in order to think more clearly about the problems and prevent such tragedies as the shooting in Buffalo.
05-22-2022

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Leadership or Arrogance?

01-20-2012
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Gatekeepers of Culture

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Smart Guys on Wall Street

01-19-2012
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Tranquility

01-19-2012
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Leadership: Brown vs.Cuomo

01-19-2012
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Shame

01-18-2012
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What Has Happened to Occupy Wall Street?

01-18-2012
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Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. on Thinking

01-17-2012
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"What Have I Done?"-Manu Samnotra

01-16-2012
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