LABOR


Labor is the activity through which life sustains and reproduces itself. It includes the ordinary and recurring tasks that nourish our bodies, care for our families, maintain our homes, and preserve the conditions upon which human existence depends.

Different from work, which creates durable things, and action, which initiates new beginnings through speech and public engagement, labor is bound to the rhythms of life itself. Meals must be prepared again. Children must be cared for again. Gardens must be tended again. The products of labor are often consumed as quickly as they are produced, leaving little behind except for the possibility of continuing life. For this reason, labor is not always easy to notice. It rarely appears as a monument or achievement. Yet throughout human history and still today, every institution, economy, and civilization has depended upon it. Labor reminds us that human beings are not self-sufficient creatures. We survive through relationships of care, maintenance, and mutual dependence.

Far from being a lesser form of activity, labor reveals one of the deepest truths of human existence: that life is a gift that must be continually received, sustained, and shared. Labor is the ongoing work of participating in that gift.

  • Hellenistic philosophy is the body of thought that emerged in Ancient Greece during the 6th to 4th centuries BCE, focusing on questions about existence, knowledge, ethics, and the nature of the universe. It marks a shift from mythological explanations of the world to rational inquiry and logical reasoning. Prominent philosophers such as Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle philosophized concepts like democracy, justice, virtue, the nature of knowledge, and the role of reason. Their ideas set the stage for centuries of intellectual development and remain crucial in contemporary debates about ethics, society, and human existence.

  • In ancient Greece, to be free meant to have the autonomy and leisure to participate in public life, including intellectual and philosophical pursuits, without being bound by the necessities of labor or servitude. Freedom was largely defined by a person’s ability to engage in the political, social, and intellectual spheres of society, especially through the exercise of reason and self-determination. Free citizens were those who could afford to live outside the constraints of labor in order to devote themselves to philosophical contemplation, civic participation, and the cultivation of virtue. This freedom was, therefore, reserved for a select few, and women, slaves, and non-citizens were not included in the privileges and responsibilities of free life.

  • Ancient Greek philosophers like Plato and Aristotle believed that philosophy, as the highest form of human activity, was reserved for those free from the demands of biological life—matters of labor and survival. This view excluded anyone bound to cycles of necessity, which meant that women, and particularly mothers, could not be philosophers since they were confined to the necessities of domestic labor. This early precedent in Greek philosophy set the capstone for a tradition of marginalizing those whose lives were rooted in rhythms of survival by limiting their participation in matters of philosophy.

  • In ancient Greece, as in the early days of America, enslaved people were kept entirely outside the realm of intellectual and philosophical life As individuals bound to the necessities of survival, laborers were considered incapable of participating in higher pursuits of thinking, which were reserved for free citizens. Because they were excluded from reading, writing, and discussing things like virtue, democracy, and beauty, the status of laborers as property rather than persons was reinforced. The marginalized status of “non-philosophers” thus became ever more deeply entrenched in the Greek philosophical tradition.