Sartre on Freedom and the Human Condition - Partially Examined Life by Partially Examined Life published on 2014-01-23T20:26:51Z On Jean-Paul Sartre’s “Existentialism is a Humanism” (1946), “Bad Faith” (pt. 1, ch. 2 of Being & Nothingness, 1943), and his play No Exit (1944). What is human nature? Sartre says that there isn’t one, but there is a universal human condition, which is our absolute freedom. This freedom is a basic certainty in our experience, and it comes out of the mere fact of our being able to will, so no subsequent alleged science can contradict it. If you claim to be determined by your character or circumstances, you’re acting in “bad faith,” which is what for Sartre has to serve as an ethics given the lack of good and evil floating out there in the world or duties assigned to us by nature or God or any of that. He describes his project as a matter of teasing out the often unrealized implications atheism. Though his reading is rife with fun, literary examples, we (the regular foursome) had trouble both with this insistence on absolute freedom in all circumstances and on on this claim about no human nature which ends up making bad faith seemingly inevitable: you can’t be “authentic” to your “true self” because there is no true self to be authentic to! So ha! Genre Philosophy Comment by ersin mert great 2017-05-04T12:57:11Z Comment by Melanie Davies 13 Your voice is sooo carming :) 2014-02-18T22:36:36Z Comment by KuZan why couldnt the fixed point be that there is no fixed point 2014-02-15T17:25:32Z