Existentialism is not merely a philosophical doctrine but a living, breathing confrontation with what it means to be human. It is a call to face the raw realities of existence—freedom, responsibility, anxiety, alienation, and ultimately, death—without retreating into comforting illusions. This book is born out of that call: to explore, unpack, and wrestle with the core ideas of existentialist thought, not from the distance of academic abstraction, but from within the very questions that define our lives.
The existentialist tradition is broad, diverse, and sometimes internally contradictory. It includes thinkers as different in style and emphasis as Søren Kierkegaard, Friedrich Nietzsche, Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir, Albert Camus, Martin Heidegger, and Maurice Merleau-Ponty. Some rooted their reflections in theology; others were staunch atheists. Some spoke of absurdity, others of transcendence. But what unites them is a shared concern: the centrality of individual existence in an often indifferent or unknowable universe.
Existentialism arose in a modern world disoriented by the collapse of traditional values, the disintegration of religious authority, the trauma of war, and the alienation of industrial society. It gave voice to a generation asking not "What should I believe?" but "How should I live?" and "Who am I when all the roles and certainties fall away?" These are not questions with definitive answers. They are lived questions—answers are provisional, contingent, and must be earned through experience, not received by doctrine.
This book does not pretend to provide the final word on existentialism. Instead, it aims to guide readers through its major themes and figures, to offer a map for navigating its often challenging terrain. From Kierkegaard's leap of faith and Nietzsche's proclamation of the death of God, to Sartre's radical freedom and Camus's myth of Sisyphus, we will examine how existentialists have approached the problem of meaning in a world where meaning is not given.
Existentialism is sometimes caricatured as dark, nihilistic, or pessimistic. Certainly, it does not flinch from despair. But at its heart, existentialism is profoundly liberating. It tells us that though we are thrown into a world not of our choosing, we are not defined by our circumstances. We are free—and with that freedom comes the burden and the beauty of shaping a life that is authentically our own. In this sense, existentialism is not a philosophy of defeat but one of courage.
As you read, you may find that existentialism doesn't offer comfort—but it does offer clarity. It asks you to look honestly at yourself and your condition, to resist the seductions of evasion and bad faith, and to take responsibility for the shape of your life. That is its enduring power and its enduring challenge.
Whether you are encountering these ideas for the first time or returning to them with new eyes, I invite you to read this book not only with the intellect but with the whole of your being. Existentialism is not just something to be studied; it is something to be lived.
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The existentialist tradition is broad, diverse, and sometimes internally contradictory. It includes thinkers as different in style and emphasis as Søren Kierkegaard, Friedrich Nietzsche, Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir, Albert Camus, Martin Heidegger, and Maurice Merleau-Ponty. Some rooted their reflections in theology; others were staunch atheists. Some spoke of absurdity, others of transcendence. But what unites them is a shared concern: the centrality of individual existence in an often indifferent or unknowable universe.
Existentialism arose in a modern world disoriented by the collapse of traditional values, the disintegration of religious authority, the trauma of war, and the alienation of industrial society. It gave voice to a generation asking not "What should I believe?" but "How should I live?" and "Who am I when all the roles and certainties fall away?" These are not questions with definitive answers. They are lived questions—answers are provisional, contingent, and must be earned through experience, not received by doctrine.
This book does not pretend to provide the final word on existentialism. Instead, it aims to guide readers through its major themes and figures, to offer a map for navigating its often challenging terrain. From Kierkegaard's leap of faith and Nietzsche's proclamation of the death of God, to Sartre's radical freedom and Camus's myth of Sisyphus, we will examine how existentialists have approached the problem of meaning in a world where meaning is not given.
Existentialism is sometimes caricatured as dark, nihilistic, or pessimistic. Certainly, it does not flinch from despair. But at its heart, existentialism is profoundly liberating. It tells us that though we are thrown into a world not of our choosing, we are not defined by our circumstances. We are free—and with that freedom comes the burden and the beauty of shaping a life that is authentically our own. In this sense, existentialism is not a philosophy of defeat but one of courage.
As you read, you may find that existentialism doesn't offer comfort—but it does offer clarity. It asks you to look honestly at yourself and your condition, to resist the seductions of evasion and bad faith, and to take responsibility for the shape of your life. That is its enduring power and its enduring challenge.
Whether you are encountering these ideas for the first time or returning to them with new eyes, I invite you to read this book not only with the intellect but with the whole of your being. Existentialism is not just something to be studied; it is something to be lived.
Existentialism: A Note on the Philosophical School
Existentialism is not merely a philosophical doctrine but a living, breathing confrontation with what it means to be human. It is a call to face the raw realities of existence—freedom, responsibility, anxiety, alienation, and ultimately, death—without retreating into comforting illusions. This book is born out of that call: to explore, unpack, and wrestle with the core ideas of existentialist thought, not from the distance of academic abstraction, but from within the very questions that define our lives.
The existentialist tradition is broad, diverse, and sometimes internally contradictory. It includes thinkers as different in style and emphasis as Søren Kierkegaard, Friedrich Nietzsche, Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir, Albert Camus, Martin Heidegger, and Maurice Merleau-Ponty. Some rooted their reflections in theology; others were staunch atheists. Some spoke of absurdity, others of transcendence. But what unites them is a shared concern: the centrality of individual existence in an often indifferent or unknowable universe.
Existentialism arose in a modern world disoriented by the collapse of traditional values, the disintegration of religious authority, the trauma of war, and the alienation of industrial society. It gave voice to a generation asking not "What should I believe?" but "How should I live?" and "Who am I when all the roles and certainties fall away?" These are not questions with definitive answers. They are lived questions—answers are provisional, contingent, and must be earned through experience, not received by doctrine.
This book does not pretend to provide the final word on existentialism. Instead, it aims to guide readers through its major themes and figures, to offer a map for navigating its often challenging terrain. From Kierkegaard's leap of faith and Nietzsche's proclamation of the death of God, to Sartre's radical freedom and Camus's myth of Sisyphus, we will examine how existentialists have approached the problem of meaning in a world where meaning is not given.
Existentialism is sometimes caricatured as dark, nihilistic, or pessimistic. Certainly, it does not flinch from despair. But at its heart, existentialism is profoundly liberating. It tells us that though we are thrown into a world not of our choosing, we are not defined by our circumstances. We are free—and with that freedom comes the burden and the beauty of shaping a life that is authentically our own. In this sense, existentialism is not a philosophy of defeat but one of courage.
As you read, you may find that existentialism doesn't offer comfort—but it does offer clarity. It asks you to look honestly at yourself and your condition, to resist the seductions of evasion and bad faith, and to take responsibility for the shape of your life. That is its enduring power and its enduring challenge.
Whether you are encountering these ideas for the first time or returning to them with new eyes, I invite you to read this book not only with the intellect but with the whole of your being. Existentialism is not just something to be studied; it is something to be lived.
The existentialist tradition is broad, diverse, and sometimes internally contradictory. It includes thinkers as different in style and emphasis as Søren Kierkegaard, Friedrich Nietzsche, Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir, Albert Camus, Martin Heidegger, and Maurice Merleau-Ponty. Some rooted their reflections in theology; others were staunch atheists. Some spoke of absurdity, others of transcendence. But what unites them is a shared concern: the centrality of individual existence in an often indifferent or unknowable universe.
Existentialism arose in a modern world disoriented by the collapse of traditional values, the disintegration of religious authority, the trauma of war, and the alienation of industrial society. It gave voice to a generation asking not "What should I believe?" but "How should I live?" and "Who am I when all the roles and certainties fall away?" These are not questions with definitive answers. They are lived questions—answers are provisional, contingent, and must be earned through experience, not received by doctrine.
This book does not pretend to provide the final word on existentialism. Instead, it aims to guide readers through its major themes and figures, to offer a map for navigating its often challenging terrain. From Kierkegaard's leap of faith and Nietzsche's proclamation of the death of God, to Sartre's radical freedom and Camus's myth of Sisyphus, we will examine how existentialists have approached the problem of meaning in a world where meaning is not given.
Existentialism is sometimes caricatured as dark, nihilistic, or pessimistic. Certainly, it does not flinch from despair. But at its heart, existentialism is profoundly liberating. It tells us that though we are thrown into a world not of our choosing, we are not defined by our circumstances. We are free—and with that freedom comes the burden and the beauty of shaping a life that is authentically our own. In this sense, existentialism is not a philosophy of defeat but one of courage.
As you read, you may find that existentialism doesn't offer comfort—but it does offer clarity. It asks you to look honestly at yourself and your condition, to resist the seductions of evasion and bad faith, and to take responsibility for the shape of your life. That is its enduring power and its enduring challenge.
Whether you are encountering these ideas for the first time or returning to them with new eyes, I invite you to read this book not only with the intellect but with the whole of your being. Existentialism is not just something to be studied; it is something to be lived.
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Existentialism: A Note on the Philosophical School

Existentialism: A Note on the Philosophical School
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Product Details
BN ID: | 2940184358215 |
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Publisher: | Pons Malleus |
Publication date: | 06/02/2025 |
Series: | Western Philosophical Schools , #1 |
Sold by: | Barnes & Noble |
Format: | eBook |
File size: | 136 KB |
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