Totalitarianism is a type of government where the state has no limits to its authority and strived to regulate every aspect of public life and of private life wherever it is convenient for themselves. The book was a result of Hannah’s experience and closely exams nazism and stalinism. Hannah believed that it was not racism or any other element of totalitarianism that caused the regime of Hitler. Rather she talks about how elements that included anti-semitism and the decline of the nation-state expansion is what caused it. Alliances between the capital and the mob became clear within the …show more content…
This is Hannah’s thoughts on how “human activities” should be and how they have been understood through Western history. The book covered the three fundamental human activities, labor the biological process, work the unnaturalness of human existence, and action the human condition of plurality. Hannah believes that labor is the way to survive. Labor maintains a survival of individuals and the species as a whole. It is an action of life that is not created. In order for the species to survive all must labor. Work is a product. Work creates something, it gives us stability and it is a way for us to have meaning in our lives. With work you can make things that will persist when we die. This creates a way of being immortal. Hannah clearly stated the difference between work and labor. Labor is an actual physical action while work is an action that gives meaning to our existence. The last fundamental human activity would be action. Action created a condition for remembrance, and creates a history. The dominant factor to action is that each individual is born with the ability to take action. Arendt is saying that the three fundamentals of human activities are connected because she believes humans are conditioned, we do not have human nature. Through the human condition we can explain life, death, future, past, and present. The human condition explains the immediate condition of our