238:. While there he continued to hold radical anti-establishment views, stating in a lecture that "The C.I.A. has infiltrated the National Student Organization. That means we are being bribed, we are being used, and we are no longer academicians any more." Later in the same lecture he insisted, that if "what the government says must be right, it must be spread, and no dissent shall be possible. If they call that consensus, then to hell with it." He argued that America was now "doing what the others (the totalitarians, the Russians) did all along." He died of a heart attack at the age of 71, in the apartment he shared with Arendt at 370 Riverside Drive, New York City. His wife
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we could be told what to do. They tried to tell us what to do on the authority of God; they tried to tell us what to do on the authority of science, and both no longer hold. We have to make up our own minds as to what we shall do and what we will do. That is the essence of freedom. It is not a freedom that is at hand. It is a freedom that has to be established, that has to be kept, and that has to be developed, or it vanishes like thin air."
263:; in a letter to Blücher, Arendt expressed joy at this, writing, "Yes, love, our hearts have really grown toward each other and our steps go in unison. These fools who think themselves loyal if they give up their active lives and bind themselves together into an exclusive One; then they have no common life but generally no life at all. If it weren't so risky, one should one day tell the world what a marriage really is."
322:. Namely, he saw science and Heraclitus agreeing on the claim that "there is a rational order of things that is also a natural order of things". He also distinguished Heraclitus from metaphysics, arguing that "Heraclitus, as well as Buddha, Socrates, Jesus, and all of the others we are considering here was an entirely non-mystical philosopher and also an entirely non-magical being." He saw
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very fact indicates one thing, and that is whenever something concrete is taken to be an absolute it all boils down to the same contention, that man is God." Although, interestingly, he placed God as the result of morality, writing that "there is not a single one, science, art, philosophy, politics, or religion, that does not have its root in the question of morality."
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Blücher came to reject both religion and science as sources of morality, and instead posed what may be interpreted as a classical republican conception of freedom, writing that "Everything we do involves an ethical and moral decision. We have to regain that freedom. We have believed for too long that
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to work and had to move frequently from hotel to hotel. Both were still formally married, but separated from their spouses. Due to the pressures of lacking citizenship and their marital status, Blücher would not marry Arendt until 1940, despite accounts reporting that they fell in love immediately.
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lines, writing that the "fact that at the very moment when man wanted to set a principle above himself and then failed to call that principle either God or the
Absolute (because both are allowed), but rather chose something concrete to make into an absolute (like human reason or what not) --- this
370:. Blücher is portrayed as a loving husband, who plays an active role in Arendt's life. He is also shown to be active in the social circles Arendt and he travel in, posed in frequent heated debate with Hans Jonas. He is described in the movie as having followed
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would later describe Blücher's political identity as a "true, hopeless anarchist." He is remembered as a philosopher, yet he "was an autodidact who had gone to night school but never graduated, a bohemian who until 1933 had worked in German cabarets."
430:"Scenes from a Marriage. Reviewed: Within Four Walls: The Correspondence between Hannah Arendt and Heinrich Blücher, 1936–1968 edited and with an introduction by Lotte Kohler, translated from the German by Peter Constantine Harcourt"
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Arendt, Hannah; Blücher, Heinrich, Köhler, Lotte, ed. (2000 ). Within four walls the correspondence between Hannah Arendt and
Heinrich Blücher 1936 - 1968. New York, San Diego, London: Harcourt
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whom he had first met in Paris in 1936. During his life in
America, Blücher traveled in popular academic circles and appears prominently in the lives of various New York intellectuals.
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and other German émigrés. Arendt was twenty-nine, Blücher thirty-seven. Both were fugitives from the Nazis. Blücher was considered a communist militant, thus he lacked the requisite
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as indicative of a need for the development of an explicit and rigorous philosophy of science. He furthered this necessity by the invocation of the deification of science along
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223:. He escaped without the necessary travel documents across the Czech border, the same route taken by his wife. During his time in France he became close friends with
374:"to the end". In the movie he is seen deeply in love with Arendt, despite the indication of mutual infidelities that imply a marriage based in some form of
310:, that science held a corresponding mindset which threatened first religion, and now philosophy. He argued that this belief, which he saw best displayed in
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378:. He is also shown as emotionally supportive of Arendt during the fallout from the aforementioned publication, consoling her on the loss of her friend
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The marriage would last until his death, however, would change in relation and normalcy over time. By 1952, the marriage was
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Blücher, Heinrich, Rösener, Ringo , ed. (2020). Versuche über den
Nationalsozialismus, Göttingen, Wallstein
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plays
Heinrich Blücher in the film which takes place during and after Arendt's research and publication of
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in 1952, despite having no post-secondary education, continuing for seventeen years, as well as at the
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Arendt and Blücher met in 1936, in a café along the rue
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and left the party in protest of its
Stalinist policies. He then became a member of a small
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Blücher was born in Berlin among the poor working class of the city. He was a member of the
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291:(1958). Blücher also coined the term "the anti-political principle" to describe
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Hannah Arendt: For Love of the World: Young-Bruehl, Elisabeth: 9780300105889
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was later buried alongside him at Bard
College Cemetery.
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The Axis Grand
Strategy: Blueprints for the Total War
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Blücher encouraged his wife to become involved with
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Communist Party of Germany (Opposition) politicians
275:and political theory, though ultimately her use of
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299:— a term taken up both by Arendt and
662:"In der ehelichen Gedankenwerkstatt"
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738:20th-century German philosophers
633:"Description of An Average Life"
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183:. He was the second husband of
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511:. Bard College. Archived from
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282:The Origins of Totalitarianism
236:New School for Social Research
199:until 1928, but soon rejected
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618:"Hannah Arendt (2012) - IMDb"
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597:"Welcome - Bluecher Archive"
567:"Welcome - Bluecher Archive"
461:"Welcome - Bluecher Archive"
434:The New York Review of Books
316:Science and the Modern World
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166:the anti-political principle
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428:Elon, Amos (5 July 2001).
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209:Communist Party Opposition
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367:Eichmann in Jerusalem
328:uncertainty principle
151:philosophy of history
758:Bard College faculty
357:Hannah Arendt (film)
295:'s destruction of a
723:Writers from Berlin
664:. Der Tagesspiegel.
547:Arendt in Jerusalem
491:"HEINRICH BLUECHER"
297:space of resistance
288:The Human Condition
763:Polyamorous people
631:Heinrich Blücher.
515:on 11 January 2014
509:"Bluecher Archive"
497:. 2 November 1970.
495:The New York Times
471:on 6 December 2020
343:In popular culture
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519:11 January
402:References
324:Heisenberg
320:Heraclitus
50:1899-01-29
376:polyamory
277:Karl Marx
201:Stalinism
191:Biography
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640:bard.edu
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147:theology
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