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  1. 22 juin 2024 · Jean-Paul Sartres Situationsbeginning of a list of essays and translations. I previously grumbled about how hard it was to navigate Jean-Paul Sartre’s Situations. I went looking for an essay in the French, only to find it was in one volume of the original edition and a different volume of the revised edition.

  2. 23 juin 2024 · I. L’Être et le Néant, suites immédiates 1945-1954. Robert Misrahi, Perspectives existentielles. Grégory Cormann, Tout Sartre lu à travers Beauvoir : Robert Misrahi et l’existentialisme sartrien en 1945. Véronique Verdier, Robert Misrahi, sartrien à sa façon.

  3. 24 juin 2024 · Sartre’s personal and philosophical connection with Venice. During his visits to Venice, Jean-Paul Sartre discovered in the lagoon city not only a source of personal inspiration, but also a fertile ground for the development of philosophical thought. Venice is a metaphor for human existence: founded on water, it embodies the fragility of life ...

  4. Il y a 6 jours · Jean-Paul Sartre's Modern Times, older second-hand books by Alexandre Koyré and Antoine Meillet, the new edition of Key Thinkers on Space and Place, and Foucault, l’indiscipliné – Sciences Humaines, Les Essentiels hors-série 16, April-May 2024.

  5. Il y a 6 jours · Søren Kierkegaard (1813-1855) was a Danish philosopher and is considered to be the first existentialist, influencing such notable philosophers as Jean- Paul Sartre (1905-1980) and Martin Heidegger (1889-1976). His works are a reflection of alienation, angst, and absurdity, and include Either/Or (1843), Fear and Trembling (1843), and The ...

  6. 23 juin 2024 · Guilt. Whereas shame pertains to a moral agent, guilt pertains to an action or actions, and to blame and remorse. Shame says, “I am bad.”. Guilt says, “I did something bad.”. More subtly ...

  7. 23 juin 2024 · Jean-Paul Sartre, photograph by Gisèle Freund, 1968. Paris after World War II quickly regained its stature as one of the world’s great centres of intellectual creativity. A cluster of brilliant thinkers and writers competed for influence, attracting acolytes both in France and abroad.