Why Is Work Different From Labor? Book Review

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Human Condition

What Caught My Attention

Hannah Arendt is a German philosopher who has refused to call herself a philosopher, but her work has been praised as being influential and brilliant (though controversial) in its originality and in its bold departure from what other philosophers have written about the human condition. What I found most compelling, and even appalling, is the way in which Arendt differentiates between "labor" and "work"; those are words that are most often used interchangeably but for Arendt, they are worlds apart in their true meaning.

Work vs. Labor -- a rather radical position by Arendt

In The Human Condition Arendt describes work and labor as two vitally different things. The laborer of today is similar to the slaves of ancient Greece, she explains. In fact those individuals whose whole lives totally revolve around labor (perhaps an example would be the farm laborers who toil in fields all day) brings them closest to the animal world of any other humans. In other words, to be trapped in a life of labor is to be almost animal (barely human). Basically she is saying, to be a laborer is merely surviving, not really living per se. This didn't shock me but she seems to denigrate common people who have no skills other than knowing how to use work tools; but an argument can be made that these laborers also have families, children, dwelling places, customs, values, and traditions, no matter how primitive their labor.

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Perhaps many laborers also have hope for a better life, so they aren't animals; they are humans, people, with thoughts and voices.

Arendt suggests that part of the reason laborers are close to becoming animals is that their labor produces "necessities" for the rest of society. This would fit well when turning one's attention to the farm laborers; because what they produce (food) is an absolute necessity for the rest of society. Hence, her assertion that today's laborers are similar to the slaves of the Hellenic society. In fact Arendt (p. 83) writes that ancient peoples justified having slaves "…because of the slavish nature of all occupations that served the needs for the maintenance of life." And so the institution of slavery was defended because "…to labor meant to be enslaved by necessity… [and] since men were dominated by the necessities of life, they could win their freedom only through the domination….....

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