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Lanier Anderson, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Stanford
University
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| What
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Being and
Nothingness, the for-itself and the in-itself, bad faith, and the
existential predicament; these Existentialist concepts were central to
the philosophical scene in Europe and America after World War II. Join
the Philosophers as they examine the ideas of Existentialism.
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Notes
Existentialism
is the idea that existence precedes essence. Our guest, Lanier Anderson
presents one way to look at this is by comparing a cutting knife with
the human situation. The knife has its essence before it is ever
manufactured-- it is for cutting. However, a human does not have any
specific purpose or meaning before he comes into existence. Jean-Paul
Sartre originally defined the word existentialism, and applied it to
lots of people who never knew they were existentialists and who held a
range of conflicting ideas on a variety of topics, the existence of god
being one such debated topic.
Lanier states that the seventeen-year-old self in each of us is
attracted to existentialism because there is a certain amount of
freedom that we have in this philosophy. The essential idea is that we
are whatever we make ourselves, that nothing about our essence is given
to us. Certainly we have a facticity about us- essential aspects of our
existence given to us in terms of our biological constraints- but
nothing that really defines us. Lanier argues that this facticity as a
whole will interact with your life projects, but you will have chosen
those projects, which then gives the meaning to those things. From the
point of view of the individual, existentialism takes nothing for
granted and does not believe any mandates about human nature have been
handed down to people. Individuals have to create meaning for and
define themselves, Each person's own human nature will be dictated by
the actions he pursues.
Existentialism is a very influential philosophy that went through
periods where it greatly affected politics and pop-culture, and is
still very popular in certain circles. It is often a difficult
philosophy to understand as well. John notes that there is so much
terminology like the for-itself, the in-itself, and other
existentialist ideas, that Sarte outlined all of these concepts in what
amounts to eight hundred pages of translations.
- Pauli
Stryker the Roving Philosophical Reporter
(Seek to 04:26): Stryker addresses the intersection of psychotherapy
and philosophy, specifically with father and son existentialist
psychotherapists. They look at how existentialism can be useful in
psychiatry, and how the issues people desire to address in
psychotherapy are often of an existential nature, like life, death, and
meaning.
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