3. The subject exists, and for some, he alone exists; that
is to say, if any essence whatever exists, it is the
individual’s subjective state of existence.
(William s. Sahakian and Mabel L. Sahakian, Ideas of the Great
Philosophers, NY Bames and Noble,Inc., 1966,p.167)
4. “Man is nothing else but
what he purpose, 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.”
- Jean- Paul Sarte
5. Soren Kierkegaard Father of Modern
Existentialism.
First European
Philosopher who bears
the Existentialist label.
In his view,
Subjectivity and
intensity should be
priced as the criteria
of truth and
genuineness.
6. Friedrich Nietzsche
(1844- 1900)
Key figure in the rise of
existentialism.
According to him
Christianity is to be overcome
by putting in its place the
doctrine of Superman, that is,
man surpassing himself.
7. Martin Heidegger
(1889-1976)
Being and Time
In his book he gave very
impressive analysis of
human existence, the
prominence of the
important themes of
existentialism like care,
anxiety, guilt, and above
all death is brought out
here.
9. Philosophy as a way of life
Immanence: Philosophy studies life from the inside.
The fundamental truths of my existence are not representations
not, that is, ideas, propositions or symbols the meaning of
which can be separated from their origin. Rather, the truths of
existence re immediately lived, felt and acted.’
- Kierkegaard
10. Anxiety • A key idea here is that
human existence is in some
way ‘ on its own’, anxiety is
the recognition of this fact.
Authenticity
• Evaluating solely in terms of the measurable outcomes of production
was seen as reinforcing the secularization of the institutions of
political, social, or economic life; and reinforcing also the
abandonment of any broader sense of the spiritual dimension.
11. Freedom
• “ There is nothing else that acts through me or
that shoulders my responsibility.”
Situatedness
• “ My body and its characteristics in a historical
world and my past, all weigh upon freedom. This
is what makes freedom meaningful. Suppose I
tried to exists as free, while pretending to be in
abstraction from the situation. In that case I will
have no idea what possibilities are open to me
and what choices need to be made, here and
now. In such a case, my freedom will be illusory.”
( Philosophical genesis in Hegel)
12. Existence
• For many existentialists,
authentic existence involves
a certain tension be
recognized and lived
through, but not resolved:
this tension might be
between the animal and the
rational or between tactility
and transcendence.
( Sartre and de Beauvoir)
“My acts are free, I am
not free not to act.”
- Marcel
13. Irrationality/ Absurdity • Many existentialists argued
that nature as a whole has
no design, no reason for
existing.
• Human existence as action is
doomed to always destroy itself.
• My freedom will not only be
undetermined by knowledge
or reason but from the point
of view of the latter freedom
will even appear absurd.
14. The Crowd
Existentialism generally
carries social or political
dimension. In so far he
or she is authentic , the
freedom of the human
being will show a certain
‘ resolution’ or
‘commitment’, and this
will involve so the being-
and particularly the
authentic being of others.
15. Assumptions Existentialism
•The assumptions are highlighted in the following area:
Man’s existence
Self- Knowledge
Man is not Complete.
No acceptance of ready made concepts.
16. Man’s Existence
The
starting
point for all
existence is
the
recognition
of the
individual
existence.
Man makes
himself
through
choices
among many
alternatives of
this
Philosophy.
18. Man is not Complete
According to existentialism a man is not
complete, he is in the process of ‘becoming’.
Man is expected to meet challenges, march on
the process of becoming a complete man.
19. Ready made concepts
Existentialism believes
that a man cannot
accept ready made
concepts of existence
forced upon him.
He is free agent to shape his own life.
The existentialist
considers, that each
man has the
responsibility of
creating his own
values and in doing so,
he chooses freedom
and responsibility.
20. Limitations
The view point of
existentialism appear to
be impractical and
inapplicable in an in
materialistic world.
It requires a good deal
of time and effort on the
part of the teacher to
develop individual
relationship with student.
The terminologies used in existentialism
is not clear. Concepts such as ‘Being’,
‘Person’, ‘Existence’ are ambiguous.
21. Conclusion
Philosophers consider Existentialism as the nature of
the human condition.
Existentialist accepts the conclusion that existence
precedes as essence.
Existentialist emphasize the person as subject.
22. References
Cavell, Stanley. “Existentialism and Analytical Philosophy.”
Daedalus, vol. 93, no. 3, 1964, pp. 946–74. JSTOR,
http://www.jstor.org/stable/20026868. Accessed 22 Aug. 2022.
Crowell,Steven,Existentialism, The Stanford Encyclopedia of
Philosophy ( Summer 2020 edi.),Edward N.Zalta(ed.)
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/existentialism/
Burnham D. and Papandreopoulos G., Existentialism, The
Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, ISSN 2161-
0002, https://iep.utm.edu/existent/ .