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Title: Philosophy/Continental Philosophy/Existentialism - The Philosophy of Existentialism Existentialism at Adventures in Philosophy, a section of The Radical Academy.
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RECENT PHILOSOPHY: The Philosophy of Existentialism Homepage Newsletter Search Updates About Adler Dolhenty <b>Adventures</b> Philosophers Critiques Glossary Quotations Mini-courses Aquinas Essays Philosophy Politics Religion Education Science Media FAQ Ask Guestbook Forum Bookstore Emporium Newsstand Calendar Subscribe Feedback Tell a friend Votecaster Cartoons Adventures in Philosophy RECENT PHILOSOPHY Select a Category... 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German Existentialism is represented by three thinkers: Barth, Heidegger, and Jaspers. Their common source of inspiration is Kierkegaard's thought, of which there was revival in Germany shortly after World War I. Heidegger and Jaspers are also dependent upon some significant motives found in the writings of Nietzsche. Heidegger felt, in addition, the influence of his teacher, Husserl. Elsewhere On the Internet More about Existentialism Existential Frames - A Primer to Existentialism The Realm of Existentialism   Sören Kierkegaard (1813-1855) The Dane Sören Kierkegaard (picture) gave an account of his own life in his writings. His is a drama of a soul tormented to the point of desperation by its consciousness of sin. Because of this sense of desperation, the soul abandons itself to God and in God finds its salvation. The predominant motives of Kierkegaard's thought may be summed up as follows: To exist as an individual, it is necessary to be withdrawn from the entire world. The individual then is aware of himself -- that he exists -- and this is the greatest and most terrible thing. Indeed, on one hand, the individual recognizes that he is created by God, and hence that he comes from nothing. But at the same time this is the most terrible thing, for to exist -- as the etymology of the word indicates -- is "to stand out," "to emerge from"; the finite existent being is detached from God. Thus I must recognize that my existence denotes a detachment, an opposition to God. In consequence of this, my existence is in itself a mystery: on the one hand I cannot be non-existent, and on the other, my existence is bathed in sin; I exist, and I am necessarily a sinner. (Kierkegaard, as a Protestant, accepts the doctrine of Luther that man, inconsequence of the original fall, is essentially a sinner.) The consciousness of this contradiction causes anguish, and anguish ends in despair -- the individual accepts existence as a mystery which he cannot hope to fathom. But because of the coincidence of opposites, from despair rises faith, and faith gives the individual the hope of redemption by means of grace. I abandon myself to the grace of God; I pray, and the prayer gives me the "pre-sentiment" that time will be changed into eternity and death into life. In The Radical Academy Books by and about Soren Kierkegaard Essay: Natural Sciences, by Soren Kierkegaard Essay: God's Existence Cannot Be Proved, by Soren Kierkegaard Elsewhere On the Internet More about Kierkegaard D. Anthony Storm's Website on Kierkegaard Provocations: Spiritual Writings of Søren Kierkegaard   Karl Barth (1886-1968) Theory of the Theological Crisis Karl Barth (picture), in his Commentary on the Epistle of St. Paul to the Romans, centers his attention on the question of the opposition between the finite and the infinite, which was the basic point of Kierkegaard's writings. The problem Barth tries to solve is this: God is in heaven, and man is on earth. What is the relation between such a God and such a man, between such a man and such a God? Barth observes that the infinite and the finite -- i.e., God and man -- are in perfect antithesis. There is a "line of death" dividing God from man, and any attempt to overcome this line is vain, as well as sacrilegious. Man lives in a world which is the opposite of that of God. The world of man, "flesh," is the world of nature, which is the framework for man's history, his culture, and his civilization -- all things that are completely under the domination of death. Man -- as an existent being, subject to death -- is conscious of his own nothingness and of the nothingness of his culture and civilization. Even religion cannot help man to overcome this sentiment of nothingness, for any attempt to cross the line of death and to come close to God is destined to fail. But precisely because of this wreckage of culture and religion -- this general theological crisis -- faith arises in man. (Barth, like Kierkegaard, was a Protestant.) Faith is due completely to God. It is the despotic domination of God over man. Now, because of faith, the line dividing time from eternity and man from God, disappears. Under the absolute domination of God, the existence of man is transformed into an achievement of the eternal plan of God (Predestination). Time and man's sinful and imperfect activity in the world are absorbed in eternity. In short, the "no" of man corresponds to the "yes" of God. In The Radical Academy Books by and about Karl Barth Essay: Faith as Knowledge, by Karl Barth Elsewhere On the Internet A Karl Barth Web Page Dr. McDowell's Karl Barth Page   Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900) The fact that Friedrich Nietzsche (picture) was insane for the last twelve years of his life has often been exploited by unfair adversaries who embarrassed serious critics of his doctrines. Before Nietzsche took his Ph.D. degree, he had already been appointed a full professor of classical philology at the University of Basel in 1869. But scholarship, which promised him a brilliant career, did not satisfy him. The aim of his life was a philosophy that would comprise both cool analysis and enthusiastic vision, a synthesis of a new religious creed and merciless criticism. Apollo, the god of lucid wisdom, and Dionysos, the god of orgiastic mysticism, were taken for its symbols. Nietzsche is acknowledged, even by most of his opponents, as a great psychologist who, particularly by using the concept of "resentment," succeeded in unmasking hypocrisy, in exposing delusions, perversion of feeling and judgment or intellectual timidity, and opened new ways by his much-disputed inquiry into the formation of morality. But the view of the philosopher, as Nietzsche conceived it, is not confined to things past and present. His task is not so much to take care of the well-being of his contemporary fellow men as rather to pave the way for the future development which will change man into a higher type, the superman (or "overman" if you prefer). For the sake of the future, Nietzsche violently fought against Christianity, whose ethics were depreciated by him as "slave morality," and he pronounced the necessity of a general "trans-valuations of values." Nietzsche's ideal of human personality meant the union of physical strength and mental energy. It combined the virtues of the warrior and the independent thinker. It was founded upon his conviction that the "will to power" is the ruling principle of all life, and that life on earth has an absolute value. Nietzsche's ethics, however, does not preach self-indulgence or regard suffering as an evil. It demands fearlessness, not love of pleasure. It prefers the dangerous life to the comfortable one. While endeavoring to grasp the essential features of cosmic life or to predict a far future, Nietzsche constantly kept his eye upon the cultural situation of his own time, foreboding a terrible catastrophe. Nihilism and decadence seemed to him the greatest dangers that threaten European civilization. He was equally opposed to democracy, socialism and nationalism, and most of all, to the national aspirations and pride of the Germans. He proclaimed the ideal of a "good European." No philosopher has raged as vehemently against his own soul as Nietzsche did by glorifying physical strength and the will to power. In reality, he was gentle, always in poor health, hating noise and trying to avoid quarrels. In The Radical Academy Books by and about Friedrich Nietzsche Essay: Zarathustra, by Friedrich Nietzsche Essay: Happiness Is Having Power, by Friedrich W. Nietzsche Elsewhere On the Internet More about Nietzsche The Friedrich Nietzsche Society "Beyond Good and Evil," by Friedrich Nietzsche (excerpts) "Thus Spake Zarathustra," by Friedrich Nietzsche Bruderhof Museum: Eberhard Arnold on Nietzsche   Edmund Husserl (1859-1938) Note: Strictly speaking, Husserl should not be considered to be an existentialist; he would probably have rejected that classification. The influence of his philosophy of phenomenology on the development of existentialism (especially in the case of Heidegger and Sartre) is the reason for his being included here. Husserl (picture) was the teacher of Heidegger and the founder of the Phenomenological School. According to Husserl, philosophy must be able to present a doctrine of truths of absolute validity. In his search for this absolute truth, Husserl starts from the phenomenology of the spirit, with the purpose of discovering whether a truth of absolute validity can be drawn from an analysis of the phenomena which are present to man's consciousness. By "phenomena" Husserl understands any act of sensitive perception or of intellective knowledge which makes its "appearance" in consciousness. Consciousness, understand as the background upon which the phenomena are offered to the will, receives and connects these phenomena. Now, Husserl observes that in any phenomenon there is an "ideal essence" which is perceived by the mind and which makes up the "content of consciousness." These essences are understood by Husserl to be like Plato's Ideas, but with this difference -- that they come from within the phenomena and are not separated from them. The ideal essences, making up the content of consciousness, do not depend for their reality upon the existence of the external world. In other words, even assuming the Cartesian principle that I may be deceived as to the real existence of all surrounding objects, I cannot be deceived by whatever is actually experienced in my consciousness. The objects of my experience may be real or imagined, but my experiences are genuine contents of my consciousness; and, as such, they have an absolute element (ideal essence) which has to be distinguished from what is contingent (the existence). Now, it is the ideal essence which gives a significance to the facts of experience. In other words, any knowledge and judgment of the facts of experience must be preceded by knowledge of the ideal essences, because they open the way to an understanding of what reality is. These essences can be combined to form part of another, larger pattern -- for instance, the idea of species, of morality, of aesthetics. But no matter how greatly the pattern may be enlarged, it never will contain Being in its totality. For the absolute Being is transcendent, while the greatest possible pattern is still in itself an activity of consciousness and therefore a phenomenon. In The Radical Academy Books by and about Edmund Husserl Essay: Consciousness and Natural Reality the View of the "Man in the Street," by Edmund Husserl Elsewhere On the Internet More about Husserl The Husserl Page "Pure Phenomenology, Its Method and Its Field of Investigation," by Edmund Husserl   Martin Heidegger (1889-1976) In his work Sein und Zeit (Being and Time), Heidegger (picture) starts his investigation from the point his master had reached. Husserl had traced the elements of the world in their historical and psychological reality to the final state of "ideal essences" which, in turn, should give us the explanation of that historical and psychological reality. For Heidegger, on the contrary, the existent reality should give us an understanding of the essence of reality. Thus... ...every metaphysical investigation must start from reality as it is in our experience, i.e., from existent reality, and seek to determine what it is in its finiteness, i.e., in its existence and in its temporal possibilities for developing the different forms of its own existence. Therefore, the initial problem of philosophy must be the following: Why am I here, rather than not existing at all? If I am able to determine the essence of the existent being, then I know what being is. In his attempt to inquire into the nature of existence, Heidegger distinguishes two ways of living: the one, inferior, called the unauthentic; the other, superior, called the authentic. Unauthentic existence is an uncritical participation in the world as it is; authentic existence consists in an analysis of self. Although distinct, the unauthentic and the authentic life have some common characteristics: actual participation in the world -- this means that the existent being has a relationship to surrounding objects which he uses as instruments of his existence; existence in a determined situation -- this means that every situation is essentially individuated, limited and presents only one of the infinite number of possible ways of realizing existence. In this sense, the existent is in a state of inferiority, of privation, of radical poverty as regards plenitude of being. On the other hand, the unauthentic life is distinct from the authentic life in many ways. The unauthentic life is characterized by its banality. The subject of such a life is not the individual, but an anonymous and featureless public ego ("das Mann"), the one-like-many, shirking personal responsibility and taking cues from the conventions of the masses. The result is a self-estrangement of human existence, which leads eventually to the blotting out of its possibilities and to its disintegration in the irrelevancy of everyday life. Authentic existence is something decidedly different from everyday life. To live authentically means "to exist"; this in turn means to stand out -- from the Latin "ex-stare," i.e., to be outside the anonymous mass, to emerge from the world in which we ourselves, and to accept our own situation with all its limitations. To exist means both to stand apart (to withdraw) and to stand out (to be offered as a target for the fullness of being). Authentic existence, a conscious returning to oneself, is a means of discovering and disclosing that the surrounding banality of the world is vanity and disappears into "nothingness." This universal sense of nothingness produces anguish. Anguish must not be confused with fear. Fear has as its object some determined thing, a determined danger; anguish, on the contrary is a dread of that indefinite something which, because it is indefinite, is a dread of nothing in particular. The struggle with anguish and the outcome of this struggle opens new horizons as regards the interpretation of being. Even though men and things are fashioned by "nothingness," I exist, I am not nothing; but I come from nothing. I accept my existence, with all the responsibilities involved in my present situation. I am aware that I am a finite being, and I can reach the fullness of my being only to the degree that my circumstances permit. The scope of my potentialities depends on time (the second section of Heidegger's work). Time is what I am not yet; it is my present situation in so far as it is moving toward my possibilities. Time is the horizon open to me. But time tells me that every being has its own end. Being is for death. Thus I am an "existent being destined for death." And since I accepted existence with all its ramifications, I accept my death without fear. Heidegger's Existentialism is a valuable contribution to the understanding of individual life; but being guided by no spiritual principle, Heidegger ends with destruction and death. In The Radical Academy Books by and about Martin Heidegger Essay: Nothingness, by Martin Heidegger Elsewhere On the Internet More about Heidegger "Existence and Being," by Martin Heidegger "The Basic Problems of Phenomenology," by Martin Heidegger   Karl Jaspers (1883-1969) For Heidegger, existence in its attempt to transcend its limits ends in nothingness. For Jaspers (picture) transcendence -- as a unique and absolute Being -- is always beyond and just outside the existent being. The more the "being in the world" clarifies his existence, the further the Absolute Being will remain from him. The transcendence of Being is intangible to human experience. The philosophical search of Jaspers may be divided into three stages: the discovery of the world; the clarification of existence; the attempt to transcend the world of objects. The first stage considers "the being in the world" understood as a mere fact: I exist and things exist around me. In this first stage, man believes that he can reach being in its totality. This attempt is illusory and hence it is destined to fail. Indeed, all knowledge of the "being in the world" is a "limitation of horizon." Jaspers distinguishes three main types of limitation of horizon: the horizon in which reality reveals itself in its individuality as a mere being in the world; the horizon in which reality reveals itself through an abstract system of laws representing things in extra-temporal schemes in the Kantian sense; the horizon in which reality develops itself from an Idea (which can be called Spirit in the Hegelian sense) according to a dialectic rhythm. There are three types of truth corresponding to this threefold horizon: the truth about empirical individuality -- such a truth coincides with utility, i.e., a thing is true "for me" if it is useful to me; scientific truth, which consists in the common way of thinking of reality; spiritual truth, which consists in what I myself and others feel to be connected with the wholeness of being. But not one of these types of knowledge is able to comprehend being in its entirety. Every degree of human knowledge is a limitation of horizon beyond which there is something more. Knowledge is a subjective point of view belonging to the being in the world. It is also limited because of the existence of many subjective points of view. Thus the intellect tells us of a multiplicity of possible presentations of reality, each of them based on the actual existence of a being. Jaspers calls this discovery of multiple existence a transcendent act, in so far as the intellect transcends the particularity of the various points of view and reaches what is absolute in these presentations; the fact that they are found in an existing being. Thus we pass to the second stage of philosophizing, whose object is the clarification of existence. Thought, in so far as it is a faculty illuminating existence, is called "reason" by Jaspers. Because of the illumination of reason, the difficulty which was found in the first stage of philosophizing is now transferred to existence. Indeed, existence, on the one hand, illuminated by reason, becomes conscious of its own limitations; on the other hand, reason shows us other modes of existence, and beyond all, the transcendent, to which our existence should be related in order to be constituted on its true level. The study of "transcendence" belongs to metaphysics, and hence we are in the third stage of philosophizing. But the difficulty already found in the first and second stages appears again. Our existence is a search for transcendence; but transcendence cannot be reached, because if transcendence were attainable, it would not be transcendence. Thus the transcendence of being is always something else, something more; and any attempt to attain it is destined to fail. There is in my existence an impassable barrier, a limit beyond which there is Transcendence (God), inaccessible to my being in the world. However, the transcendent Being can be perceived in the form of "ciphers" or symbolic characters expressed by the things of the world. Philosophy, in its search for being, reads these ciphers as possible traces of God, as signs and signals pointing toward the ultimate depth and plenitude of Being. In The Radical Academy Books by and about Karl Jaspers Essay: Reason, by Karl Jaspers Elsewhere On the Internet Short Biography of Karl Jaspers   To The Philosophy of Existentialism 2 Enrich Your Life With a Philosophy Book... Introduction & Directory
 

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