Existentialism Kevin Aho
Existentialism Kevin Aho
Existentialism Kevin Aho
Kevin Aho
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
First published Fri Jan 6, 2023
As an intellectual movement that exploded on the scene in mid-twentieth-century France, “existentialism” is often
viewed as a historically situated event that emerged against the backdrop of the Second World War, the Nazi
death camps, and the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, all of which created the circumstances for
what has been called “the existentialist moment” (Baert 2015), where an entire generation was forced to confront
the human condition and the anxiety-provoking givens of death, freedom, and meaninglessness. Although the
most popular voices of this movement were French, most notably Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir, as
well as compatriots such as Albert Camus, Gabriel Marcel, and Maurice Merleau-Ponty, the conceptual
groundwork of the movement was laid much earlier in the nineteenth century by pioneers like Søren Kierkegaard
and Friedrich Nietzsche and twentieth-century German philosophers like Edmund Husserl, Martin Heidegger,
and Karl Jaspers as well as prominent Spanish intellectuals José Ortega y Gasset and Miguel de Unamuno. The
core ideas have also been illuminated in key literary works. Beyond the plays, short stories, and novels by French
luminaries like Sartre, Beauvoir, and Camus, there were Parisian writers such as Jean Genet and André Gide, the
Russian novelists Leo Tolstoy and Fyodor Dostoevsky, the work of Norwegian authors such as Henrik Ibsen and
Knut Hamsun, and the German-language iconoclasts Franz Kafka and Rainer Maria Rilke. The movement even
found expression across the pond in the work of the “lost generation” of American writers like F. Scott Fitzgerald
and Ernest Hemingway, mid-century “beat” authors like Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsburg, and William S.
Burroughs, and the self-proclaimed “American existentialist,” Norman Mailer (Cotkin 2003, 185).
What distinguishes existentialism from other movements in the intellectual history of the West is how it stretched
far beyond the literary and academic worlds. Its ideas are captured in films by Ingmar Bergman, Michelangelo
Antonioni, Jean-Luc Goddard, Akira Kurosawa, and Terrence Malick. Its moods are expressed in the paintings
of Edvard Munch, Marcel Duchamp, Pablo Picasso, Paul Cézanne, and Edward Hopper and in the vitiated forms
of the sculptor Alberto Giocometti. Its emphasis on freedom and the struggle for self-creation informed the radical
and emancipatory politics of Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X as well as the writings of Black intellectuals
such as Ralph Ellison, Richard Wright, and W.E.B. Du Bois. Its engagement with the relationship between faith
and freedom and the incomprehensibility of God shaped theological debates through the lectures and writings of
Karl Barth, Paul Tillich, and Martin Buber, among others. And, with its penetrating analyses of anxiety and the
importance of self-realization, the movement has had a profound impact in the development of humanistic and
existential approaches to psychotherapy in the work of a wide range of theorists, including R.D. Laing, Rollo
May, Viktor Frankl, and Irvin Yalom.
With this broad and diverse range of incarnations, it is difficult to explain what the term “existentialism” refers
to. The word, first introduced by Marcel in 1943, is certainly not a reference to a coherent system or philosophical
school.[1] Indeed, the major contributors are anything but systematic and have widely divergent views, and of
these, only Sartre and Beauvoir explicitly self-identified as “existentialists.” In surveying its representative
thinkers, one finds secular and religious existentialists, philosophers who embrace a conception of radical freedom
and others who reject it. And there are those who regard our relations with others as largely mired in conflict and
self-deception and others who recognize a deep capacity for self-less love and interdependence. Given these
disparate threads and the fact that there is no unifying doctrine, one can nonetheless distill a set of overlapping
ideas that bind the movement together.
Nihilism: The emergence of existentialism as an intellectual movement was influenced by the rise of
nihilism in late nineteenth century Europe as the pre-modern religious worldview was replaced with one
that was increasingly secular and scientific. This historical transition resulted in the loss of a transcendent
moral framework and contributed to the rise of modernity’s signature experiences: anxiety, alienation,
boredom, and meaninglessness.
Engagement vs. Detachment: Against a philosophical tradition that privileges the standpoint of theoretical
detachment and objectivity, existentialism generally begins in medias res, amidst our own situated, first-
person experience. The human condition is revealed through an examination of the ways we concretely
engage with the world in our everyday lives and struggle to make sense of and give meaning to our
existence.
Existence Precedes Essence: Existentialists forward a novel conception of the self not as a substance or
thing with some pre-given nature (or “essence”) but as a situated activity or way of being whereby we are
always in the process of making or creating who we are as our life unfolds. This means our essence is not
given in advance; we are contingently thrown into existence and are burdened with the task of creating
ourselves through our choices and actions.
Freedom: Existentialists agree that what distinguishes our existence from that of other beings is that we
are self-conscious and exist for ourselves, which means we are free and responsible for who we are and
what we do. This does not mean we are wholly undetermined but, rather, that we are
always beyond or more than ourselves because of our capacity to interpret and give meaning to whatever
limits or determines us.
Authenticity: Existentialists are critical of our ingrained tendency to conform to the norms and
expectations of the public world because it prevents us from being authentic or true to ourselves. An
authentic life is one that is willing to break with tradition and social convention and courageously affirm
the freedom and contingency of our condition. It is generally understood to refer to a life lived with a
sense of urgency and commitment based on the meaning-giving projects that matter to each of us as
individuals.
Ethics: Although they reject the idea of moral absolutes and universalizing judgments about right conduct,
existentialism should not be dismissed for promoting moral nihilism. For the existentialist, a moral or
praiseworthy life is possible. It is one where we acknowledge and own up to our freedom, take full
responsibility for our choices, and act in such a way as to help others realize their freedom.
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