She kept her eyes on the door. Suddenly Alberto walked in. Although it was midsummer, he was wearing a black beret and a gray hip-length coat of herringbone tweed. He hurried over to her. It felt very strange to meet him in public.
"It"s quarter past twelve!"
"It"s what is known as the academic quarter of an hour. Would you like a snack?"
He sat down and looked into her eyes. Sophie shrugged.
"Sure. A sandwich, maybe."
Alberto went up to the counter. He soon returned with a cup of coffee and two baguette sandwiches with cheese and ham.
"Was it expensive?"
"A bagatelle, Sophie."
"Do you have any excuse at all for being late?"
"No. I did it on purpose. I"ll explain why presently."
He took a few large bites of his sandwich. Then he said:
"Let"s talk about our own century."
"Has anything of philosophical interest happened?"
"Lots ... movements are going off in all directions We"ll start with one very important direction, and that is existentialism. This is a collective term for several philosophical currents that take man"s existential situation as their point of departure. We generally talk of twentieth-century existential philosophy. Several of these existential philosophers, or existentialists, based their ideas not only on Kierkegaard, but on Hegel and Marx as well."
"Uh-huh."
"Another important philosopher who had a great influence on the twentieth century was the German Friedrich Nietzsche, who lived from 1844 to 1900. He, too, reacted against Hegel"s philosophy and the German "historicism." He proposed life itself as a counterweight to the anemic interest in history and what he called the Christian "slave morality." He sought to effect a "revaluation of all values," so that the life force of the strongest should not be hampered by the weak. According to Nietzsche, both Christianity and traditional philosophy had turned away from the real world and pointed toward "heaven" or "the world of ideas." But what had hitherto been considered the "real" world was in fact a pseudo world. "Be true to the world," he said. "Do not listen to those who offer you supernatural expectations." "
"So ... ?"
"A man who was influenced by both Kierkegaard and Nietzsche was the German existential philosopher Martin Heidegger. But we are going to concentrate on the French existentialist Jean-Paul Sartre, who lived from 1905 to 1980. He was the leading light among the existentialists--at least, to the broader public. His existentialism became especially popular in the forties, just after the war. Later on he allied himself with the Marxist movement in France, but he never became a member of any party."
"Is that why we are meeting in a French cafe?"
"It was not quite accidental, I confess. Sartre himself spent a lot of time in cafes. He met his life-long companion Simone de Beauvoir in a cafe. She was also an existential philosopher."
"A woman philosopher?"
"That"s right."
"What a relief that humanity is finally becoming civilized."
"Nevertheless, many new problems have arisen in our own time."
"You were going to talk about existentialism."
"Sartre said that "existentialism is humanism." By that he meant that the existentialists start from nothing but humanity itself. I might add that the humanism he was referring to took a far bleaker view of the human situation than the humanism we met in the Renaissance."
"Why was that?"
"Both Kierkegaard and some of this century"s existential philosophers were Christian. But Sartre"s allegiance was to what we might call an atheistic existentialism. His philosophy can be seen as a merciless analysis of the human situation when "God is dead." The expression "God is dead" came from Nietzsche."
"Go on."
"The key word in Sartre"s philosophy, as in Kierkegaard"s, is "existence." But existence did not mean the same as being alive. Plants and animals are also alive, they exist, but they do not have to think about what it implies. Man is the only living creature that is conscious of its own existence. Sartre said that a material thing is simply "in itself," but mankind is "for itself." The being of man is therefore not the same as the being of things."
"I can"t disagree with that."
"Sartre said that man"s existence takes priority over whatever he might otherwise be. The fact that I exist takes priority over what I am. "Existence takes priority over essence." "
"That was a very complicated statement."
"By essence we mean that which something consists of--the nature, or being, of something. But according to Sartre, man has no such innate "nature." Man must therefore create himself. He must create his own nature or "essence," because it is not fixed in advance."
"I think I see what you mean."
"Throughout the entire history of philosophy, philosophers have sought to discover what man is--or what human nature is. But Sartre believed that man has no such eternal "nature" to fall back on. It is therefore useless to search for the meaning of life in general. We are condemned to improvise. We are like actors dragged onto the stage without having learned our lines, with no script and no prompter to whisper stage directions to us. We must decide for ourselves how to live."
"That"s true, actually. If one could just look in the Bible--or in a philosophy book--to find out how to live, it would be very practical."
"You"ve got the point. When people realize they are alive and will one day die--and there is no meaning to cling to--they experience angst, said Sartre. You may recall that angst, a sense of dread, was also characteristic of Kierkegaard"s description of a person in an existential situation."
"Yes."
"Sartre says that man feels a//en in a world without meaning. When he describes man"s "alienation," he is echoing the central ideas of Hegel and Marx. Man"s feeling of alienation in the world creates a sense of despair, boredom, nausea, and absurdity."
"It is quite normal to feel depressed, or to feel that everything is just too boring."
"Yes, indeed. Sartre was describing the twentieth-century city dweller. You remember that the Renaissance humanists had drawn attention, almost triumphantly, to man"s freedom and independence?
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