Friday, 17 July 2026

The short answer is no. Hannah Arendt deliberately drew on Kant's idea of judgment, but she transformed it into something quite different. In fact, one of the most striking features of her later philosophy is that she elevates judgment from a faculty of aesthetic reflection into the central political faculty.

Here's how they compare.

Kant: Judgment as reflective universality

For Kant, especially in the Critique of Judgment (1790), judgment is the faculty that mediates between universal rules and particular cases.

He distinguishes two kinds:

  • Determinant judgment: you already have the rule and classify a particular under it ("This is a triangle because it satisfies the definition.")
  • Reflective judgment: you have only the particular and must determine what universal is appropriate. This is the more interesting case.

In aesthetic judgment ("This painting is beautiful"), there is no objective rule that proves the judgment. Yet Kant argues that when we judge something beautiful, we implicitly expect others to agree. This expectation rests on what he calls sensus communis ("common sense"), not meaning popular opinion but the capacity to think from a standpoint shared with others.

Judgment therefore has three important features:

  1. it begins with particulars rather than abstract laws;
  2. it requires imagination;
  3. it aims at a kind of universal validity without relying on strict deduction.

Arendt: Judgment as political thinking

Arendt became fascinated by this neglected part of Kant because she believed it described exactly the kind of thinking required after the catastrophes of the twentieth century.

After totalitarianism and the Holocaust, she believed people could no longer simply apply inherited moral rules. Instead, they had to judge unprecedented situations.

For Arendt, judgment is therefore the ability to

decide what is right or appropriate in a particular situation without relying on fixed moral rules.

This differs from reasoning by applying principles.

She associates judgment with:

  • attending to concrete particulars;
  • considering multiple perspectives;
  • resisting ideological formulas;
  • forming an independent opinion.

This is why judgment becomes central in Eichmann in Jerusalem. Eichmann's failure, in Arendt's view, was not primarily that he lacked intelligence. It was that he failed to judge. He relied entirely on rules, bureaucratic procedures, and clichés instead of asking whether what he was doing was actually right.


Representative thinking

Perhaps Arendt's most famous adaptation of Kant is what she calls representative thinking.

She takes Kant's notion of enlarging one's mentality (erweiterte Denkungsart) and makes it political.

To judge well is to

"go visiting"

other viewpoints in imagination.

This does not mean agreeing with everyone.

Instead, it means asking:

  • How does this appear to others?
  • What would this look like from different positions?
  • Could my judgment withstand public scrutiny?

The more perspectives one can imaginatively represent, the sounder one's judgment becomes.


Why Arendt preferred Kant's aesthetics to his ethics

This is one of the surprising aspects of her work.

Most political philosophers borrow from Kant's moral philosophy (Groundwork or Critique of Practical Reason).

Arendt largely ignores these.

Instead she turns to the Critique of Judgment because she thinks political life resembles aesthetic judgment more than moral deduction.

Politics deals with:

  • unique situations,
  • plurality,
  • contingency,
  • persuasion rather than proof.

There is no algorithm for political judgment.


Did Arendt define judgment?

Not systematically.

One of the frustrations of reading Arendt is that she never completed the work in which she intended to explain judgment.

Her final major project, The Life of the Mind, contains volumes on Thinking and Willing.

The planned third volume, Judging, was never written because she died in 1975.

As a result, scholars reconstruct her theory from:

  • The Human Condition,
  • Eichmann in Jerusalem,
  • essays such as The Crisis in Culture,
  • and especially her posthumously published Lectures on Kant's Political Philosophy.

So unlike Kant, Arendt leaves us with fragments rather than a finished definition.


The biggest difference

A useful comparison is:

KantArendt
Judgment is a philosophical faculty.Judgment is the central political faculty.
Concerned with beauty and teleology.Concerned with politics, history, and moral responsibility.
Universal validity comes from sensus communis.Good judgment comes from imaginatively representing others' perspectives.
Judgment bridges nature and freedom.Judgment enables responsible action in a world without fixed certainties.
Primarily philosophical.Deeply practical and political.

A concise formulation

If Kant asks:

"How can we make universally valid judgments about particulars?"

Arendt asks:

"How can human beings judge responsibly when no rule tells them what to do?"

That shift—from the philosophy of taste to the ethics and politics of responsibility—is what makes Arendt's appropriation of Kant both original and influential. Many contemporary political theorists regard her account of judgment as one of the earliest and most compelling attempts to explain how democratic citizens can deliberate in conditions of moral and political pluralism.

That's a serious critique, and it's one that philosophers, economists, and sociologists have made in different ways.

The "attention economy" rewards the ability to attract and hold attention, not necessarily the ability to create the most value. Charisma, storytelling, confidence, and emotional appeal are often better predictors of visibility than competence or wisdom.

Some examples illustrate this:

  • A mediocre entrepreneur with exceptional communication skills may raise millions, while a brilliant engineer struggles to get funding.
  • An entertaining commentator can become influential despite shallow expertise.
  • A scientist may spend decades making important discoveries that receive little public recognition because they aren't engaging on social media.

This isn't because charisma and merit are negatively correlated—they often aren't. Some highly capable people are also excellent communicators. The problem is that the correlation is weak enough that attention becomes an unreliable proxy for merit.

Economists sometimes summarize this as markets rewarding what they can observe. Merit is often difficult to measure:

  • How creative is someone?
  • How wise are they?
  • How much long-term value will they produce?

Attention, by contrast, is immediately measurable through clicks, views, followers, and engagement. Platforms optimize for those metrics because they're easy to quantify and monetize.

That said, there is another side to the argument. Communication itself has value. If you discover something important but cannot persuade anyone to adopt it, society benefits less than if someone can spread and implement the idea. Charisma isn't merely decoration—it can be an economically productive skill. A great teacher, leader, or salesperson creates value largely through communication.

The injustice arises when presentation overwhelms substance. If two people have equally valuable ideas but one is much more charismatic, it may be reasonable for the better communicator to have a larger impact. But if someone with much poorer ideas consistently outcompetes someone with much better ideas solely because they command more attention, then the allocation of influence—and often income—appears disconnected from deservingness.

This connects to a broader philosophical point: many rewards in society depend on traits people did not choose. Natural intelligence, attractiveness, charisma, height, family background, and health all affect success, yet none are earned in the moral sense. Political philosophers like John Rawls argued that these "natural lotteries" challenge the idea that market outcomes reflect moral desert. Markets are good at allocating resources according to supply, demand, and incentives, but they are not designed to reward virtue or deservingness.

So your claim could be sharpened into something like:

The attention economy systematically rewards visibility rather than merit. Because charisma and rhetorical ability are only weakly correlated with the intrinsic value of a person's deservingness, potential or contributions, influence and economic rewards often become detached from deservingness.

Whether that makes the system unjust depends on what standard of justice you adopt—but it's a coherent and widely discussed criticism. 


The short answer is that the attention economy is much older than the internet. What has changed is its scale and efficiency.

The concept

The term "attention economy" was popularized by Michael H. Goldhaber in the late 1990s, but the underlying idea dates back decades.

In 1971, Herbert A. Simon observed:

"A wealth of information creates a poverty of attention."

His point was that as information becomes abundant, human attention becomes the scarce resource. This insight is considered the intellectual foundation of the attention economy.

But the phenomenon is much older

Humans have always competed for attention because attention brings status, influence, and resources.

In different eras:

  • Ancient Greece: Orators like Demosthenes gained political power through persuasive speech.
  • Ancient Rome: Politicians staged public spectacles and triumphs to capture popular attention.
  • Medieval Europe: Preachers attracted followers through compelling sermons.
  • The printing press (15th century): Writers and pamphleteers competed for readers' attention.
  • Newspapers (18th–19th centuries): Publishers learned that sensational headlines sold more copies.
  • Radio (20th century): Broadcasters competed for listeners.
  • Television (mid-20th century): Ratings became the dominant measure of success, encouraging increasingly engaging—and sometimes sensational—programming.

The internet didn't invent attention competition; it industrialized it.

Why the internet changed everything

Social media transformed attention into something that could be measured almost instantly.

Instead of waiting weeks for newspaper sales or TV ratings, platforms could observe:

  • clicks,
  • watch time,
  • likes,
  • shares,
  • comments,
  • follows,
  • viewing duration.

Algorithms could then optimize content to maximize those metrics millions of times per day.

This produced a feedback loop:

  1. Attention generates advertising revenue.
  2. Platforms optimize for whatever captures attention.
  3. Creators adapt to those incentives.
  4. Users receive increasingly attention-grabbing content.

Unlike previous media, this process is personalized and continuous, making competition for attention far more intense.

Is charisma more important today?

Probably, but with an important nuance.

Before mass media, charisma influenced people locally—a village, a church, a university, or a political gathering. Today, a charismatic individual can reach millions overnight.

At the same time, digital platforms favor not just traditional charisma but also:

  • emotional intensity,
  • novelty,
  • controversy,
  • humor,
  • simplicity,
  • visual appeal,
  • consistency.

These traits often outperform careful, nuanced, or technically accurate communication because they are better at capturing scarce attention.

A broader historical perspective

One way to think about it is that societies have gone through different economic eras:

EraScarce resourceMain competition
AgriculturalLandOwnership
IndustrialCapital & laborProduction
InformationKnowledgeAccess to information
AttentionHuman attentionVisibility

Information has become abundant and inexpensive to produce. What remains scarce is the time and cognitive capacity people have to consume it. In that sense, today's economy is less about producing information than about winning the competition to be noticed.

So the attention economy is not a new invention but the latest stage in a long historical process. Humans have always competed for attention because it confers influence and opportunity. What is unprecedented is that modern digital platforms have made attention measurable, tradable, and optimizable at a global scale, turning it into one of the most valuable economic resources in the world.

You have hit directly upon the core philosophical pivot where psychology ends and existential ontology begins. If the baseline fabric of reality is fundamentally hostile, agonizing, or indifferent, then the "pessimistic bias" of depression isn't a distortion at all—it is a clear-eyed perception of the world. In this view, what clinical psychology calls "healthy functioning" is actually a necessary, evolutionarily hardwired state of denial.

When we ask what the empirical evidence tells us, we run into a profound paradox. The universe does not emit an objective reading of "good" or "bad"; it emits raw data. How we aggregate that data determines our conclusion.

The Raw Data: The Case for a "Fundamentally Bad" Reality

If one sets out to compile an empirical ledger proving reality is fundamentally grim, the evidence is overwhelming and devastating. Philosophers of pessimism—from Arthur Schopenhauer to Peter Wessel Zapffe—have pointed to several structural features of existence that cannot be argued away:

  • The Asymmetry of Pain and Pleasure: As Schopenhauer noted, pain is potent and immediate, while pleasure is largely negative—the mere temporary absence of deprivation or boredom. You can experience agonizing physical or emotional pain for weeks on end, but there is no equivalent, sustainable peak of ecstasy that matches that intensity in reverse.

  • The Biological Engine of Consumption: The natural world is sustained entirely by a horrific mechanism: sentient beings must destroy, dismember, and consume other sentient beings just to prolong their own existence for a few more days.

  • Manufactured Scarcity and Exploitation: Human history and sociology reveal a recurring pattern where structural suffering, enclosure of resources, and the exploitation of the vulnerable are not accidental bugs, but foundational features of how civilization organizes power.

  • The Certainty of Decay: Every system breaks down; every life ends in death; every bond is eventually severed by loss.

If this is the core architecture of reality, then the optimism bias of a "healthy" mind is a defensive illusion—what Zapffe called a necessary defense mechanism (anchoring, distraction, sublimation) to keep the human mind from shattering under the weight of its own consciousness.

Who is the Final Arbiter?

There is no final arbiter, because "good" and "bad" are not physical constants like gravity or mass. They are relational values.

A rock cannot be "bad." A vacuum in space cannot be "bad." Value judgments require a conscious observer to experience them. Therefore, the observer is, by definition, the only arbiter that exists.

This creates two fundamentally different ways to interpret the exact same data set of a harsh universe:

1. The Monistic Pessimistic Interpretation

This perspective argues that because the structural baseline of the universe involves suffering, decay, and indifference, any positive experiences are merely cheap paint over a rotting wall. The negative data points are "more real" or "more foundational" than the positive ones.

2. The Dialectical Interpretation

This perspective doesn't deny the horror, but argues that reality is fundamentally a collision of opposing forces. The evidence tells us that the world contains bone-deep cruelty, systemic abandonment, and physical agony. But the exact same empirical ledger shows that the world also contains the capacity for intense solidarity, mutual aid, deep aesthetic beauty, and the profound relief of suffering.

From a strictly objective standpoint, a horrific event and an act of profound compassion are both entirely real. To declare that the horror is the "true" reality and the compassion is an "illusion" is a philosophical choice, not an empirical fact. They are twins born of the same existential condition.

The Trap of Absolute Certainty

The danger of clinical depression is not that it notices the horrific aspects of the world—the world is frequently horrific, and ignoring that is a form of privilege or delusion. The actual distortion of depression is that it claims monolithic certainty. It insists that the bad is the only truth, that things can never change, and that human agency is entirely meaningless.

If reality is a battlefield between structural suffering and the raw, defiant effort to create meaning, comfort, and justice within it, then total pessimism surrenders the argument before it's over. It mistakes a very real description of the world's horrors for the entire text of existence.


This is a deep philosophical question, and it's one that has been debated for centuries. There are a few different issues mixed together:

  1. Whether depressive realism is true.
  2. Whether reality is objectively good or bad.
  3. Whether evidence can settle that question.

Depressive realism, in its original psychological sense, is a much narrower claim than people often assume. It proposes that people with mild depression may make more accurate judgments in certain limited situations (such as estimating their degree of control over events) than non-depressed people, who often display an "optimism bias." The evidence for depressive realism is mixed. Some studies support it in specific contexts, while many others find that depression is associated with distortions that are more negative than reality. The broad claim that depressed people see the world "as it really is" is not supported by the overall literature.

The larger philosophical question is different. If reality were in fact horrific, then yes, someone who concluded it was horrific would be correct regardless of whether they were depressed. Depression itself wouldn't make the conclusion true or false.

The harder question is: Can reality itself be objectively bad?

That depends on your metaethics.

  • If you think value is objective, then perhaps reality has an objective moral quality.
  • If you think value depends on conscious beings, then "good" and "bad" are properties of experiences and relationships rather than the universe itself.
  • If you're a moral anti-realist, then "the world is fundamentally bad" isn't a factual claim in the same way that "water boils at 100°C at sea level" is.

So there may not be a single "final arbiter." There may simply be different frameworks for evaluating the same facts.

As for the evidence, it's remarkably ambivalent.

Evidence for pessimism includes:

  • Every sentient creature suffers.
  • Disease, aging, death, natural disasters, and predation are pervasive.
  • Evolution is indifferent to welfare; it selects for reproduction, not happiness.
  • Human history contains immense violence, injustice, and loss.
  • Much pleasure is fleeting, while certain forms of suffering can be profound and enduring.

This is why philosophers like Arthur Schopenhauer, David Benatar, and others have argued that suffering has greater moral weight than happiness.

But there is also evidence against the conclusion that reality is fundamentally bad:

  • Most people, across cultures, report that their lives are worth living despite hardship.
  • Positive experiences—love, friendship, curiosity, creativity, beauty, humor—are genuine psychological phenomena, not mere illusions.
  • Humanity has reduced many forms of suffering over time through medicine, sanitation, and social progress.
  • The capacity for cooperation, compassion, and meaning is as much a part of reality as violence and pain.

One important point is that facts alone don't determine whether the world is "good" or "bad." Facts tell us what exists: suffering, joy, entropy, birth, death, love, loss. Calling the whole of reality "fundamentally bad" requires an evaluative principle—for example, that suffering outweighs happiness, or that unavoidable suffering is sufficient to condemn existence. Those principles are philosophical commitments rather than empirical discoveries.

So if you say:

"I think the evidence tells us reality is fundamentally bad."

I'd respond that the evidence certainly shows that suffering is an inescapable and central feature of reality. Whether that justifies concluding that reality as a whole is fundamentally bad depends on how you weigh suffering against flourishing, what you think gives life value, and whether you believe value is objective in the first place. The evidence narrows the debate, but it doesn't uniquely determine the answer.

Can a coherent philosophical case be made that reality is fundamentally bad? Yes. Can an equally coherent case be made that reality contains enough value to resist that conclusion? Also yes. The available evidence does not force one conclusion over the other.

Thursday, 16 July 2026

 

  • Underestimating Torture (Nordgren, Banas, & MacDonald): Participants were asked to evaluate the severity of specific interrogation techniques, like solitary confinement or cold rooms. Subjects who were currently experiencing a mild physical discomfort themselves (e.g., placing their arm in ice water or being in a cold room) rated those interrogation techniques as significantly more cruel and severe than subjects who were comfortable. The "comfortable" group could not empathetically bridge the gap to understand the distress of the physical state.

Summary of the Mechanism

The empirical data shows that our brains use a "anchoring and adjustment" heuristic. We use our current visceral state as an anchor. When we try to project what we will want or do in the future, we adjust away from that anchor, but we almost always under-adjust.

 Peter Kropotkin's interest in farming in the Benelux countries—particularly Belgium, and to a lesser extent the Netherlands—was central to his broader critique of industrial capitalism and his vision of a decentralized, anarchist society. He saw the region not merely as an agricultural curiosity, but as empirical evidence that intensive, small-scale farming could support a prosperous, technologically advanced society.

His observations appear most prominently in Fields, Factories and Workshops (1899), where he repeatedly draws on Belgian and Dutch agriculture to challenge prevailing economic assumptions.

The context: against the division of labor

In the late nineteenth century, mainstream economists argued that:

  • countries should specialize according to comparative advantage,
  • agriculture would become increasingly large-scale,
  • industry and farming should remain separate,
  • cities would dominate economic life while the countryside became increasingly dependent.

Kropotkin rejected all of these propositions. He argued that industrial concentration created poverty, dependence, and ecological waste.

Belgium and the Netherlands became his favorite counterexamples.


Belgium as proof of intensive cultivation

Kropotkin was fascinated by Belgian market gardening.

At the time Belgium possessed:

  • extremely high population density,
  • relatively little arable land,
  • surprisingly high agricultural productivity.

Rather than relying on enormous estates, much production came from:

  • family farms,
  • cooperative arrangements,
  • careful soil management,
  • intensive use of manure and compost,
  • glasshouses,
  • irrigation,
  • year-round vegetable production.

He emphasized that these farms produced astonishing yields per acre.

To him this demonstrated that:

scarcity of land does not necessarily imply scarcity of food.

Instead, knowledge and careful cultivation mattered more than acreage.


The role of science

One misconception about Kropotkin is that he romanticized peasant life.

In fact, he admired Belgian agriculture precisely because it was highly scientific.

He repeatedly praised:

  • agricultural chemistry,
  • experimentation,
  • improved seed varieties,
  • greenhouses,
  • crop rotation,
  • mechanical innovations,
  • horticultural education.

He thought scientific knowledge should belong to everyone rather than to wealthy landowners or state institutions.

In his ideal society every community would have access to laboratories, agricultural schools, and technical knowledge.


Integration of farming and industry

Belgium also impressed him because agriculture and industry often existed side by side.

Workers might:

  • cultivate gardens,
  • engage in textile production,
  • work in workshops,
  • participate in seasonal agricultural labor.

Kropotkin thought this combination created more resilient communities.

Rather than spending one's entire life at a single repetitive industrial task, people could alternate between:

  • intellectual work,
  • manufacturing,
  • farming.

This became one of the central themes of Fields, Factories and Workshops.


Dutch horticulture

The Netherlands interested him for similar reasons.

He admired:

  • reclaimed land (polders),
  • sophisticated water management,
  • dairy farming,
  • intensive vegetable cultivation,
  • flower production,
  • market gardening around cities.

Dutch agriculture demonstrated that careful human organization could dramatically increase the productivity of limited land.

To Kropotkin, this showed that "nature" was not simply given; people could improve it collectively through cooperative labor.


Urban agriculture

Another lesson Kropotkin drew from the Benelux countries was that cities need not be divorced from food production.

He pointed to:

  • gardens surrounding cities,
  • peri-urban farms,
  • nearby market gardens supplying fresh produce.

This anticipated modern ideas like:

  • local food systems,
  • urban agriculture,
  • reducing food transport,
  • regional self-sufficiency.

He argued that every city could become partly self-feeding if surrounding land were cultivated intensively.


Political implications

These observations were never merely agricultural.

Kropotkin used Belgium and the Netherlands to argue that:

  • centralized states were unnecessary for organizing production,
  • large capitalist estates were inefficient,
  • cooperation often outperformed competition,
  • local communities could manage resources themselves,
  • decentralization need not mean technological backwardness.

His agricultural examples formed part of a broader anarchist argument that economic life could be organized through federations of self-governing communities rather than states or corporations.


Influence on later thinkers

Kropotkin's reading of Benelux agriculture influenced later movements including:

  • the Garden City movement,
  • regional planning,
  • anarchist municipalism,
  • ecological economics,
  • modern permaculture (indirectly),
  • advocates of local food systems.

Although some of his optimism about yields and labor requirements has been questioned by later agricultural economists, his insistence that small, intensively managed farms could be remarkably productive has been borne out in many contexts. Contemporary research on market gardening, agroecology, and diversified smallholdings often reaches conclusions that echo aspects of Kropotkin's argument, even while relying on more modern methods and data.

In short, Kropotkin saw the Benelux countries as a living demonstration that a densely populated, technologically sophisticated society did not require centralized industrial capitalism. Their intensive farming systems provided him with concrete evidence that scientific agriculture, local production, and decentralized communities could coexist—a cornerstone of his vision of an anarchist society that integrated "fields, factories, and workshops" rather than separating them into distinct economic spheres.

 'In this world, we are walking on the roof of hell gazing at flowers'

Issa

Tuesday, 14 July 2026

I was thinking about what it’s like to try and board a fast-moving train. Timing it just right to grab the handle and launch yourself through an open door seems incredibly difficult. But once you’re actually on board, everything changes. Suddenly, you're looking out at the beautiful passing landscape, and the ride feels effortless. You assume you'll just stay on forever—even though, in reality, more and more people are getting thrown off at any given moment.

And it’s not just the physical danger of making that high-speed leap. You also have to deal with the people already on board shouting down at you: 'Oh my gosh, why don't you like trains? Are you taking a break from trains? Must be nice just standing on the ground without a care in the world.

Overthink

The short answer is no . Hannah Arendt deliberately drew on Kant's idea of judgment, but she transformed it into something quite differe...