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Sartre, Nietzsche and Non-Humanist Existentialism

David Mitchell

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Springer International Publishing img Link Publisher

Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Sonstiges

Beschreibung

This book argues that existentialism’s concern with human existence does not simply make it another form of humanism. Influenced by Heidegger’s 1947 ‘Letter on Humanism’, structuralist and post-structuralist critics have both argued that existentialism is synonymous with a naïve ‘humanist’ idea of the subject. Such identification has led to the movement’s dismissal as a credible philosophy; this book aims to challenge such a view.

Through a lucid and thought-provoking exploration of the concept of perversity in Sartre and Nietzsche, Mitchell argues that understanding the human as a ‘perversion’ of something other than itself allows us to have a philosophy of the human without the humanist subject. In short, through perversion, we can talk about the human as not merely having a relation to the world, but of being that relation. With an explicit defence of Sartre against the charge of humanism, accompanied by a novel and distinctive reinterpretation of Nietzsche, Mitchell recovers an existentialism that is at once both radical and philosophically relevant.


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Kundenbewertungen

Schlagwörter

Angst, Humamism, Geneaology, Existentialism, Nietzsche, humanism, Self-deception, Nothingness, Perversity, Sartre