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Abstract. This chapter reconsiders mortality in view of its connections with birth and natality, arguing that mortality is a relational phenomenon. Because we are relational beings, when someone dies who was important to us, we lose part of our own selves, and so different people’s deaths shade into each other.
27 lip 2006 · Introduction. 3. Arendt’s Concept of Totalitarianism. 4. The Human Condition. 4.1 Arendt’s Conception of Modernity. 4.2 The Vita Activa: Labor, Work and Action. 4.3 Freedom, Natality and Plurality. 4.4 Action, Narrative, and Remembrance. 4.5 Action and the Space of Appearance. 4.6 Action and Power.
Birth rate, also known as natality, is the total number of live human births per 1,000 population for a given period divided by the length of the period in years. [1] The number of live births is normally taken from a universal registration system for births; population counts from a census, and estimation through specialized demographic ...
10 cze 2013 · Hannah Arendt introduces “natality” as a conceptual moment when one is born into the political as the sphere where acting together can create the truly unexpected. I argue that this new conception of freedom in The Human Condition draws its strength from a philosophical and rhetorical transformation of the question of the definition of man ...
2 wrz 2021 · Chapter six reveals the connection between natality and mortality. In the final chapter, Stone addresses temporality and the gift of birth, and conclusion by reflecting on how natality structures our existence.
26 wrz 2019 · In this article I rethink death and mortality on the basis of birth and natality, drawing on the work of the Italian feminist philosopher Adriana Cavarero.
Education in morality focuses on morality as a form of life with a specific domain in which it aims to initiate students, and on education as a growth-oriented, progressive activity.