Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 December 2009
Introduction
Although there exists a vast literature dealing with Hannah Arendt's thoughts on evil, few attempts have been made to assess Arendt's position on evil by tracing its connection with her reflections on conscience. In this chapter, I set out to examine the significance of such a connection.
Conscience does not figure among the topics for which Arendt's work is most known. One searches in vain for an essay or book of hers devoted to it. To present-day readers, Arendt is associated first of all with the notion ‘the banality of evil’, coined in her book Eichmann in Jerusalem (1965a). Arendt's struggle to come to terms, philosophically if not morally, with Eichmann and his kind of (doing rather than being) evil, forced her to consider again and again the interrelation between thinking, willing, and judgment, on the one hand, and evildoing, on the other. Her undertaking was to see how much light philosophy – meaning thinking as such, not the academic discipline – can throw on evil.
So what about conscience? As I said, conscience is no salient topic in Arendt. However, this is not the whole truth. As soon as one starts to trace Arendt's reflections on evil in her oeuvre, one finds that she from early on explored a connection now overshadowed by the aforementioned one between thinking and evil – namely, a connection between conscience and evil.
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