Examinando por Materia "Totalitarismo"
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Ítem From phylosophy to politics. An sketch of Hannah Arendt´s intellectual itinerary(Universidad EAFIT, 2006-11-29) Macías Álvarez, Sandra Paola; Universidad EAFITÍtem Hannah Arendt. Judgement and Action(Universidad EAFIT, 2006-11-29) Fonnegra Osorio, Claudia Patricia; Universidad EAFITÍtem Hannah Arendt: moral conscience and banality of human condition(Universidad EAFIT, 2009-12-21) Lenis Castaño, John Fredy; Universidad de AntioquiaÍtem Principios humanistas en el Estado Constitucional y la amenaza de la reacción antihumanista(Universidad EAFIT, 2021) Calle Pérez, José Manuel; Ramírez Echeverri, Juan DavidSince the 19th century, the ideals of the Enlightenment, the philosophical theory of Humanism, the Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen and the liberal revolutions have been strongly criticized by conservative, monarchical and religious centers that flatly denied the enlightened assumptions. Between the 19th and 20th centuries, European colonization and totalitarian states diverted these ideals into a systematic abuse of rights and power. Today, the debate is still going on, and the resurgence of the anti-humanist reaction and new extreme right-wing movements, in addition to the recent war events, suggest that the current Constitutional State, and humanism, its political and philosophical core, are facing the same threat of the past: the negation or deviation of the ideals that took shape in Europe during the Age of Enlightenment.