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Simone Weil: The Revolutionary Mystic on Affliction, Attention, and the Need for Roots
Episode 1585

Simone Weil: The Revolutionary Mystic on Affliction, Attention, and the Need for Roots

pplpod · pplpod

January 14, 202655m 45s

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Show Notes

In this episode of pplpod, we explore the intense life and uncompromising philosophy of Simone Weil (1909–1943), a figure Albert Camus once called "the only great spirit of our times". A French philosopher, mystic, and political activist who died at the age of 34, Weil’s legacy is defined by her radical empathy and her concept of "decreation"—the undoing of the self to make room for truth.

We trace Weil’s journey from her youth as the "Red Virgin"—a radical teacher and trade unionist—to her time working on factory floors to directly experience the "affliction" (malheur) of the working class. We discuss her brief, clumsy, yet courageous participation in the Spanish Civil War with the anarchist Durruti Column, and her eventual work for the French Resistance in London.

Key topics covered in this episode include:

  • The Philosophy of Attention: Why Weil believed that the capacity to truly pay attention to a sufferer is a "miracle" and the rarest form of generosity.
  • Gravity and Grace: Her dualistic view of the world where "gravity" pulls us toward selfishness and force, while "grace" offers a counter-balance of light and justice.
  • Roots vs. Uprootedness: Her diagnosis of modern spiritual alienation in The Need for Roots, where she argues that connection to community and the past is a vital need of the human soul.
  • The Christian Outsider: Her mystical encounters in Assisi and her refusal of baptism, choosing to remain on the threshold of the Church out of solidarity with "outsiders" and non-believers.

Finally, we examine the controversy surrounding her premature death, ruled a suicide by starvation, as she restricted her food intake in solidarity with those living in Nazi-occupied France. Join us for a deep dive into the mind of a thinker who lived her philosophy until the very end.