Existentialism is a Humanism by Jean-Paul Sartre


Existentialism is a Humanism
Title : Existentialism is a Humanism
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0300115466
ISBN-10 : 9780300115468
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 122
Publication : First published January 1, 1945

It was to correct common misconceptions about his thought that Jean-Paul Sartre, the most dominent European intellectual of the post-World War II decades, accepted an invitation to speak on October 29, 1945, at the Club Maintenant in Paris. The unstated objective of his lecture (“Existentialism Is a Humanism”) was to expound his philosophy as a form of “existentialism,” a term much bandied about at the time. Sartre asserted that existentialism was essentially a doctrine for philosophers, though, ironically, he was about to make it accessible to a general audience. The published text of his lecture quickly became one of the bibles of existentialism and made Sartre an international celebrity.

The idea of freedom occupies the center of Sartre’s doctrine. Man, born into an empty, godless universe, is nothing to begin with. He creates his essence—his self, his being—through the choices he freely makes (“existence precedes essence”). Were it not for the contingency of his death, he would never end. Choosing to be this or that is to affirm the value of what we choose. In choosing, therefore, we commit not only ourselves but all of mankind.

This book presents a new English translation of Sartre’s 1945 lecture and his analysis of Camus’s The Stranger, along with a discussion of these works by acclaimed Sartre biographer Annie Cohen-Solal. This edition is a translation of the 1996 French edition, which includes Arlette Elkaïm-Sartre’s introduction and a Q&A with Sartre about his lecture.


Existentialism is a Humanism Reviews


  • Florencia

    Man is nothing other than what he makes of himself.
    — Jean-Paul Sartre

    If you're interested in Existentialism, this is the book you should dive into. You will find an energetic Sartre defending his views on many subjects. I was immediately drawn to one opinion in particular: existentialism emphasizes what is despicable about the world. I have read that before. Most people apparently want to read about beauty and bliss and puppies and all those things that are part of one side of our reality. Denying the ugliness of the world doesn't vanish it at all. It is there in all its glory regardless of how fast you close your eyes. Some authors have been labeled as violent freaks, racists or misogynists because they wrote about those particulas issues—the cruelty and selfishness that also characterize human beings—as if they were more than mere narrators. Some people mistake honesty with a defense of whatever the awful subject the book deals with. Speaking about it doesn't justify it.

    I have already wrote about Sartre's beautiful and accessible writing while reviewing
    Nausea. This book is no exception. I also found a subtle humor that made the reading experience even more enjoyable.
    Those who easily stomach a Zola novel like "The Earth" are sickened when they open an existentialist novel. (19)

    I am quite intrigued by that, now.

    Sartre felt the need to make a statement in favor of this doctrine. Why do people criticize it? Perhaps because they have read about it and know what it is all about. Others because they have heard about it... And that is much more common than most of us think. We tend to judge what we don't know. And in most cases we don't even bother in getting to know it. We judge and we fear. And we talk. That is why Sartre asked and answered the following question: "What, then, is 'existentialism'?" He then started by explaining one of the most important principles of the doctrine: existence precedes essence. That alone might sound confusing, however, Sartre's masterful use of metaphors and engaging prose made it all possible.
    In a universe where there is not a god, man is born empty without a specific purpose. He creates his own essence while making decisions based on the well-known concept of freedom. A thing every man and woman pursuits but few would be able to handle.

    Freedom without God. Without that sense of protection. Because we do feel safe if we are only acting according to something that has been decided before we were born. Every awful consequence would not be our fault. Nevertheless, in a world sans God, we become a little lonely dot with nothing above us but stars. And that's a horrifying thought. Liberating, terrifying.

    The author later affirmed that when man makes a choice, he doesn't make it just for himself but for all humanity. Those choices reflect what we think a man should be. Try not to feel pressured for the great responsibility that represents making choices that concerns all people in the planet.
    Choosing to be this or that is to affirm at the same time the value of what we choose, because we can never choose evil. We always choose the good, and nothing can he good for any of us unless it is good for all. (24)

    Debatable.

    There are certain words that people use to reach the conclusion that existentialism is a depressing way to look at the world: anguish, abandonment, despair. They are all related to what the author explained about man's existence in a godless world. A man who is aware of the fact that he is responsible for himself and for the rest of humanity. That kind of responsibility surely creates anguish, but it does not prevent men from acting. As for the abandonment issue, it's not as negative as it sounds. He simply meant that if God doesn't exist, then we are alone without excuses. We are alone and free. That thought led him to one of the most memorable lines of the book:
    That is what I mean when I say that man is condemned to be free: condemned, because he did not create himself, yet nonetheless free, because once cast into the world, he is responsible for everything he does. (29)

    Freedom has been defined as the absence of necessity, coercion, or constraint in choice or action. From a certain perspective, Sartre made his point. Without God, everything is permissible. However, the freedom (or lack of it) we have to deal with every day, the freedom that is far away from the abstraction of a concept, that entails earthly matters such as work, people, love, well... that is another issue. The absence of necessity is too rare.
    Can a person be happy while knowing that he is free because there is no God but, at the same time, not so free because he is a victim of some system? Just like there are several concepts of freedom, there are many factors that restrict them, making the man feel like a powerless individual immersed in a situation he cannot complain about without being replaced in a heartbeat.
    On one hand, we are condemned to be free; on the other, freedom is apparently nothing more than theory, something we experience by convincing ourselves that we are free while being constrained by political or economical factors (Locke explained it with much more precise words).
    Yes. There is an answer for every aspect of the term. We can be free or we can convince ourselves that we are. Birds still sing while they spend their lives in a cage—whether it is because of joy or plea, that is another matter.

    There is another interesting passage about signs. We often look for them while going through a difficult situation. Sartre skillfully explained that we are the ones who find a particular meaning in those signs. They may mean something different for everybody; in any case, said meaning is determined by us.
    This is what "abandonment" implies: it is we, ourselves, who decide who we are to he. (34)

    The last word used to describe existentialism was “despair”. That alone, yes, it doesn't sound so pleasant. Even so, by adding some context to it... still, it doesn't sound good. I had some trouble trying to digest this idea.
    It means that we must limit ourselves to reckoning only with those things that depend on our will, or on the set of probabilities that enable action... From the moment that the possibilities I am considering cease to be rigorously engaged by my action, I must no longer take interest in them, for no God or greater design can bend the world and its possibilities to my will. In the final analysis, when Descartes said "Conquer yourself rather than the world," he actually meant the same thing: we should act without hope. (35)

    From a practical point of view, the time we spend hoping for a result is time wasted. Sartre encourages us to act. To do something in order to achieve what we want and not to wait for others to do it for us; people or a superior being, whichever the case may be. Reality exists only in action.

    By the end of the book, there is a commentary on
    The Stranger. Do not miss it.

    If you are new to Sartre's philosophy, then this remarkable essay would be a perfect introduction.
    It's not only a book that sheds some light on the matter and rectifies many misconceptions, but also a book which gently encourages you to do some serious introspection. Shall we?

    Stop for a minute. Breathe. Take a look around. Look back; contemplate your present. Where are you right now? Are you the person you have always wanted to be?
    "Get up, take subway, work four hours at the office or plant, eat, take subway, work four hours, eat, sleep—Monday-Tuesday-Wednesday-Thursday-Friday-Saturday—always the same routine..." (77)

    Now tell me, I'm dying to know. Do you feel free?


    April '14
    * Also on
    my blog.

  • Ahmad Sharabiani

    L'Existentialisme est un Humanisme = Existentialism Is a Humanism = Existentialism, by Jean-Paul Sartre

    Existentialism Is a Humanism is a 1946 work by the philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre, based on a lecture by the same name he gave at Club Maintenant in Paris, on 29 October 1945.

    In early translations, Existentialism and Humanism was the title used in the United Kingdom; the work was originally published in the United States as Existentialism, and a later translation employs the original title.

    The work, once influential and a popular starting-point in discussions of Existentialist thought, has been criticized by several philosophers. Sartre himself later rejected some of the views he expressed in it.

    تاریخ نخستین خوانش: در ماه آگوست سال 1992میلادی

    عنوان: اگزیستانسیالیسم و اصالت بشر؛ نویسنده: ژان پل سارتر؛ مترجم: مصطفی رحیمی؛ تهران، مروارید، 1354؛ در 109 ص؛ چاپ هشتم 1361؛ چاپ دهم 1380؛ شابک 9644480236؛ چاپ سیزدهم 1389؛ شابک: 978964480232؛ موضوع: اگزیستانسیالیسم از نویسندگان فرانسه - سده 20م

    سارتر میگویند: (آنچه در میان آدمیان تفاوت می‌پذیرد، «ضرورت در جهان بودن»، «در جهان کار کردن»، «در جهان در میان دیگران زیستن»، و در آن فانی شدن است، اینها هم جنبه ی عینی، و هم ذهنی دارند؛ از این نظر جنبه ی عینی دارند، که همه جا هستند، و در همه جا باز شناخته می‌شوند؛ از این لحاظ جنبه ی ذهنی دارند، که با بشر زنده‌ اند، و اگر بشر آن‌ها را زنده ندارد - یعنی در جهان وجود، رابطه ی خود را آزادانه نسبت به آن‌ها تعیین نکند - هیچ نیستند)؛ پایان نقل

    تاریخ بهنگام رسانی 08/08/1399هجری خورشیدی؛ 16/07/1400هجری خورشیدی؛ ا. شربیانی

  • هدى يحيى

    أنا أفكّر إذًا أنا موجود

    هكذا راح سارتر وجاء يعرض ويفند ويناقش
    وهذه اللافتة لا تفارق يده

    الكتاب في الأساس ترجمة لمحاضرة من محاضرات سارتر

    وقد اهتم كثيرا فيها بالتأكيد على نقطة أن حرية الفرد مسئولية
    وأن الوجودية ليست فلسفة تأملية فقط
    بل هي التي تحث الإنسان على أن يصنع ويفعل

    والوجودية لا تحرص على الأمل كثيرا

    وليست ذلك سوداوية فيها
    ولكن لأن الأمل يؤدي بالفرد إلى التراخي وعدم إنجاز عمله بالجهد والمهارة الكافيين


    إن هدفي هنا هو الدفاع عن الوجودية ضد كل ما يوجه إليها من انتقادات
    فهم يتهمونها أولا بأنها دعوة للأستسلام لليأس
    لأنه ما دامت كل الحلول مستحيلة
    فإن العمل في هذا العالم مستحيل كذلك ولا جدوي منه
    وحينئذ تكون الوجودية فلسفة تأملية
    ومادام التأمل رفاهيه ومن كماليات الحياة
    فهي لن تكون سوي فلسفة برجوازية تضاف الي الفلسفات البرجوازية الأخري.
    إنّ الوجوديّة فلسفة متفائلة
    لأنها في صميمها تضع الإنسان مواجهـًا لذاته
    حرًا
    يختار لتفسه مايشاء


    فرق سارتر بين الوجودية عند المؤمن
    الذي يؤمن بأن الماهية سبقت الوجود
    "و الوجودية عند الملحد الذي لا يؤمن ب"فكرة الله
    وعنده الوجود هنا يسبق الماهية

    وشرح ذلك بقوله

    ونحن عندما نفكر في الله كخالق
    نفكر فيه طوال الوقت علي أنه صانع أعظم
    ومهما كان اعتقادنا
    سواء كنا من اشياع ديكارت أو من أنصار ليبنز
    فإننا لا بد أن نؤمن بأن إرادة الله تولد اساسا
    أو علي الأقل تسير جنبا الي جنب مع عملية الخلق
    بمعني أنه عندما يخلق فهو يعرف تمام المعرفة ما يخلقة
    فإذا فكر في خلق الإنسان
    فإن فكرة الإنسان تترسب لدي الله
    كما تترسب فكرة السكين في عقل الصانع الذي يصنعه
    بحيث يأتي خلقها طبقا لمواصفات خاصة وشكل معين
    هكذا الله فإنه يخلق كل فرد طبقا لفكرة مسبقة عن هذا الفر


    في البدء كان الإنسان وبعده جاءت جميع الأشياء
    بما فيها فكرة وجود الله
    وبذلك يكون الإنسان قد صنع نفسه أي أنه يصبح هو الحرية المطلقة

    إنّ الإنسان يوجد ثم يريد أن يكون
    ويكون ما يريد أن يكونه بعد القفزة التي يقفزها إلى الوجود

    إنّ الإنسان لن يحقق لنفسه الوجود
    ولن يناله
    إلا بعد أن يكون ما يهدف إليه م�� يكونه
    وليس ما يرغب أن يكونه
    لأنه ما نفهمه عادة من الرغبة أو الإرادة
    هو أنها قرار واع نتخذه غالبا بعد أن نكون قد صنعنا أنفسنا على ما نحن عليه فقد أرغب أن أنضم إلى حزب من الأحزاب أو أن أكتب كتاباً
    أو أن أتزوج
    لكن في حالة كهذه فإن ما يسمى عادة باسم إرادتي
    إن هو إلا الممارسة الطبيعية لقرار مسبق اتّخذته عفوًا
    فإذا كان الوجود حقيقة أسبق على الماهية فالإنسان مسؤول عما هو عليه
    وإذن تكون أوّل آثار الوجودية المترتبة على ذلك هي وضعها

    كل فرد وصي على نفسه مسئولا عما هي عليه مسئولية كاملة

    إ��ن الإنسان عند سارتر مسئول عن كل مايصدر عنه عن عاطفة
    "لا يمكنه أن يرد ما يفعله إلى غيبيات "توحى إليه
    ولكنه يؤول هذه الغيبيات الموحاة كما يروق له


    "والإنسان كذلك ليس سوى "سلسلة مشاريع

    إنّ الإنسان ليس إلا مشروع الوجود الذي يتصوره
    ووجوده هو مجموع ما حققه
    وهو نفسه ليس إلا مجموع أفعاله وهو حياته


    في نهاية الكتاب عرض سارتر لمحاورةفلسفية بينه وبين نافيل

    للفكر الماركسي VS الفكر الوجودي

    والحقيقة أنني استمتعت بها كثيرا

  • Jasmine

    have you ever noticed that when you are at rock bottom nothing makes you feel better quite as much as Sartre telling you that if your life is screwed up it's your own damn fault.

  • Amira Mahmoud




    سارتر مش عاجبني يا أم سارتر :DD

    حسنًا الكتاب عبارة عن تفريغ لمحاضرة كان سارتر قد ألقاها
    للرد على الانتقاضات الموجهة للفلسفة الوجودية
    فتحدث في الجزء الأول من الكتاب عن الخطوط العريضة للوجودية
    الاعتقاد بالوجود قبل الماهية
    وأن الإنسان ما هو إلا حصيلة عمله
    عمل الشخص هو الذي يحدد ماهيته ووجوده
    بل ويحدد وجود الآخرين أيضًا
    وكذا اختياراته التي ستشكل وجوده ووجود من حوله
    وضرب مثال الشاب الذي جاء يطلبه النصح في قضيته
    هذا المثل الذي استعان به في كل سطر يكتبه
    والذي المح نافيل إلى كثرة استعمال سارتر له
    والحقيقة أنه ليس الشيء الوحيد الذي كان سارتر يقوم بتكراره
    فهو على صغر مساحة حديثه لم ينفك يردد ثلاثة أشياء بمزيد من التكرار
    1-الوجود قبل الماهية
    2-العمل هو الوجود
    3-الوجودية مذهب إنساني
    وتلك الأخيرة صدقًا لم أفهمها، حاول شرحها لكني شعرت بالتيه
    كان سارتر هنا رجل ضعيف الحجة، مضطرب
    يبدأ حديثه بهكذا يهاجمون الوجودية، ويقول بعض ناقدي الوجودية إلخ
    ربما كثرة الانتقادات حوله ومحاولته الرد عليها اقحمه في جو مشحون مضطرب
    ساهم في غياب حجته
    وهذا ما سيبدو ليّ صحته من خطأه
    حين اقرأ أحد أعماله الأخرى

    الجزء الثاني من الكتاب محاورة بينه وبين الماركسي نافيل
    الأخير ينقد، وسارتر يرد
    ورغم أن الماركسية أيضًا فلسفة بها ما بها من الأخطاء
    ويوجه لها البعض الكثير والكثير من الانتقادات
    إلا أنني شعرت أن موقف نافيل وردوده أكثر قوة وإقناعًا من سارتر

    الكتاب نصفه لن تفهمه
    والنصف الآخر مكرر أكثر من مرة
    ولا اعتبره حتى يصلح كمدخل للوجودية

    تمّت

  • Rakhi Dalal

    Reading Sartre’s Existentialism is a Humanism has been as arduous as it has been stimulating, for while I did try to understand his philosophy, I could also acutely discern what challenged my understanding of his work.

    To begin with Sartre explains Atheistic Existentialism. He says:

    Atheistic existentialism, of which I am a representative, declares with greater consistency that if God does not exist there is at least one being whose existence comes before its essence, a being which exists before it can be defined by any conception of it. .... What do we mean by saying that existence precedes essence? We mean that man first of all exists, encounters himself, surges up in the world –and defines himself afterwards. If man as the existentialist sees him is not definable, it is because to begin with he is nothing. He will not be anything until later, and then he will be what he makes of himself.

    The first principle of Existentialism according to him is: Man is nothing else but that which he makes of himself.

    By this he places the entire responsibility of a human self on himself. In this World where “God is Dead”, we humans are condemned to be free. Condemned because we do not exist out of our choice but our existence is, to begin with, imposed upon us i.e. we are here first and then once we become aware of this existence, are only we free to make out whatever we wish to from it, any action that we will to, in a world which doesn’t offer any objective, guidance or consolation.

    Sartre speaks of abandonment. The ‘abandonment’ implies that since there is no God to lead the humanity, we are on our own. This abandonment may result in anguish or despair. Anguish, for being aware of the weight of responsibility of our freedom, for if God does not exist we are left without excuses. Despair, for being unable to accept things as they happen outside our control.

    While explaining existentialism, he strongly opines that there is no human nature because there is no God. By this he means, there is no conception prior to the existence of man, but that man simply is. So, he is responsible for what he is and what he makes of himself. Hence, man is defined by the sum total of actions that he takes and his relation with the world.

    Answering his critics, he further says:

    And this is what people call its “subjectivity,” using the word as a reproach against us. But what do we mean to say by this, but that man is of a greater dignity than a stone or a table? For we mean to say that man primarily exists – that man is, before all else, something which propels itself towards a future and is aware that it is doing so. Man is, indeed, a project which possesses a subjective life, instead of being a kind of moss, or a fungus or a cauliflower.

    Also:

    Quietism is the attitude of people who say, “let others do what I cannot do.” The doctrine I am presenting before you is precisely the opposite of this, since it declares that there is no reality except in action. It goes further, indeed, and adds, “Man is nothing else but what he purposes, he exists only in so far as he realizes himself, he is therefore nothing else but the sum of his actions, nothing else but what his life is.”


    It is here that the question arises: what about the people who cannot take actions according to their will? First, because they may not be free to do so. Second, even if we argue that this cannot be the case, [Sartre gives the example of a coward whose actions determine the way he live his life (cowardly)] still what can be said of people who are not even remotely aware of their freedom i.e. even the freedom to think, let alone to choose or act. In other words, who are not conscious of their will but accede to their circumstances mechanically. Why, aren’t we aware of the oppression of certain classes/ races in the form of slavery? Can we say for sure that when they didn’t oppose, it was because of only cowardliness, a fear of things falling apart from even the tolerable? Couldn’t it be that they were so numbed of the continuous oppression/ exploitation that they were not even conscious of their own will?

    Also, what can be said of the people whose minds are not as evolved as those of their fellow beings? Those who depend entirely upon a help to even go through their daily routines because they are not conscious of their surroundings or even of their body? What can be said of their life since it is not a life which is a sum total of their actions, because strictly speaking they do not act themselves for they cannot even think. Can we then conclude that their life is not a subjective life but is equivalent to that of a moss or a cauliflower? Surely, we cannot say this because it is not humane and lacks the virtue of kindness or empathy.

    The humanism that he(Sartre) endorses emphasises the dignity of human beings; it also stresses the centrality of human choice to the creation of all values.[1]

    But for Existentialism to be truly Humanism, shouldn’t there be an emphasis on right action, rather than just action? How one can justify the individual choices / action which can bring upon wars / anarchies in this world? How can then such individual choices be responsible for whole human kind? And the question which may still arise is who can justify what “right action” is?

    I think it is time for me to read Kant.

    Sartre, while publishing this work in translation, had changed the title from “Existentialism is a Humanism” (French) to “Existentialism and Humanism”. I wonder what his reasons were for doing so.

    Of course I, in no way, possess wisdom or knowledge adequate to justify my thoughts on the subject of Existentialism. Further, it cannot be ignored that Sartre was an eminent philosopher who influenced, and still influences, the views held on this subject by not only literati but also common readers like me. And I do believe that this work is quite important in understanding the philosophy of existence.

    Should definitely be read.

    -----------------------------------------------------

    [1] Source:
    http://philosophynow.org/

  • Riku Sayuj


    Existentialism is an Essentialism

    This is supposed to be the only one of his lectures that Sartre regretted seeing in print. This was primarily because it became accepted as a sort of manifesto piece and thus tended to reduce the original themes. Sartre repeatedly implies that he will not admit to this essay/lecture being considered as an introduction to his philosophy. Again, this is because treating an 'explanation' as an essential component (or worse a summary) of his complex system of philosophy did not sit well with him.

    However, by framing the core of the philosophy of existentialism as it applies to the most urgent walk of life - human freedom - he does clarify the core purpose of his philosophy: How mankind can live "as if there were no God." And this is extremely valuable for any student of his work.

    It also redefines Humanism in a very basic way and makes it primarily about human freedom, choice and the dignity therein. So the freedom that attacks the reader as an Anguish in Nausea is reframed here as a great and true liberator of the individuals' truest tendencies. This is absolutely in keeping with the core themes of B&N.

    He puts your future, your potential and the entire future of humanity in your limitlessly capable hands. That is the freedom we have to deal with. That is the responsibility of this humanism. It is central. It is unbearable. It is glorious. It is the only attribute of a human being. It is an essentialism

    And even if only for this glorious vision of Humanism, this small lecture should stand as an important monument. Any insights into Sartre's philosophy it might provide is only an added bonus.

  • Farnoosh Farahbakht

    اگر بخواهم این کتاب را در یک جمله خلاصه کنم از نظرم هیچ جمله ای رساتر از "بشر محکوم به آزادی است" نمی تواند باشد
    این کتاب به سه بخش اصلی تقسیم شده است. در بخش اول که مهمترین و جذاب ترین بخش کتاب نیز هست "سارتر" سعی بر این دارد که خلاصه ای جامع و کامل از این فلسفه ارایه دهد همچنین پاسخی دهد به ایراداتی که به آن وارد می کنند و در خصوص انحرافاتی که بر اثر کج فهمی آن ایجاد شده شفاف سازی نماید.در این فلسفه "وجود" انسان مقدم بر "ماهیت" اوست، بدین منظور که در آن پیش از اینکه انسان زندگی کند، زندگی به خودی خود برای او هیچ است; اما به عهده انسان است که به زندگی معنایی ببخشد و "ارزش" چیزی نیست جز معنایی که او برای آن بر می گزینید و در این راه بشر محکوم است به آزادی، محکوم است زیرا خود را نیافریده و در عین حال آزاد است، زیرا همین که پا به جهان گذاشت مسئول همه ی کارهایی است که انجام می دهد. بخش اول به لطف پانویس های مترجم تا حدود زیادی برای من که چندان با مباحث فلسفی آشنایی ندارم قابل فهم بود .مفاهیم این فلسفه در عین سختگیرانه بودن برایم بسیار زیبا و منطقی و ملموس بود و باعث شد به خودم، موقعیتم در زندگی، انتخاب ها وارزش هایم نگاهی دوباره و عمیق تری داشته باشم
    بخش دوم کتاب شامل پرسش و پاسخ هایی انتقادی با "سارتر" در خصوص اصول اگزیستانسیالیسم است که تا حدود زیادی برای من گنگ و نافهوم بود و بخش سوم که "آنچه من هستم" نام دارد گفتگویی است خواندنی با سارتر به مناسبت هفتاد سالگی او که در آن از وضعیت فعلی زندگی، اندیشه ها، برنامه ها، علایق و سبک و سیاق زندگی خود سخن می گوید
    در آخر با توجه به اینکه اگزیستانسیالیست ها به دو دسته "مسیحی" و "غیر مذهبی" تقسیم می شوند و در این کتاب به اندیشه "سارتر" که در دسته دوم قرار می گیرد پرداخته شده است،درخصوص جمع مفاهیم این فلسفه با "مذهب" علامت سوال بزرگی برایم ایجاد شده است که حتما به دنبال پاسخ آن خواهم بود

  • فؤاد

    تصویر جالبیه. اسمش رو گذاشتم: اگزیستانسیالیسم در یک دقیقه.



    نوشته های ریزش واضح نیست، گفتم با کیفیت بالاتر بذارم، حجمش بالا میره، ممکنه بعضیا راضی نباشن.

    تنها چیزی که میتونم بگم، اینه که ترجمه افتضاح بود. فکر کنم سواد فرانسوی مترجم، در حد سواد فرانسوی من بوده. شاید هم سواد فارسیش کم بوده. نمیدونم، خلاصه به قدری جملات رو بد ترجمه کرده بود که با چهار پنج بار خوندن هم نمیشد حدس زد که سارتر چی میخاسته بگه. راجع به نقطه گذاری هم که بگذریم. وسط جمله یه دفعه نقطه میذاشت، آخر جمله نقطه نمیذاشت و خلاصه هر جا علاقه داشت، از علائم استفاده میکرد.
    این تنها چیزی بود که راجع به این کتاب میتونستم بگم چون به خاطر ترجمه ی بد، نتونستم زیاد متن سارتر رو بفهمم.
    بعداً که یه ترجمه ی بهتر گیرم اومد و خوندم، این ریویو رو تغییر میدم.

  • Seemita

    [Please note that the reviewer is a new entrant in the school of existentialism and is attempting to grasp the building blocks. Hence, her inferences can be basic and occasionally, vague too. Those who have spent considerable time in this school can choose to overlook this little account if so deemed fit (although I would love to have them here to elevate my understanding level). For the more tolerant and sagaciously curious, I will go about my way.]

    Essentially, “Existentialism Is a Humanism” is a lecture that Sartre gave in Paris during 1945. By this time, many of his notable works like The Transcendence of the Ego, Nausea, Being and Nothingness, No Exit, The Roads to Freedom series, etc. had won him a fair amount of loyalists but had also ushered in a frenzied group of detractors. The major bone of contention of the latter was the repugnance, this doctrine created by perennially pushing the Man or the Individual, into wells of anguish, abandonment and despair. They saw this philosophy seeped in negativism, even romanticizing hopelessness.

    This essay was one of those communiques through which Sartre chose to dispel some of these misconceptions.

    To begin with, he describes the principle tenet of Existentialism as valuing human life by empowering the individual to make his choices and take actions and holding him accountable for the environment his action creates for himself as well as the human community.

    He states that there are two types on existentialism: Theistic Existentialism (TE) and Atheistic Existentialism (AE). And he champions for the latter. His mantra: ”existence precedes essence”.. Since AE doesn’t acknowledge the presence of God, there is no divine intelligence from which the essence of the Man (who is to be created), can be drawn. Hence, the Man has to essentially exist first and then, go about finding/ creating his essence in life.

    Sartre, then, tries to tackle the three primary accusations that bog down heavily AE’s neck.

    Anguish – He maintains that every action of the individual is not restricted to individual ramification alone but extends to human community as well.He gives this example: ”By undertaking to marry, I am committing not only myself but to all of humanity, the practice of monogamy.” Hence, this enormous sense of collective responsibility is bound to reign in a certain amount of anguish in him. This anguish is not palpable to any other person but is a battle of intrinsic nature.

    Abandonment – There is no God, no past point of beginning and no future line of reference. In such a scenario, the individual feels abandoned by good measure and is left with the only support of his own choices and interpretations for which he is, solely and completely, responsible. That he is condemned to be free. The tendency of blaming circumstances or making excuses of external forces is non-existent in AE.

    Despair – Since we are nothing more or less than what our will can afford, there is a sense of despair to limitations of such probability cloud. So, essentially, the individual has to act without hope of a certain outcome but act nonetheless in the best of his minds.

    Having soothed the frayed veins of the naysayers with his above constructs, he goes on to say that Existentialism is, in fact, akin to Humanism since this school of philosophy never objectifies human, always places the power in his hands and doesn’t treat him as an end. In being constantly in making, having the control of his life, making choices, seeking out an outside goal to project himself onto the canvas of liberation, he can realize what it means to be truly human.

    While, for a beginner like me, this essay has proven to be an effective harbinger to better understanding of this doctrine, I can’t help but have some questions pop in my head.

    Firstly, what merits the choice of Atheistic Existentialism (AE) over Theistic Existentialism (TE)? How is the fundamental of essence precedes existence (which is the manifested principle of TE) a bad thing? Isn’t the presence of an objective a trigger to action which is the main point of deliberation in AE?

    Also, if my decision is a collective commitment to the human community, then is my renouncement (or the choice of “not choosing”), a renouncement by the community too? Is there a concept of anguish and “larger” anguish here?

    At some point in the essay, Sartre says, ’The only way I can measure the strength of this affection is precisely by performing an action that confirms and defines it.

    Where does AE accommodate recurring acts then? There are many emotions or even events that have a streak of commonality. While taking a fresh call on an existing event, doesn’t the past experience form part of the set of probable choices upon which the subsequent action will be based?

    This one statement, which finds place in the later part of the essay, really baffled me:

    ”I cannot discover any truth whatsoever about myself except through the mediation of another. The other is essential to my existence, as well as to the knowledge I have of myself.”

    Now, if knowing myself mandates the presence of another individual, then there is a reference point, a yardstick; which is against the fundamentals of AE doctrine, right? How is this dichotomy addressed then?

    Alright, I am babbling in either my ignorance or half knowledge. But this essay had been handy in encapsulating the highlights of Existentialism in terse narrative, giving examples from routine life to simplify its heavy garb. There is a lot of reference to past and fellow philosophers like Descartes, Voltaire, Kant, Kierkegaard and Heidegger and reading them in parallel might bring about wider perspectives and clarity.

    [Thank you. The class is over. For those who are still with me, you love philosophy. Really.]

  • Saeed

    اعتراف میکنم که تا قبل از خواندن این کتاب هیچ شناخت درستی از مکتب اگزیستانسیالیسم نداشتم و آنچه در اینترنت و این طرف و آن طرف خوانده بودم تقریبا ربطی به مفهوم واقعی آن نداشت.

    کتاب حاضر از سه نوشته مجزا تشکیل شده: نخست متنی حدودا شصت صفحه ای است که سارتر آن را بر اساس یکی از سخنرانی هایش تنظیم کرده. در این نوشته، سارتر با توضیحاتی ساده و قابل فهم، اصول فلسفه اگزیستانسیالیسمی که بدان باور داشته را شرح داده است. توضیحات مترجم کتاب در این بخش (با وجود قدیمی بودن ترجمه) کمک زیادی به فهم متن می کند. دو نوشته بعدی شامل دو مصاحبه سارتر است که به نظرم با توجه به مطالبشان، تاریخ مصرف شان گذشته و حداقل برای من کاربردی نداشتند. به نظرم اگر همان شصت صفحه ابتدایی کتاب با طمانینه و دقت خوانده  و حتی دوباره خوانی شود، حظ کافی از این کتاب برده شده است.

    اگزیستانسیالیسم سارتر برای من فوق العاده جذاب بود؛ مکتبی بر اساس حس مسئولیت پذیری اجتماعی، اتکای به خود (نه دیگران و نه عالم بالا)، تلاش و تحرک فردی و خوش بینی به قدرت بشر در ایجاد تغییر. اگزیستانسیالیسم مخالف "گوشه گیری" و "راحت طلبی" و "ناامیدی" است (ویژگی هایی که بین فرهیختگان ما به وفور دیده می شود). سارتر معتقد است که پیش از هر کاری باید دست به کاری زد!

    تصویری که سارتر از انسان ارائه می کند دارای سه ویژگی اصلی است:
    1. آزاد است. یعنی در این جهان خودش تصمیم می گیرد که چه کسی باشد. هیچ قالب از پیش تعیین شده ای (مثل طبیعت بشری یا اخلاق یا ...) وجود ندارد. البته این متفاوت با انتخاب بر اساس هوس است. هر انسان با انتخاب خود تعیین می کند که علاوه بر خودش، دیگر انسانها نیز چگونه باشند (مثل یک الگو).
    2. تنهاست. یعنی کسی قرار نیست او را یاری کند. هر کس بر اساس مسئولیت ذاتی ای که دارد باید برخیزد و تلاش کند.
    3. خوش بین است. بدین معنا که در ساخت آینده ای روشن، همه چیز در دست خودش است و عامل خارجی ای دخالت ندارد و در صورت تلاشی درخور، قطعا نتیجه می بیند.

    سارتر به گفته خودش مسیحی نیست. یعنی به خدا باور ندارد. اما هیچ تلاشی هم نمی کند که ثابت کند خدا نیست. چون به اعتقاد او به فرض بودن واجب الوجود (یا خدا) چیزی تغییر نمی کند. درواقع از نظر سارتر "مساله اساسی بودن واجب الوجود نیست؛ مهم آن است که بشر باید خود شخصا خویشتن را بازیابد و یقین کند که هیچ چیز نمی تواند او را از خود رهایی دهد، حتی اگر دلیلی بیابد که بودن واجب الوجود بر او ثابت شود".

  • Mahsa

    هنگامی که دکارت می گوید: "به جای تسلط بر جهان، باید بر خویشتن مسلط شد" در واقع میخواهد بگوید: عمل کنیم بی آنکه به امید متکی باشیم.

    اون روز که این کتاب رو خریدم، به خاطر این بود که با مفهوم اگزیستانسیالیسم در روان درمانی مشکل داشتم و امید داشتم رسیدن به یه درک مستقل از اگزیستانسیالیسم، کمکی باشه برای درک بهترش در روان درمانی. حالا که تونستم بخونمش؛ دیگه با این مفهوم در روان درمانی مشکلی نداشتم و بالاخره تقریبا برام جا افتاده بود، اما مشکل اینجاست این کتاب رو خوب نفهمیدم.
    حتی حس میکنم اینکه بگم خوندمش فعل درستی نباشه، چون خوندن چندباره ی بعضی جملات هم گاهی برای فهمیدنشون کافی نبود. درنهایت اینکه ترجمه ی عجیب و دوری داشت و نتونستم با ریتم کلمات به خوبی ارتباط برقرار کنم. همین.

  • Mohammad Hrabal

    خیلی عالی بود و لذت بردم. در صورتی که به موضوع کتاب و نویسنده علاقه دارید حتماً بخوانید، در غیر این صورت نخوانید. ترجمه بسیار خوب بود و پانویس‌های عالی مترجم بسیار کمک کننده بودند.
    ********************************************************************************
    آدمی در زندگی خود به نحوی ملتزم و درگیر می‌شود و بدین گونه تصویری از خود به دست می‌دهد. خارج از این تصویر هیچ نیست. ص 52 کتاب
    اگزیستانسیالیسم را نمی‌توان فلسفه‌ای مبنی بر انزواطلبی و گوشه‌گیری دانست، زیرا آدمی را با مقیاس عمل می‌سنجد و تعریف می‌کند. اگزیستانسیالیسم توصیفی بدبینانه از بشر به دست نمی‌دهد. بدین سان، فلسفه‌ای خوش بین تر از آن نمی‌توان یافت، زیرا عقیده دارد که سرنوشت بشر در دست خود اوست. همچنین اگزیستانسیالیسم کوششی برای انصراف بشر از عمل نیست، زیرا به آدمیان اعلام می‌کند که امیدی جز به عمل نباید داشت و آنچه به بشر امکان زندگی می‌دهد فقط عمل است. ص 55 کتاب

  • Dolors

    “Existentialism Is a Humanism” is the result of a transcribed lecture Sartre delivered in 1945 responding to several critiques to existentialist theories. Communist detractors accused Existentialism of being a contemplative and bourgeois philosophy that led to quietism while Catholics condemned it for emphasizing what was despicable about humanity, which induced to a hopeless and pessimistic notion of human nature.
    Sartre presents his defense dissecting the concept of Existentialism in a very didactic fashion, avoiding technical jargon or abstract content and using illustrative examples to make his points clear to reply one by one to all the attacks with a well argued discourse in spite of the ongoing contradictions he was struggling with at the time.

    He proclaims: “Man is nothing other than his own project. He exists only to the extent that he realizes himself, therefore he is nothing more than the sum of his actions…responsible for what he is… free… condemned to be free… committing himself to life.”

    According to Sartre, the leitmotif existence precedes essence denotes the often misunderstood optimism of the existentialist doctrine, for it places the responsibility of “being” upon mankind, stressing the impossibility of a predefined “human nature” a priori and therefore allowing man to be nothing other than what he makes of himself. Man materializes in the world through his own actions but at the same time he is overburdened with his choices because he commits not only himself but all of humanity.
    Sentiments of “anguish”, “abandonment” and “despair” might ensue. “Anguish” appears when the individual realizes the profound responsibility and the consequence of his actions on a collective level. Sartre quotes Dostoevsky’s words “If God does not exist, everything is permissible” to address the concept of abandonment. As there is no human nature or moral values to ascribe to a priori, man is condemned to freedom because once cast into the world he is responsible for everything he does without having any values or code of ethics that can legitimate his conduct. Consequently, he is “abandoned” in his present to create a virgin future defined only through his own actions. As the realm of possibilities yet to be transformed into realities and the intersubjectivity of man’s existence can’t be controlled, they can generate hope, expectations and dreams which eventually end up in “despair” and disappointment.

    In analyzing the cornerstones of Existentialism, Sartre stresses the underlying contradictions in the accusations of its detractors pointing out that a philosophy based on action can’t be accused of quietism the same way that an unequivocal declaration of man as the only actor to dictate his own destiny can’t be labeled as a pessimistic view on existence, rather the opposite.

    This short essay is a very accessible introduction to Sartre because it is addressed to the general public making use of an instructive tone and a simple yet eloquent language, very appropriate for neophytes on Existentialism like myself.
    Although I can’t proclaim I fully comprehend the intricate web of reasoning behind Sartre’s viewpoint, the proposition of “freedom” as the foundation of all value, the transcendental belief that true essence lies in man discovering himself and the idea of a morality based on human beings taking responsibility of their own actions resonate within me.
    At the same time I find comfort in recalling Whitman’s saying “I am large, I contain multitudes”, so I don’t even bat an eye when my quixotic self rebels against a doctrine which discards ideals and dreams for not being based on real foundations or when the romantic in me cringes at art being defined as a mere aesthetic invention in continuous progress instead of the passionate expression of an artist’s understanding of the world.
    I have to keep reminding myself that Sartre’s world was falling apart in 1945 when he declared his critical defiance against all forms of authority in freeing himself from the weight of history and in urging a new generation to ponder and to reject dogma. I am made myself of many doubts and just one certainty: "the only way to learn is to question”. And that is precisely what I aim to do. Keep questioning.

  • Valeriu Gherghel

    O conferință de popularizare, care cuprinde toate locurile comune ale existențialismului sartrian. Transport aici un pasaj bine cunoscut din această prelegere ținută în 1945, cînd toată lumea s-a trezit brusc condamnată la libertate:

    „Existenţialismul ateu, printre ai cărui reprezentanţi mă număr, declară cu multă claritate că dacă Dumnezeu nu există, atunci există cel puţin o fiinţă la care existenţa precede esenţa, o fiinţă care există înainte de a putea fi definită de orice concepţie asupra ei. Acea fiinţă este omul... Ce vrem să spunem atunci cînd afirmăm că existenţa precede esenţa? Vrem să spunem că omul mai întîi există, ia cunoştinţă de el, survine în lume - şi abia după aceea se defineşte. Dacă omul aşa cum îl vede un existenţialist nu este definibil, e pentru că de la început nu este nimic. El nu va fi ceva decît mai tîrziu, şi anume, va fi ceea ce va face din el. Astfel, nu există natură umană, pentru că nu există un Dumnezeu care să aibă o concepţie asupra ei. Omul este pur şi simplu. Nu în sensul că este ceea ce se concepe el a fi, ci că este ceea ce se vrea şi ceea ce se concepe el însuşi după ce există deja - aşa cum îşi proiectează el să fie după acel salt către existenţă”.

  • Argos

    Uzun zamandır hakkında okuma yapmadığım bazı konuları gözden geçirme ihtiyacı duyuyorum. Bunu Nietzsche için yakın zamanda yapmış ve görüşlerimin bazı yerlerde eskisine göre farklılıklar gösterdiğini farketmiştim. Şimdi de bu okumayı “varoluşçuluk” için yaptım, hem de bu konuda en temel metin olan ve özgün ismi “Varoluşçuluk bir İnsancıllıktır” olan J. P. Sartre’ın kitabından.

    Herşeyden önce varoluşçuluk bir ideoloji değil, felsefik farklı düşünme sonunda oluşan bir felsefe çeşididir. Tek bir varoluşçu görüş yoktur, temelde “insan önce vardır ve özünü kendisi yaratır” gibi basit bir tanım varoluşçuları birbirine bağlar, bu bağlar içinde ise insan özgürlüğü, seçme özgürlüğü, bireyciliğin ön plana çıkması, bunalım, korku ve kaygı gibi duyguların tecrübeleri yer alır. Özgürlük konusu varoluşçular arasında öne çıkmaktadır çünkü bu konuda eylemleriyle uygulama içinde bulunmuşlardır.

    Bu kısa gözden geçirme okumamda esasen “varoluşçuluk” felsefesi ya da düşünce sistemine inancımın aynı olduğunu, sadece “başkalarını kendi varoluş nedeni hatta koşulu sayma” konusunda yani “kendisi ile ilgili bir gerçeğe varma konusunda başkalarından geçmesi gerektiği koşulunda” takıldığımı belirtmemde yarar var.

    Varoşçuluğun anlamlandırılmasındaki temel sorunun kavram ve tanımlara Sartre’ın romanlar yoluyla (Bulantı, Sinekler, Özgürlük Yolları vb...) girmiş olmasını, saf felsefik metinleri sonra bu romanları tamamlamak için yazmış olduğunu da bu okumamda farkettim. Tüm eleştirilere rağmen “varoluşçuluk” benim düşüncelerimde karşılığını buluyor.

    Kitaba gelirsek derli toplu bir kaynak kitap niteliğinde, bir söyleşi ve J.P. Sartre’nin hayat hikayesi kitaba eklenmiş. Sonunda da geniş bir kaynakça var.

  • Ismini

    Ένα βιβλίο που ξεπερνάει το "πρέπει να διαβαστεί" και πετυχαίνει το "μπορεί να διαβαστεί" από όλους. Αυτό και μόνο αποδεικνύει την αξία του.
    Τι πιο αξιοθαύμαστο από την επιλογή ενός φιλοσόφου να εκλαϊκεύσει τη θεωρία του για να μπορέσει να απευθυνθεί στο ευρύ κοινό κι όχι μόνο σε μία περιορισμένη ελιτίστικη μειοψηφία.

    Το βιβλίο αυτό καταρχάς δεν είναι ογκώδες κι αυτό αναμφίβολα αποτελεί ένα ισχυρό πλεονέκτημα για άτομα που κάνουν τα πρώτα τους βήματα σε τέτοιου είδους αναγνώσματα. Ασφαλώς απαιτεί συγκέντρωση, στοχασμό, ξεκούραστο μυαλό, προϋποθέσεις που θεωρώ πως ο μέσος άνθρωπος εξασφαλίζοντάς τες θα μπορέσει να κατανοήσει τουλάχιστον σε ικανοποιητικό βαθμό τις βασικές πτυχές που συνθέτουν την θεωρία του υπαρξισμού. Έτσι, ολοκληρώνοντας την ανάγνωση αυτού του βιβλίου, ο αναγνώστης είναι σε θέση να αποφασίσει κατά πόσο τον ενδιαφέρει να εντρυφήσει στον Σαρτρ και να συνεχίσει διαβάζοντας δυσκολότερα βιβλία του. Ωστόσο, ακόμα και στην περίπτωση που το βιβλίο αυτό δεν δημιούργησε στον αναγνώστη το ενδιαφέρον περαιτέρω μελέτης του υπαρξισμού, και πάλι έχει κερδίσει έχοντας μάθει και κατανοήσει τα κυριότερα σημεία αυτού του φιλοσοφικού ρεύματος. Επομένως, ο άνθρωπος που θα επιλέξει αυτό το βιβλίο, μόνο κερδισμένος μπορεί να βγει.

    Πέραν τούτου, το σημαντικότερο ατού του βιβλίου αποτελεί το γεγονός της συμπερίληψης αντιλόγου. Ο αναγνώστης δεν περιορίζεται στις βασικές έννοιες του υπαρξισμού, αλλά έρχεται αντιμέτωπος και με την αμφισβήτησή του κι η διαλεκτική αυτή προσφέρει την ικανοποίηση μιας κριτικής κι επομένως εν ολίγοις ολοκληρωμένης πρώτης επαφής με την φιλοσοφία του Σαρτρ.

  • Mobina J

    من از وقتی که با این فلسفه آشنا شدم واقعا راحت تر زندگی میکنم، پذیرش مطالب اگزیستانسیالسم به من حس استقلال بیشتری میده و به فردیت من کمک میکنه و علاوه بر این در تعاملات اجتماعی هم باعث میشه طوری که دیگران هستن رو خیلی راحت تر بپذیرم.
    به نظر من این کتاب خیلی خوب ترجمه شده بود و سعی شده مفاهیم این فلسفه به صورت مختصر و مفید به خواننده منتقل بشه.

    '' بشر هیچ نیست مگر آنچه از خود میسازد ''

  • Phil

    It is difficult to overstate the effect of Sartre’s L’Être et le Néant (1943) on postwar French culture. Although the book was, by Sartre’s own account, a technical work intended only for professional philosophers, it captured the imagination of a generation of disaffected youth, catapulting the author into superstardom and putting him at the centre of public controversy. Catholic conservatives accused him of corrupting the youth; Marxist revolutionaries of lulling them into an apolitical slumber, and just about everyone else of glorifying ugliness, negativity, and nihilism.

    L’Existentialisme est un humanisme (1946) is a popularization of L’Être et le Néant intended to clear it of these accusations. The Existentialism developed therein, Sartre tells us, does nothing more than to draw the logical consequences of atheism. Its central thesis is that “existence precedes essence.” There being no God, human beings have no intrinsic nature (ousia) or objective purpose (telos) to give their lives meaning. They must rather make themselves what they are and set their own purpose by their actions. In this sense, “man is nothing else than what he makes himself.”

    Sartre’s ontological views have important ethical implications. The non-existence of God, he maintains, entails the unreality of mind-independent moral values. Values are instead strictly subjective: To say that one values some object is to say no more than that one chooses it or is disposed to choose it on the appropriate occasion, and there is no criterion to decide what one ought to choose. Human beings therefore find themselves alone in the midst of infinite possibilities with nothing to guide them through an objectively meaningless existence. As Sartre puts it, “Man is condemned to be free.”

    Existentialism is unmistakably a product of its time. Sartre wrote in the mid-twentieth century when scientific advances, social upheavals, and armed conflicts had destabilized the traditional order of things and shattered narratives of human progress. Reading his work, one can practically see him struggling to build a coherent philosophical system from the rubble around him. As evidenced by his own awkward and unconvincing attempts to get ethics back off the ground, however, the project was doomed from the start. Try as Sartre may to convince otherwise, his doctrine is ultimately a philosophy of irrationalism and arbitrariness.

  • Steven Godin

    In this short book Sartre provides a clear overview of the varying aspects of existentialism, clarifying each while refuting arguments against the philosophy throughout, which leaves us with a well rounded understanding of the tenets of the philosophy. It's more educational that it is enjoyable, but then one doesn't read Sartre for the thrill of it. He composes his theory, shrinks it down from the massive and better in-depth Being and Nothingness really, so it's not a bad place to start for the Sartre novice looking for nothing too expansive.

    In short, in the eyes of Sartre, there is no God, we have simply been abandoned to our fate. That point however should not be misconstrued as that Existentialism is only about Atheism. It simply affirms that even if a holy being like God existed, it would make no difference to humanities existence. Human nature is not a self-congratulatory condition, but rather a fearful, uncertain, anguished and forlorn condition. Thus the real problem with our humanity is not with God's existence, but with man's own. Existentialism argues that man does not need a God so much as he needs to rediscover himself and to comprehend that nothing can save him from himself. The view is understanding alone makes Existentialism, not only profoundly human, but also optimistic about human nature and the human condition.

  • Leonard Gaya

    L’existentialisme est un humanisme est la transcription d’une conférence de Jean-Paul Sartre, prononcée quelques mois après la Libération. L’objet de cette conférence est, principalement, de dissiper certains malentendus au sujet de la doctrine philosophique défendue par Sartre. Autrement dit, il s’agit d’une apologétique de Sartre par lui-même, en réponse aux différentes critiques que lui avaient adressé les philosophes communistes d’un côté, chrétiens de l’autre. Les principaux points défendus par Sartre sont l’affirmation d’un non-déterminisme absolu de l’homme et donc d’une morale de la liberté totale et de la responsabilité absolue. En résumé : on ne peut pas ne pas choisir et on choisit toujours seul (voir exemple du jeune résistant) ; par conséquent aussi, on est responsable de tout ce que l’on fait (et de tout ce qui nous arrive !).

    L’impression générale que j’en tire est celle d’un texte simple, accessible, où Sartre s’exprime sur le ton de la conversation. Cependant, pour être clair, il n’est pas pour autant très éclairant quant aux positions existentialistes. Et, à lire la discussion qui suivit la conférence, il est assez évident que l’objectif de réconciliation avec le camp adverse (communistes en particulier) est manqué. Quant à la doctrine de la liberté totale, les mots de
    Spinoza n’ont cessé de revenir à mon esprit :


    Concevez maintenant, si vous voulez bien, que la pierre, tandis qu'elle continue de se mouvoir, sache et pense qu'elle fait tout l'effort possible pour continuer de se mouvoir, Cette pierre, assurément, puisqu'elle n'est consciente que de son effort, et qu'elle n'est pas indifférente, croira être libre et ne persévérer dans son mouvement que par la seule raison qu'elle le désire. Telle est cette liberté humaine que tous les hommes se vantent d'avoir et qui consiste en cela seul que les hommes sont conscients de leurs désirs et ignorants des causes qui les déterminent. (Lettre à Schuller, 1674).

  • Agnė

    "Man is, indeed, a project which possesses a subjective life, instead of being a kind of moss, or a fungus or a cauliflower."

    "Life is nothing until it is lived; but it is yours to make sense of, and the value of it is nothing else but the sense that you choose."

  • Nastaran

    مطالب این کتاب برگرفته از مصاحبه و پرسش و پاسخی با آقای سارتر در زمینه رفع ابهام و روشن سازی فلسفه اگزیستانسیالیسم می باشد. چرا که عده ای به اشکال گوناگون، برداشت هایی نادرست از مفاهیم این فلسفه داشته اند.

    عده ای آن را سراسر آمیخته با عزلت و گوشه گیری می دانند، که برای آنان نتیجه ای جز ناامیدی و گریز از زندگی ندارد.
    و دسته ای دیگر، این مکتب را بدلیل بیان اینکه "بشر آزاد است"، سراسر بی قیدی و عبث می نامند. یعنی به دلیل آزادی تام بشریت، تنبیه و جزایی شامل اعمال انسانها نمی شود.

    سارتر به صراحت بیان میکند که "این مکتب بدی ها را نشان میدهد تا آنها را دگرگون سازد". و این عمل صورت نمی پذیرد مگر با شناختی که بشر از خود به عمل می آورد.

    بنا به گفته ی او "بشر هیچ نیست مگر آنچه از خود می سازد". به عبارت دیگر، "بشر جز مجموعه ای از رفتار و کردار مفهوم دیگری ندارد."

    اگزیستانسیالیسمِ سارتر معتقد به "تقدم وجود بر ماهیت" و منکر وجود طبیعت بشری و واجب الوجود است.
    او بشر را وانهاده معرفی میکند. یعنی یار و یاوری در آسمانها ندارد و تنها خود اوست که راهنمای خویش می باشد. ولی ناگفته نماند که از دیدگاه این مکتب، عدم وجود واجب الوجود به منزله ی بی بند و باری بشر نیست. برعکس، اگزیستانسیالیسم بشر را مسئول وجود خود و بشریت می داند و بنابرِ این مسئولیت کلی، انتظار انتخاب های صحیح در زندگی را از تک تک افراد دارد.

    در ادامه، سارتر معانی و مفاهیم متفاوتی از "دلهره"، "ناامیدی"، "اصالت بشر" و "موقعیت" ارائه میدهد. و از وجود محدودیتهایی سخن می گوید که همیشه و در همه ی اعصار پا برجا خواهند ماند.

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    جالب توجه بود که سارتر تلاشی برای بیان مفاهیم فلسفی خود از طریق ایجاد لغات جدید نداشت. تمامی لغات موجود در فلسفه های پیشین را با مفهومی تازه بیان میکرد که این خود یکی از ایرادهای گرفته شده بر این فلسفه بود.

  • roz_anthi

    Μία φιλοσοφία που βάζει αντίρροπες τάσεις μέσα μας να κοιτιούνται κατάματα, είναι μια φιλοσοφία στην οποία, αν μη τι άλλο, αξίζει να αφεθούμε παραπάνω.
    Καταπληκτική η μετάφραση του Αντώνη Χατζημωυσή όπως κι η έκδοση συνολικά, νομίζω ότι συνεχίζει ωραία την προσπάθεια της σειράς «Τα Στοιχειώδη» που βγάζει το Δώμα και που μοιάζει να συμπληρώνει αναγνώσεις και προσεγγίσεις γύρω από το πώς να ζει κανείς στο εδώ και στο τώρα.

  • Ahmed Oraby

    الخمس نجوم لأول 70 صفحة (كانوا 70 باين) من الكتاب، بغض النظر عن لعب العيال اللي حصل بعد كده :D

  • Roy Lotz

    A friend of mine once said something that I found very insightful: “Western people are bad at navigating the difference between nihilism and despair.” I think this comment is right on the money. For example, in Schopenhauer’s hands, Hinduism and Buddhism are transformed into an extraordinarily pessimistic and tortured philosophy. This also reminds me of Sartre.

    I am hesitant to judge Sartre’s philosophy from this book. For one, it’s so short. And besides, it’s a popularization. Nevertheless, I want to offer some critiques.

    The existentialism in this book is essentially Dostoyevsky stripped of God. Sartre says so much himself: “Dostoyevsky once wrote: ‘If God does not exist, than everything is permissible.’ This is the starting point of existentialism.” That quote of Dostoyevsky's (from
    The Brothers Karamazov) has always struck me as strange. This means that Christianity was so central Dostoyevsky’s worldview that the absence of God entailed the entire collapse of all morality—even civilization itself. Apparently Christianity was still so central to the European worldview that in 1945 Sartre uses words like “anxiety” and “despair” to describe the human condition when God is removed.

    Sartre goes on to echo Dostoyevsky again when he says “Thus, the first effect of existentialism is to make every man conscious of what he is, and to make him solely responsible for his own existence. And when we say that man is responsible for himself, we do not mean that he is responsible only for his own individuality, but that he is responsible for all men.”

    Quoth Dostoyevsky:

    For I want you to know, my beloved ones, that every one of us is responsible for all men and for everything on earth, not only responsible through the universal responsibility of mankind, but responsible personally—every man for all people and for each individual man who lives on earth.


    Again, I find statements like these puzzling. In the absence of a universal, eternal law-giving God, Sartre proclaims that it is now we who must take up the mantle. Each individual must play God, and set the values for the entire human race. Not only do I fail to understand the logic behind this idea, but it strikes me as absurd on its face, since every person would individually be setting the standard for every other person. What’s that add up to? Nobody is listening to anyone else in this scheme.

    The existence precedes essence argument is a bit of Aristotelian rubbish. The idea, as I understand it, goes like this. You can explain an object like a chair by pointing to the design that the chairmaker had in mind, which you can call the essence. Thus, the chair’s ‘essence’ precedes its existence. But without God, humans have no designer, and therefore exist before they have any definition. They must give themselves their own ‘essence’. So, unlike chairs, we’re not cast in any particular mold, but mold ourselves through our actions.

    I suppose if this argument is meant metaphorically then I have no problem with it. Still, I do not see how essences could apply to inanimate objects that were not designed, like rocks. Moreover, to return to the chair example, I don’t think there is any such thing as an ‘essence’ of a chair—or any other object for that matter.

    Let’s say I sit down too hard and accidentally break the back off of a chair. I ask you if you’d still call it a chair, and you say “no, it’s a stool.” So what happened to its essence? Did I break it? Also, I had no design or purpose when I broke the back off—it was an accident. Yet now we’re calling it a stool. Did this stool’s existence, in chair form, precede its essence?

    Clearly, all this talk of essences is silly. In fact, ‘essences’ are not properties of objects, they are properties of language. Words have set definitions. We can call a certain object a certain word if the object has the right qualities. But this definition is external to the object, not something that inheres in it like an ‘essence’. To twist Sartre’s example, what if I used a paper knife to slit someone’s throat—something it clearly wasn’t designed for. Am I betraying its essence?

    People don’t have these core ‘essences’ either. Let’s go back to one of Aristotle’s examples. If Socrates was wearing a hat, we’d still call him Socrates. That’s because the presence or absence of headgear has almost nothing to do with our idea of Socrates. But if Socrates got in a terrible chariot accident and became a vegetable, some of us might say “that’s Socrates’ body, but not Socrates.” Part of Socrates’ ‘definition’ (i.e. 'essence') is his habit of going around asking annoying questions.

    Let’s move on to Sartre's ideas on responsibility and freedom. Sartre believes that, since we are all absolutely free, we are all absolutely responsible for our actions. Those who point to outside sources as explanations are acting in ‘bad faith’, since they aren’t owning up to the reality of their condition.

    On the one hand, I’m all for personal responsibility. But on the other hand, this clearly takes things too far. I don’t think it’s a coincidence that crime rates are higher in poorer neighborhoods, that corruption rates are higher in Third World countries, and that divorce rates are higher now than they were 60 years ago. Of course, if you get divorced, you are responsible. But if a divorcee pointed to the increased acceptance and prevalence of divorce as a partial explanation, I wouldn’t say they were operating in ‘bad faith’. That’d be true.

    In fact, I sense a bit of ‘bad faith’ in Sartre’s single-minded insistence that we are the sole determinants of our actions. His argument feels like it’s a retrospective justification for his beliefs rather than something he arrived at through dispassionate thinking—always a no-no for a philosopher. Plus, every shred of empirical evidence is against the claim that human beings are capable of absolutely free decisions. For example, I have political views broadly similar to my parents and my friends, and I don’t think that’s because I independently came to the same conclusion. To refuse to admit that wouldn’t be ‘good faith’, it would be childish.

    And, as I hoped to have shown above, Sartre’s thinking is deeply rooted in a Christian worldview—a worldview that was collapsing, but Christian nonetheless. Is he ‘responsible’ for the effect that this had on his philosophy? Or are we acting in 'bad faith' if we partially attribute these thoughts to the time and place that he lived?

    So, in summary, I found the arguments in this book rather weak. I’m sure
    Being and Nothingness
    is more convincing.

    If you’ve managed to make it to the bottom of this review, you’ll now be wondering why I’m giving this book so high a rating. Well, for one, Sartre’s a great writer. You can’t argue with style.

    What’s more, I think the kinds of issues he is dealing with are profoundly relevant to our current time. It is all too easy to do as I have done and point to cultural, historical, biological, and psychological explanations for human behavior. The world seems full of biological, cultural, economic, and geographic determinists. (For example, subjective thoughts and decisions play absolutely no role in Jared Diamond’s
    Guns, Germs, and Steel
    .) I absolutely agree with Sartre, that there’s something of bad faith in all this. We may not be absolutely free and absolutely responsible, but we’re certainly free enough to have to take responsibility.

  • Elham

    My first exposure to Existentialism is a Humanism was in our faculty book fair when I was the second year student of engineering. I bought this book and another book Hajj written by Ali Shariati. I was totally a blockhead. I knew almost nothing about literature, philosophy, theology, God and whatever else which wasn't science. All I knew was that I was a Muslim, growing up in a religious family and society, but I always wished to choose my beliefs by myself, I mean I wish to have some well thought and examined ideas based on good books that I needed to read. The very first step for a journey of self discovery was to find someone to help me understand at least from which way I had to start. I needed a motive force; an initial velocity or initial condition. But actually the most difficult part was that. To read an atheistic philosophy or a religious book in order to reinforce the basis of your beliefs. The latter was the one that I used to hear from people around myself. You should first read books about your own religion then read other kind of philosophies in order to critic them by your own reasons. Obviously, that way wasn't correct. If my religious thoughts were correct they shouldn't be changed after reading other kind of books. And now that I think about it, my situation was just like the man in that example of Sartre in this book who wasn't sure about which way he had to choose. And Sartre's suggestion was: "You are free, so choose; in other words, invent. No general code of ethics can tell you what you ought to do; there are no signs in the world". Even, I was free in choosing my guidance. Reading Existentialism is a Humanism or Hajj?! That was the question. It was not actually that simple. For a long time I felt I was a suspended particle, with no special orientation. A point in the Cartesian system with no coordinates with a very random and accidental motion.

    I chose Sartre.

    I chose him not that I knew him or the impression of a friend or someone else encouraged me to read him. All I knew about him was that he was a great philosopher of 20th century. His philosophy affected many things in many countries and my own region of world was not an exception. I needed to feel that I was "Free" . My friends kept saying "Do not engage yourself with Sartre, it will plunge you into despair." Indeed it did. It was officially the first time in my life that I was reading a book saying there was no need to consider God in life, it was extremely different from what we had "proudly" been taught at schools.

    Existentialism is a Humanism was indeed among one of top ten books which change my life. A new window. A new way of thinking. A new way of living.

    This is the third time that I read it and if I get any time I will read it again. Not that this is too difficult to understand, I think this book needs a general background of philosophy. Surely, I now understand it better that 8 years ago, but still I can't totally connect all the parts and come to one conclusion, for instance I do not know anything about phenomenology, materialism or philosophy of Marx.

    The first part of the book is a speech about Existentialism, then two Q&As that the first one still very philosophical and the second one is more about Sartre himself in his 70.

    I have already highlighted every sentence of this book. I think this is a precise explanation of Existentialism, a good start in order to read his other work "Being and Nothingness".

  • Chris Shank

    I have been interested in reading something by Sartre for some time, but was unwilling to waste my time with a meandering, depressing novel like Nausea (which I still might read one day); or a dry, 700-page tome (tomb!) like Being And Nothingness. To be honest, Nothingness seems hardly worth my time. It hardly seems worth anyone’s time.

    THAT’S why I started this little jewel. This book was a lecture that Sartre gave in defense of existentialism to his non-philosopher auditors. He was attempting to market his views as humanistic’ in nature, or, benefiting humanity in some way. Sartre broke the logic down to bite-sized pieces for the laity, which I think is commendable because there’s a certain amount of risk involved with diluting your ideas so that they can be understood. Sartre made clear this struggle: “Many of the people that interview me are not qualified to do so. This leaves me with two alternatives: refuse to answer their questions, or agree to allow discussion to take place on a simplified level… [but] We must agree to popularize it on the condition that we don’t deform it.” In spite of its simplicity, there are some meatier parts for the initiated, and Sartre’s method and value for disseminating his ideas among the working class is intriguing in itself.

    Sartre boiled down his ideas in the following propositions:
    1. Existence precedes essence. Humans are ‘abandoned’, are ‘thrown’ into their situation by forces that are beyond their scope of understanding or control, and can only define themselves moment by moment. “Life is nothing until it is lived.”
    2. Man is a situation. He cannot defined by his so-called destiny or pre-determined role.
    3. Man is responsible. In every act (‘project’), humans are creating a new situation for themselves as individuals, which means a new situation for society with each act. I commit all of mankind with every new act.
    4. Our situation breeds anguish: knowing I am responsible to determine my meaning, and to determine the meaning of mankind, that produces the ‘anguish’ of the burden that responsibility is, and the ‘despair’ of knowing we are abandoned to our own resources.
    5. Absolute truth is available, but is subjectively seized by realizing that truth is not ‘out there’, but is here—the “absolute truth of consciousness confronting itself.”
    6. Intersubjectivity: Subjectivity is not attained in a vacuum. A sense of individuality is developed, refined and reflected by community. “We each attain ourself in the presence of the other…The other is essential to my existence, as well as to the knowledge I have of myself.”

    Included at the end of this handy volume of philosophical pabulum is an essay on Camus’ “The Stranger.” This was very illuminating. Besides fleshing out more of Sartre’s ideas, it provided a great explanation to Camus’ work, and—something I was delighted to discover—evidenced Sartre’s own bewilderment upon first reading the book. He traces the line of existentialism throughout the story, but also exposes Camus’ literary talent. I feel like I understand the book better than before, and I have a new appreciation for what Camus was trying to impress upon his audience.

  • Momina

    This is a very accessible introduction to Sartrean existentialism. Some of the most elementary and basic concepts of Sartre's system have been explained in an easy, approachable way. Basically, Katie Holmes in the super-awesome Batman Begins sums up Sartre's concerns in this book:

    It's not who you are underneath, it's what you do that defines you.

    Yeah, that's basically it. Existence precedes essence entails the negation of any universal concept or idea of "human nature", and that when we come into this world we simply exist and it is up to what we do thereon that will eventually define who we are. There's a Janus-faced quality to this, though. On one side, it's pretty cool to understand that an individual can become whatever he puts his mind to as long as his actions concord. There are no born heroes or villains in this world, and nothing or nobody has any control over us whatsoever. But then the tricky part comes in when Sartre talks about "anguish", "despair" and on owning up to the consequences of what we do. That explains the word "condemned" in his oft-quoted adage: Man is condemned to be free.

    Anyway, I strongly recommend this book to all those who are interested in understanding Sartrean existentialism and its basic concepts. Before beginning the dense and heavy Being and Nothingness, this is a good book with which to get started.

  • Carlo Mascellani

    Poche pagine sono sufficienti a questo straordinario pensatore per delineare l'esistenza umana nei suoi indiscutibili aspetti di progettualità, responsabilità individuale e universale, essenza che può giunger a definirsi solo dopo che l'individuo ha infine scelto che far di se stesso. Straordinario.