Being and Nothingness

a phenomenological essay on ontology

811 pages

English language

Published Aug. 1, 1993 by Washington Square Press.

ISBN:
978-0-671-86780-5
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OCLC Number:
28828503

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(3 reviews)

Being and Nothingness: An Essay on Phenomenological Ontology (French: L'Être et le néant : Essai d'ontologie phénoménologique), sometimes published with the subtitle A Phenomenological Essay on Ontology, is a 1943 book by the philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre. In the book, Sartre develops a philosophical account in support of his existentialism, dealing with topics such as consciousness, perception, social philosophy, self-deception, the existence of "nothingness", psychoanalysis, and the question of free will. While a prisoner of war in 1940 and 1941, Sartre read Martin Heidegger's Being and Time (1927), which uses the method of Husserlian phenomenology as a lens for examining ontology. Sartre attributed the course of his own philosophical inquiries to his exposure to this work. Though influenced by Heidegger, Sartre was profoundly skeptical of any measure by which humanity could achieve a kind of personal state of fulfillment comparable to the hypothetical Heideggerian "re-encounter with Being". In Sartre's account, man …

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In this conference lecture he threw at Paris in 1945, Sartre fights off common misconceptions about existentialism. I find his arguments perennial and on point. If I have to sum them up, it'd be somewhere along these lines. Existentialism is an action-based theory that transcends what it's often labeled as a source of disquiet and despair. It considers human existence antecedent to human essence.

Sartre stresses on Heidegger's abandonment and fuses it with atheism and liberty to conceive the human condition. To note that existentialism does not equate atheism. Its starting point is, however, Dostoevsky's "si Dieu n'existait pas, tout serait permis."
Thus, man's abandoned with a chaste future, writable with actions, and nothing but actions.

But how truly free we are if we can't have chocolate filled pancakes with Mövenpick ice cream for lunch? You tell me.

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Subjects

  • Existentialism
  • Existential psychology

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