Hannah Arendt, in the chapter VI of The human condition, while understanding the active life in the context of the transformations effected by modernity, especially those related to the glorification of the sciences as an attempt to establish a new worldview in which the affairs of the public domain are debased, affirms that Renaissance love for Earth and the world was the first victim of the process of alienation of modern man. In her conception, the modern era not only did not give importance to the efforts of civic humanists in favor of the valorization of active life and the establishment of civic principles that would mark for centuries the demands of institution of the politics, but also conceived other conditions that cooled what had...