In that sense, Hannah Arendt was one of many Jewish, Christian, and
nonreligious intellectuals» of whom there were many, if not a majority, in Germany» as well as working people, whose spirit was dulled by memories of a deeply flawed national ambition and shattered personal expectations.
The complementarity between man and woman is a fundamental principle in Judaism, in other religions, in
some nonreligious intellectual traditions, and in the organization of society, as well as in the opinion of a very large majority of the population.