Article

Willing and action

Details

Citation

Marková I (2022) Willing and action. Culture and Psychology. https://doi.org/10.1177/1354067x221097124

Abstract
Why did Hannah Arendt, in her book on The Life of the Mind, select thinking, willing and judging as the basic faculties of the mind in preference to some others which might be equally plausible? Why did she conceptualise these three faculties as autonomous, each being an activity with its own features, self-motivation and self-determination? If willing is necessarily bound with freedom, what does it indicate about the constraints of freedom in political actions? In this article, I am addressing these questions and attempting to explore them in relation to political psychology. In contrast to Arendt’s perspective, one can discern different forms of willing in political actions, such as those between minorities and majorities, in single individuals and in masses where willing is often displayed as a ‘collective will’.

Keywords
willing; thinking; political action; liberty and the construction of freedom; Serge Moscovici

Notes
Output Status: Forthcoming/Available Online

Journal
Culture and Psychology

StatusEarly Online
Publication date online04/05/2022
Date accepted by journal12/10/2021
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/34265
PublisherSAGE Publications
ISSN1354-067X
eISSN1461-7056

People (1)

Professor Ivana Markova

Professor Ivana Markova

Emeritus Professor, Psychology

Files (1)