Metaphors of Existentialism Underlying M PDF
Metaphors of Existentialism Underlying M PDF
Metaphors of Existentialism Underlying M PDF
Abstract
The goal of this paper is to analyze and explain the key metaphors of Sartre’s
Metaphor Theory presented in Lakoff and Johnson (1980, 1999), Lakoff (1987,
1990) and Johnson (1987, 2007). This account will serve to shed light on two
analysis of Sartre’s work in these terms is necessary and useful; next (part 1) I
present the fact that Sartre’s (1943) ideas on being and nothingness depend on
his ideas from previous works on imagination and perception; part 2 deals with
the key concepts on Sartre (1943): being and nothingness; part 3 centers its
attention on the concepts of en-soi and pour-soi, also central in Sartre (1943);
part 4 deals with the moral principles of contingence and freedom; part 5
focuses on time; parts 6 and 7 center on the role of the body and the others in
Sartre’s system. Finally, a conclusion shows the key ideas that I have brought to
light throughout my analysis of Sartre’s work and explains why a Lakoff &
Johnson-style analysis is the correct and most useful tool in order to obtain a
!1
clear and explicative view of philosophical system, specifically in this case
Sartre’s.
0. Introduction
I plan this work as if it were a new chapter on Lakoff and Johnson’s (1999)
Philosophy in the Flesh: I will examine Sartre’s (1943) L’être et le néant (Being
and nothingness) through Lakoff and Johnson glasses1 in the order in which it is
written so as to present and systematize the key metaphors that are the basis of
his work.2
consider that Sartre was not two individual people — a philosopher and a writer
— but one whole person, and as a writer he has left clear signs of his use of
1 You can clearly see further on that I base my analysis more on Lakoff & Johnson
(1999) and Johnson (2007) than on Lakoff & Johnson (1980) and Johnson (1987)
because I center my attention not only on image schemas but also on qualities and
feelings. Apart from this, I have varied some pieces of the standard model in order to
obtain a clearer and more exact vision of Sartre's metaphors.
2 Noudelman (1996) tries the same but he refers to different aspects: désagrégation,
comblement, arrachement, and so on. I prefer the presentation of metaphors referring
to different spheres of reality or forms of existing for the en-soi and the pour-soi.
!2
discover the following metaphors: we find that freedom has paths — in Les
the trial between men is held behind closed doors — in Huis clos —, etc. to
Sartre’s literature urges me to think that the same would occur in his philosophy.
mappings that Sartre uses in order to defend his system as both coherent and
complete. It is in this sense that we can state that I am seeking the pre-
that summarizes all the metaphors (in the Lakoff & Johnson sense) that are
It is necessary here to point out that Sartre himself wants us to recall his ideas
from earlier works on imagination (Cf. Sartre 1943 [reed. 1996]: most evident in
the Introduction and the First Chapter),3 and that in those works (Cf. Sartre
1926 [unpublished], 1936, 1940 as the most important) we can find the
!3
following metaphors which aim to differentiate perception and imagination.4 It is
important for us to fix our attention on these metaphors because they are
inherited from the early works and used once again in a more developed form in
PERCEPTION IMAGINATION
opaque brouillard
solidité gaz
état fluidité
résidu lumière
rempli processus
chose activité
passivité absence
présence évanouissement
être néant
Arrêt se glisse
éclatement
vide
spontanéité
4Cf. Pérez i Brufau (2000, 2010) in order to have a global view of all Sartre’s works
between 1927 and 1943.
5
It is necessary to highlight here the fact that each metaphorical expression collected
in these figures can be presented in a standard form as "PERCEPTION IS SOLIDITY"
or "IMAGINATION IS GAS", for example. This standard construction can be made for
all the expressions we have collected but we prefer this form of tabulation to obtain a
clearer and more concise result. At the end of the paper (Cf. Conclusion) there is a
table in which I summarize and systematize all Sartre’s metaphors and linguistic
expressions. It is clear that not all the collected expressions correspond to Conceptual
Metaphors as defined by Lakoff and Johnson in the sense that we structure an abstract
concept based on concrete experiences. These expressions, despite being analyzed
throughout the text, are not included in the tables because they are at the same
abstract level as the target domain that appears in the heading.
!4
It is clear that all these metaphors can be understood by means of a sense
(principally sight and touch) because we can reduce them to function simply as
as those that we can locate and interact with, whereas the imagination or
environment) that an encounter with these kinds of objects awakens: solid and
gaseous. Here, however, metaphors are still constructed without using image
schemas6 in a conscious form; we will see later on that when Sartre compares
the two spheres of reality he uses image schemas (without referring to them in
this way) in order to be coherent and consistent when pushing his analysis
Hypothesis defended by Lakoff and Johnson,7 in the sense that the structure of
the elements and the conceptual content related to the experience is what
sustains the metaphor. For example, as we will see further on, Figure 1 shows
that être and néant — the essential elements of Sartre’s ontology — can be
represented by figures (a) and (b), while anguish and nausea — the first
6In terms of image schemas, I follow the theory presented by Johnson (1987, but
especially 2007).
7 Cf. Lakoff (1990), for example.
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(a) Être (b) Néant
This figure is purely a construction of mine since Sartre obviously never talked
about image schemas and Johnson never examined Sartre's philosophy from
conjunction of image schemas (force, container and path) that shows us that
must lead us to think that être, néant, anguish and nausea, are all born from
bodily experiences that we can conceptualize as the figures show, and they are,
hence, more basic and not as abstract at an experiential level. Figure 1(d),
which shows anguish may also represent other metaphorical expressions used
!6
From the beginning of Sartre (1943), he refers to two spheres of being which
are opposed and defines them little by little in order to show their differences.
Being (être) is defined as "positivité" (Sartre 1943: 12), as an act (the opposite
of potentiality). Initially, Sartre states (Sartre 1943: 14) that we perceive this
(anger, nausea, and so on). It is in statements like this that we can see Sartre
clearly affirming the key role of the body and emotions evident throughout
Sartre’s works, from 1936 — with books devoted to imagination and emotions,
but both referring to the central role of the body — to 1943 — where he
constructed his ontology — and beyond — to ethics and so on. Affectivity, body
sensations coming from the interaction with the world and ourselves — as
occurs in Johnson.
The essence of being is the form in which it appears, a form that implies
1943: 32), "opaque" (Sartre 1943: 32), because "l'être est partout" (Sartre 1943:
28). Being is the condition of all appearance but it has no intentionality, it is not
action with goals and purposes, it is simply there. It is, therefore, consciousness
total" (Sartre 1943: 23). This “vide total” is related to nothingness and
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highlighted by Noudelman (1996). And it is necessary to highlight the fact that
this statement of Sartre’s is taken from a book that was written by Sartre in the
70s, a book which shows the centrality of imagination all through Sartre’s life.
Conscious acts are "tout activité" and "tout spontanéité" (Sartre 1943:
the most important metaphors for être and consciousness at the beginning of
the book; we will see later on that metaphors for être appear slowly throughout
the book, as the opposite to consciousness, néant, or pour-soi (taking the name
of en-soi when opposite to it). It is important here to highlight the fact that
because it allows us to believe that Sartre uses these metaphors with être and
conscience because they are related to his own personal experiences and
whether they were pleasant or unpleasant (and it is here that we can see the
ÊTRE CONSCIENCE
8
It is clear that the titles are the target domains, and the expressions listed represent
the various source domains, all related to physical experiences through sense and
body.
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éclatement
fuite
arrachement
vent
Glisser
il est ce qu’il est rayons
passivité légèreté
rempli de lui-même désagrégation
il est partout flux
opaque échappement
translucidité
rien
claire
lucide
enchaînement d’éclatements
vide
activité
Spontanéité
Now we have the key elements that form the fundamental structure of the book:
We can see here that Sartre constructs the system by means of image
them: movement, forces and paths are only related to the metaphors that refer
clear in this respect, showing containers and forces that trace paths which are
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used to construct or to explain (or both) the essential elements of Sartre’s
system.
nothingness.
ÊTRE NÉANT
passivité vide total
rempli activité
opaque spontanéité
partout translucidité
plein transcendance
no dehors évanescence
trou
The continuity from previous works is clear here but it is necessary to highlight
the metaphor of the trou (hole), because it is this metaphor which shows most
clearly the physical basis of all the metaphors used by Sartre. This metaphor,
experiences in the sense that holes, as Freud has already noted, constitute
simple, basic experiences when we are children. And it is important here also to
highlight the fact that holes are not only conceptually related to nothingness but
also to containers and the emptiness within. The action of filling a void
9
Satre also refers to these target domains in terms of positivité and négativité, but this
is an abstract level as is that for être and néant; it is not a Metaphor in the sense
defended by Johnson and Lakoff.
!10
(“remplir”) is what is born from this metaphor when we think of it as the
existential goal of having a meaningful life. The importance of action and future
standard theory, in which the most important role is given to the past.
UNDERSTANDING IS SEEING, are present in this part of the book in the sense
that Sartre states that there is a "domaine de la conscience" (Sartre 1943: 30)
with "régions" (Sartre 1943: 30) and he says things like "la claire vision du
phénomène d'être a été obscurcie souvent..." (Sartre 1943: 31). It is clear that
Sartre uses metaphors in order to explain his central ideas, but he uses them in
or being, and he presents both kinds of reality with the names: être-en-soi and
continuing the metaphors that have guided the previous analysis related to être
and néant, perception and imagination or être and consciousness, he says that
the en-soi is "massif" (Sartre 1943: 32), "pleine positivité" (Sartre 1943: 33), and
10Cf., for example: "notre tendance est perpétuellement de dépasser l'image dans le
sens du concret, d'appliquer à l'image le vocabulaire de la perception" (Sartre 1926
[unpublished]: 124-125).
!11
According to Sartre, that is all we can say about the en-soi, and the rest
of the book is devoted to pour-soi and the relationship between both spheres of
EN-SOI POUR-SOI
massif défaut d’être
chose décompression
positivité fuite
contingence destruction
plein (sans fissure) dehors
densité infinie valeur
il est processus
trou
manque
il se possibilise
It is still clear that Sartre upholds his system within the same metaphorical
system when he tries to define the two spheres of reality: the first related to
solid objects and thus to perception, and the second related to the experience
blended into a new kind of object: it would be the viscous thing (physical
11Cf. for example: de Beauvoir (1981 [translation into Spanish 1982]: 399). This is an
important point in the sense that it shows us that Sartre also relates his metaphors to
his life and personal feelings and sensations in interaction with the world in the same
way that Lakoff and Johnson found their Conceptual Metaphor Theory on image
schemas and qualities born from our experience.
!12
In relating his analysis to Descartes and imagination (Sartre 1943: 37),
Sartre assumes that for the consciousness “to be” means "being-in-the-world";
that the principal way of putting these spheres into contact with each other
nothing more than "constitution d'une forme sur un fond" (Sartre 1943: 44), the
Sartre at this point (and it is precisely in Sartre's examples that we often find the
and imagination is as follows: you enter a bar and you are looking for Peter; you
are searching for Peter with your imagination projecting his form into the space,
glisse" (Sartre 1943: 44), "papillotement de néant" (Sartre 1943: 44), multiple
dissolution), but if you found Peter "mon intuition serait remplie par un élément
solide" (Sartre 1943: 44) turning image into perception, solidity, presence,
fulfillment, solidification, halt. In this case, the negativity that comes with thinking
that "Peter is not there" "nous arrache à ce mur de positivité" (Sartre 1943: 45)
presence.
12Even his literary works and analysis focusing on real people can be considered
examples of his philosophical argumentation.
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“séparation” (Sartre 1943: 62) or “décollement” (Sartre 1943: 62), all of them
ontological and structural metaphors that lead us to think in terms of space. The
typical form that this “arrachement” takes is “angoisse” (Sartre 1943: 64), as a
CONTINGENCE LIBERTÉ
It corresponds to: lieu, passé, espace, les arrachement à soi
autres and la mort (to be understood as a décrochage
mur or empêchement). coupure
séparation
décollement
fuite
projet
rupture néantisante
vide
spontanéité
délaissement
échappement
supération de la facticité
Here, once more, we find the same metaphors for freedom related to
movement, forces, paths and explosions from a container to the outside; they
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are also founded, as we can easily see, on image schemas. And they are the
action takes place and puts us in the situation of planning goals and going for
them. The fact of introducing action creates a “vide actif” that puts us in the
Contingence and freedom are related and will come together within a
situation (a mixture of imagination and action) which brings into existence the
three essential goals of the human being: doing, having and being. It is
important to highlight that Sartre defends the transitivity of doing which is the
key point, in the sense that without it we can neither have nor be anything,
Next, Sartre begins his definition of time in the same terms: time puts us
into existence as “là-bas” (Sartre 1943: 66), “dans l’avenir” (Sartre 1943: 66).
Time “sépare” (Sartre 1943: 66) and signals that “un néant s’est glissé” (Sartre
1943: 66). We must pay close attention to the metaphorical words: “là-bas”,
experiences as forces, motions and paths, all of them image schemas in the
The essence of the pour-soi is merely what has already been, the past, in
the sense that time is “écoulement” (Sartre 1943: 70) because we are “lancés
“surgit” (Sartre 1943: 74) in a “monde peuplé d’exigences” (Sartre 1943: 74)
and we are born as a “fuite” (Sartre 1943: 77) in front of us is what we want to
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However, despite all this, Sartre often states in the work that
consciousness is not a container and image is not the contents (ideas central in
Sartre’s system that we have seen in earlier books). But in this text Sartre says
that consciousness is “un être pour lequel il est dans son être question de son
être” (Sartre 1943: 81). By using the spatial indicator “dans”, it obviously causes
84). Both are central metaphors that are related to our physical (visual and
tactile) experience.
douane” (Sartre 1943: 84) and “résistances” (Sartre 1943: 86) and
chosiste” (Sartre 1943: 87) full of metaphors (Sartre 1943: 87) and that all of
consciousness into a thing and this is not what Sartre upholds. He believes that
1943: 110) implied: a “densité infinite” (Sartre 1943: 110). Contrary to this image
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Throughout the book the “trou d’être” (Sartre 1943: 115) image is
meaning and goals and values. The pour-soi, despite being defined as a “fuite”,
d’être” (Sartre 1943: 121) or “manque” (Sartre 1943: 122) which must be taken
as an imagined whole projected into the future. This may take on a real form, for
example, a “désir” (Sartre 1943: 123). And this is the foundation of Sartre’s
a concrete body with a characteristic structure) appears with the coming of the
pour-soi, and that nothingness projects its goals (imagination) and 3) by means
of action with contingence (body) it acts to change the world and itself in giving
a new meaning to situation and existence. As we can clearly see, it is just the
All human life is, therefore, a search for an impossible synthesis of pour-
that cannot be realized and this causes “malheur” (Sartre 1943: 127), in the
this search, which connects us with our project and reveals the world to us, also
gives us a value: “la valeur est par delà l’être” (Sartre 1943: 129) and we can
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ontological metaphor that puts us in an intellectual space in which we can see
values and ideas as things. But, really, values and possible options are born out
of “décompression” (Sartre 1943: 133) and they exist and are experienced as a
5. Time
Once more on temporality, Sartre says that past is “arrière” (Sartre 1943: 146),
connected to possession or “avoir à être”; it is en-soi, as are all the things in the
world; it has a “densité compacte” (Sartre 1943: 153); it has the “lourde
plenitude d’être” (Sartre 1943: 152). But we can go back to it from a distance in
order to give a new meaning to it. “Le passé c’est la substance” (Sartre 1943:
154) and it is “hors de portée” (Sartre 1943: 155). We can see, merely from
these short phrases, that the metaphor which invites us to imagine time as a
other hand, is “pour-soi” (Sartre 1943: 156) and “présence” (Sartre 1943: 156)
or “dévoilement” (Sartre 1943: 245). And finally the future is “par delà” (Sartre
The following Table 6 tries to show the essential metaphorical expressions that
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essence pour-soi par delà
arrière présence vides à remplir
possession dévoilement
densité compacte
lourde plénitude d’être
substance
hors de portée
en-soi
takes the pour-soi out of itself, or “hors de soi” (Sartre 1943: 172), as if it were a
It is curious that Sartre talks about reflection within the point he makes on
temporality, but he justifies this by saying that this is another type of “diaspora”
of the pour-soi in the sense that it tries to be “témoin” (Sartre 1943: 137) and
“regardé” (Sartre 1943: 137) at the same time; it tries to turn itself into another
“échec” (Sartre 1943: 189) because we cannot be totally others for ourselves
have put into the concrete image. That is to say, discourse and deduction are
we have seen in the former part, Sartre says that “les descriptions de la
!19
He repeats that meaning comes to us from the future in the sense that it
now indicates absences as “vides à remplir” (Sartre 1943: 236) — key idea that
6. The others
Finally, the last “diaspora” of the pour-soi is what Sartre calls “pour-autrui”. In
come into existence with experiences like “honte” (Sartre 1943: 256) that are
untenable.
“fuite” (Sartre 1943: 295) or “décentration” (Sartre 1943: 295). This view of
others turns us from a “trou” (Sartre 1943: 295) that “s’écoule” (Sartre 1943:
295) into a “massivité” (Sartre 1943: 295), “solidification” (Sartre 1943: 302) and
puts us into a new situation where our being “[nous] échappe” (Sartre 1943:
304).
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POUR-AUTRUI
désintégration
désagrégation
arrière-fond
fuite
décentration
trou
s’écoule
massivité
solidification
m’échappe
dehors
s’enliser
7. The body
The body — another key element in both Sartre’s and Johnson’s systems and
the element that relates freedom to contingence in action and feeling — is what
puts us into contact with both the world and with others. It is the element that
1943: 359) in our situation that brings into existence our being-in-the-world; it is
“dépassement” (Sartre 1943: 366), “le corps est le negligé, le «passé sous
“rattachement” (Sartre 1943: 373) that puts us in relation to ourselves, the world
“scission” (Sartre 1943: 376) in the sense that we live “au-delà” (beyond)
ourselves. It is, finally, “toujours le passé” (Sartre 1943: 391), what we live,
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exist, experience as either flesh or as a window to the world and to us. So,
nausea has no special status; it is only a way to capture the world and our
existence within it. In Sartre’s works after 1948 (Critique de la raison dialectique
(1960) being the most important) an “incarnation” (always projected but never
achieved) manages to overcome this “manque” that shows the pour-soi from its
origin.
CORPS
dévoiler
centre de référence
dépassement
negligé
arrachement
rattachement
scission
passé
incarnation
Relationships with others are, then, “fuite vers” (Sartre 1943: 402),
“poursuivre” (Sartre 1943: 402), “dehors” (Sartre 1943: 402) and in specific
reality searches to turn itself into flesh, “s’enliser” (Sartre 1943: 432). But it is
like this not only in the case of love, it is so for all kinds of actions in the world,
because actions must be done with the body. And actions are founded on
freedom and “la liberté (…) est fondement de toutes les essences” (Sartre
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1943: 482), clearly using the metaphor IDEAS ARE CONSTRUCTIONS. Apart
from this, “fuite”, “poursuivre”, and so on, leads us to think of motion along a
in our relation to others, a dialectic that, born from our bodily existence, causes
“plein” (Sartre 1943: 485) — whilst freedom, as the way for consciousness to
same entity and are connected with the same metaphors. Finally, human reality
is a series of intentional actions that gives meaning to the world and to itself. It
is in this sense that Sartre talks about a “liberté engagée” (Sartre 1943: 524) in
which is the result of a project in the sense that the pour-soi exists as
“échappement” (Sartre 1943: 530) of the meeting or presence that this original
nothingness, from the future), past, environment, others and death. All of them
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can be overcome (that is to say that we can escape from them) by means of a
«mur»” (Sartre 1943: 576), in clear reference to his literary work. Death is, then,
the “empêchement imprévu” (Sartre 1943: 580), the “absurde” (Sartre 1943:
584) by means of which we turn into opacity as a being and nothing more than
being.
as the key point in our existence, because the situation “c’est le sujet éclairant
les choses par son dépassement même” (Sartre 1943: 594) “ou c’est les
choses renvoyant au sujet son image” (Sartre 1943: 594) clearly marking the
fact that the existence of the pour-soi is the appearance of a new sphere of
being in the en-soi; this new sphere gives order, image, meaning, and so on, to
existence in general, and occurs due to the participation of freedom and action
of the pour-soi.
Finally, in this work Sartre tries to present his idea of what must be taken
608). The key point in explaining this is the concept of experience, although
nothingness, too, has a central role as we can see in this statement by Sartre:
“entre l’en-soi néanti et l’en-soi projeté, le pour-soi est néant” (Sartre 1943:
order to confront the situation and achieve the “being” or “having” which has
been projected. And it is this continual action that allows us to understand the
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qualities of the world, qualities we understand logically in a symbolic or
existence.
The conclusion of the work offers us a brief account of the moral and
simply refer to it as the image that best summarizes the presentation of the
pour-soi: “(le pour-soi) il est comme un trou au sein de l’être” (Sartre 1943:
665).
about the world, using solidity to describe what he feels to be the opposite of
8. Concluding remarks
Following Lakoff and Johnson (1999) I have shown that Jean-Paul Sartre’s
physical experiences which are important for him in the sense that they
ontological concepts of être and néant. These metaphors are extended from
implied by the physical or emotional experience that are the basis of the first
metaphors, those related to anguish and nausea (from the point of view of
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psychological faculties). I summarize and systematize what I have said all
ÊTRE NÉANT
(being, perception, contingence, past, (nothingness, imagination, freedom,
body, en-soi) future, consciousness, pour-soi)
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BEING IS NON-ACTION NOTHINGNESS IS ACTION
- passivité - spontanéité
- arrêt - activité
- état - éclatement
- arrachement
- décrochage
- coupure
- processus
- projet
- décollement
- rupture
- délaissement
The fact that we now know the metaphors which are the foundation of Sartre’s
system does not devalue it, because, as we know, all abstract systems are
constructed on the basis of physical interaction with the world via metaphors,
image schemas and qualities which emerge by means of our action in the world
central metaphors that he bases it on. But now we are more prepared to judge it
because we know not only the categories of the system but also the pre-
References
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De Beauvoir, S. 1981 [translation into Spanish 1982], La cérémonie des
Press.
Chicago Press.
Lakoff, G. & Johnson, M. 1999, Philosophy in the flesh. New York: Basic
Books.
nature.
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Sartre, J.-P. 1944, Huis clos. Paris: Gallimard.
Sartre, J.-P. 1963, Les mots. Les temps modernes 209-210, Paris.
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