A Homeless Mind, as represented by sociologists keen to theorize upon the effects of the emotional and social displacements wrought by what is still called Modernity began, some might argue, with the Industrial Revolution. These thinkers see Homelessness as an absence of stable social structures that encourage belonging, which becomes a rootless anxiety where feeling safe doesn't happen. They go on to recommend a range of solutions designed around the idea that a mind being unhomed produces an unhealthy separation of public from private life that results in an alienation, an absence of whole hearted commitment to a set of "cultural norms."
It's yet one more version of a society wide ennui which apparently can also result from a surfeit of Postmodern Ironic Metaphysical Stress on the symbolic order that results in something like Truth being placed bang next to Probably Bullshit and Aren't I Clever for pointing it out.
And here I am still wandering what the heroine Hannah Arendt at the age of 18 ever saw in a loving relationship with a grim looking 35 year old married Martin Heidegger who already had his horrible mustache. None of my business! But, there are things in life that linger, and it's not just the upsetting image of Heidegger porking Arendt when I'm pretty sure that in the 1920's Heidelberg University had a boys swimming team.
Hannah's PhD thesis was titled: On the Concept of Love in the Thought of Saint Augustine: An Attempt at a Philosophical Interpretation. Or, if you prefer the simplicity of Love and Saint Augustine, and go ahead just try to ignore the flashing red lights in your homeless soul as you struggle with Love and Martin. Would that it was just physical. At the time she thought him a new prince of knowledge.
It's possible to take these unhinged moments of drifting in emptiness to the mental health professionals who would be only too happy to reinterpret a "Cultural Norm" so that I might be considered as engaged in a perfectly natural expression of entangled emotions running amok through a delicate psyche. You see, as with so many others, I like my Heroines to man the barricades, point to the horizon and sing about watering the fields with the impure blood of our enemies and if she can roll her r's a little like Marie Mathieu, I shall be as putty. And like you, I don't want my heroines to tell me in a German accent that it's all my fault for not thinking.
Hannah's Love and Saint Augustine suffers when reduced by the passionless English language. Amor Mundi, love for the world requires footnotes aplenty. First of all Amor means directing the will toward, it's nothing to do with following a pair of high heels down a corridor. Augustine of Hippo's grasp of Amor Mundi, his love of the world, something Augustine regularly engaged in, wasn't a love that God encouraged. Love of the world was very much why people went to hell and had to spend the great majority of their waking hours feeling guilty. Same with Amor Sui, loving yourself. There was just too much of it, me-me-me all over the place. For Augustine what you needed was to have a whole lot of Amor Dei, loving God with all your heart and mind and body. It was that simple. Eternal life. A bit boring. But nothing to feel guilty about for ever and ever amen.
For Augustine the world was a temporary illusion and how you managed it determined your position in the next life. It was that sort of game.
For Hannah, Augustine's error was to devalue the public world, the shared world and human life within it. The public world, the political world had been cast into the firmament by Saint Augustine. Hannah, for her part sought a redemption for the world, and her point was, that the ethical commitments such a redemption would require, needed us to love the world for what is.