Science, asked by nat82, 5 months ago

what did you personally learn from the statement of Sartre's claim that we must recognize the moral choices we make for all humankind and must resist the urge to escape this responsibility for all humankind?​

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Answered by Anonymous
4

"Being is. Being is in-itself. Being is what it is."

Jean-Paul Charles Aymard Sartre is one of the most important philosophers of all time. Despite his work garnering considerable flak over the years, his theories on existentialism and freedom cement his place among the most influential Western philosophers of the 20th-century and beyond.

Born in Paris on June 21, 1905, Sartre's early work focused on themes of existentialism as exemplified by his first novel Nausea and later the essay Existentialism and Humanism. After spending nine months as a German prisoner of war in 1940, Jean-Paul Sartre began exploring the meaning of freedom and free will and in 1940, he penned his principal philosophical work — Being and Nothingness: a phenomenological essay on ontology. Today, on Sartre's 112th birthday, we look at some of the key aspects of his philosophical contemplations.

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