Sartre's French Contemporaries and Enduring Influences: Camus, Merleau-Ponty, Debeauvoir & Enduring InfluencesWilliam L. McBride Routledge, 13. sep. 2013 - 392 sider Sartre's French Contemporaries and Enduring Influences This final volume examines Sartre's best-known philosophical contemporaries in France-Albert Camus, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, and Simone de Beauvoir-in terms of both their own philosophical insights and their relationship to Sartre's thought. The articles also offer some suggestive connections between Sartre's thought and subsequent developments in European philosophy, notably structuralism, poststructuralism, and postmodernism. The comparatively recent nature of much of this scholarship is solid testimony to the enduring influence of Sartrean existentialism. |
Indhold
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3 | |
4 | |
5 | |
6 | |
7 | |
8 | |
John ONeill | 132 |
MerleauPonty and the Existential Conception of Science | 147 |
A Polemic | 171 |
The Philosophical Relationship | 183 |
Simone de Beauvoir and Existentialism | 199 |
Teaching Sartre About Freedom | 213 |
Simone de Beauvoirs Autobiography as a Biography of Sartre | 229 |
The Development of | 273 |
Man in Revolt | 23 |
Linguistic Analysis and Existentialism | 69 |
The Polemic in the Pages of Les Temps Modernes 1952 | 79 |
Its Social Philosophies | 94 |
Sartre MerleauPonty and Human Freedom | 111 |
Situation and Temporality | 123 |
Sartrean Structuralism? | 297 |
From Sartre to Deleuze | 338 |
Levinas Sartre and Understanding the Other | 350 |
Acknowledgments | |
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