mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-10-01 01:15:38 -04:00
219 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
219 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
EXISTENTIALISM Downloaded from The Void, Auckland 699-579
|
|
**************
|
|
|
|
First a word of warning, this bulletin is more than 200 lines in length.
|
|
Below is an article writen by Jean-Paul Sartre, first published as
|
|
"A More Precise Characterization of Existentialism" in a newspaper called
|
|
"Action", December 29, 1944. Satre is commonly considered to be the
|
|
most important of this centuries existentialists. He wrote the article
|
|
as a reply to various criticisms of existentialism that were common at the
|
|
time. I have reproduced a translation of it here, mainly because it gives
|
|
a very clear statement of the central themes of existentialist philosophy.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Newspapers - including "Action" itself - are only too willing these days to
|
|
publish articles attacking existentialism. 'Action' has already been kind
|
|
enough to ask me to reply. I doubt that many readers will be interested in
|
|
the debate; they have many more urgent concerns. Yet if, among the persons
|
|
who might have found principles of thinking and rules of conduct in this
|
|
philosophy but have been dissuaded by these absurd criticisms, there were
|
|
just one I could reach and straighten out, it would still be worth for him.
|
|
In any case I want to make it clear that I am replying in my own name only:
|
|
I would hesitate to involve other existentialists in this polemic.
|
|
|
|
What do you reproach us for? To begin with, for being inspired by Heidigger,
|
|
a German and a Nazi philosopher. Next for preaching, in the name of
|
|
existentialism, a quietism of anguish. Are we not trying to corrupt the
|
|
youth and turn it aside from action by urging it to cultivate a refined
|
|
dispair? Are we not upholding nihilistic doctrines (for an editorial writer
|
|
in L'Aube, the proof is that I entitled a book "Being and Nothingness".
|
|
Nothingness; imagine!) during these years when everything has to be redone
|
|
or simply done, when the war is still going on, and when each man needs all
|
|
the strength that he has to win it and to win the peace? Finally your third
|
|
complaint is that existentialism likes to poke about in muck and is much
|
|
readier to show men's wickedness and baseness than their higher feelings.
|
|
|
|
I'll give it to you straight: your attacks seem to me to stem from ignorance
|
|
and bad faith. It's not even certain that you have read any of the books
|
|
you're talking about. You need a scapegoat because you bless so many things
|
|
you can't help chewing out someone from time to time. You've picked
|
|
existentialism because it's an abstract doctrine few people know, and you
|
|
think no one will verify what you say. But I am going to reply to your
|
|
accusations point by point.
|
|
|
|
Heiddegger was a philosopher well before he was a Nazi. His adherence to
|
|
Hitlerism is to be explained by fear, perhaps ambition, and certainly
|
|
conformism. Not pretty to look at, I agree; but enough to invalidate your
|
|
neat reasoning. "Heidegger," you say, "is a member of the National Socialist
|
|
Party; thus his philosophy must be Nazi." That's not it: Heidegger has no
|
|
character; there's the truth of the matter. Are you going to have the nerve
|
|
to conclude from this that his philosophy is an apology for cowardice? Don't
|
|
you know that sometimes a man does not come up to the level of his works?
|
|
And are you going to condemn "The Social Contract" because Rousseau
|
|
abandoned his children? And what difference does Heidegger make anyhow? If
|
|
we discover our own thinking in that of another philosopher, if we ask him
|
|
for techniques and methods that can give us access to new problems, does
|
|
this mean that we espouse every one of his theories? Marx borrowed his
|
|
dialectic from Hegel. Are you going to say that "Capital" is a Prussian
|
|
work? We've seen the deplorable consequences of ecconomic autarky; let's
|
|
not fall into intellectual autarky.
|
|
|
|
During the Occupation, the slavish newspapers used to lump together the
|
|
existentialists and the philosophers of the absurd in the same reproving
|
|
breath. A venomous little ill-manered pedant named Alberes, who wrote for
|
|
the Petainist "Echo des etudiants", used to yap at our heals every week.
|
|
In those days this kind of obfuscation was to be expected; the lower and
|
|
stupider the blow, the happier we were.
|
|
|
|
But why have you taken up the methods of the Vichyssoise press again?
|
|
|
|
Why this helter-skelter way of writing if it's not because the confusion
|
|
you create makes it easier for you to attack both philosophies at once? The
|
|
philosophy of the absurd is coherent and profound. Albert Camus has shown
|
|
that he was big enough to defend it all by himself. I too shall speak all by
|
|
myself for existentialism. Have you ever defined it for your readers? And
|
|
yet it's rather simple.
|
|
|
|
In philosophical terminology, every object has an essence and an existence.
|
|
An essence is an intelligible and unchanging unity of properties; an
|
|
existence is a certain actual presence in the world. Many people think
|
|
that the essence comes first and then the existence: that peas, for example,
|
|
grow and become round in conformity with the idea of peas, and that gherkins
|
|
are gherkins because they participate in the essence of gherkins. This idea
|
|
originated in religious thought: it is a fact that the man who wants to
|
|
build a house has to know exactly what kind of object he's going to
|
|
create - essence precedes existence - and for all those who believe that
|
|
God created men, he must have done so by refering to his idea of them. But
|
|
even those who have no religious faith have maintained this traditional view
|
|
that the object never exists except in conformity with its existence; and
|
|
everyone in the eighteenth century thoght that all men had a common essence
|
|
called 'human nature'. Existentialism, on the contrary, maintains that in
|
|
man - and in man alone - existence precedes essense.
|
|
|
|
This simply means that man first 'is', and only subsequently is this orthat.
|
|
In a word, man must create his own essense: it is in throwing himself into
|
|
the world, suffering there, struggling there, that he gradually defines
|
|
himself. And the definition always remains open ended: we cannot say what
|
|
this man is before he dies, or what mankind is before it has disappeared.
|
|
It is absurd in this light to ask whether existentialism is facist,
|
|
conservative, Communist, or democratic. At this level of generality
|
|
existentialism is nothing but a certain way of envisaging human questions by
|
|
refusing to grant man an eternally established nature. It used to be, in
|
|
Kierkegaard's thought, on par with religious faith. Today, French
|
|
existentialism tends to be accompanied by a declaration of atheism, but this
|
|
is not absolutely neccessary. All I can say - without wanting to insist too
|
|
much on the similarities - is that it isn't too far from the conception of
|
|
man found in Marx. For is it not a fact that Marx would accept "this motto
|
|
of ours for man: make, and in making make yourself, and be nothing but what
|
|
you have made of yourself?"
|
|
|
|
Since existentialism defines man by action, it is evident that this
|
|
philosophy is not a quietism. In fact, man cannot help acting; his thoughts
|
|
are projects and commitments, his feelings are undertakings, he is nothing
|
|
other than his life, and his life is the unity of his behavior. "But what
|
|
about anguish?" you'll say. Well, this rather solemn word refers to a very
|
|
simple everyday reality. If man 'is' not but 'makes himself', and if in
|
|
making himself he makes himself responsible for the whole species - if there
|
|
is no value or morality given a priori, so that we must in every instance
|
|
decide alone and without any basis or guide lines, yet 'for everyone' - how
|
|
could we possibly help feeling anguished when we have to act? Each of our
|
|
acts puts the world's meaning and man's place in the universe in question.
|
|
With each of them, whether we want to or not, we constitute a universal
|
|
scale of values. And you want us not to be seized with fear in the face of
|
|
such a total responsibility? Ponge, in a very beautiful piece of writing,
|
|
said that man is the future of man. The future is not yet created, not yet
|
|
decided upon. We are the ones who will make it; each of our gestures will
|
|
help fashion it. It would take a lot of pharisaism to avoid anguished
|
|
awareness of the formidable mission given to each of us. But you people,
|
|
in order to refute us more convincingly, you people have deliberately
|
|
confused anguish and neurasthenia, making who knows what pathological terror
|
|
out of this virile uneasiness extistentialism speaks of. Since I have to dot
|
|
my i's, I'll say then that 'anguish, far from being an obstacle to action,
|
|
is the very condition for it, and is identicle with the sense of that
|
|
crushing responsibility of all before all which is the source of both our
|
|
torment and our granduer.'
|
|
|
|
As for despair, we have to understand one another. It's true that man would
|
|
be wrong 'to hope'. But what does this mean except that hope is the greatest
|
|
impediment to action? Should we hope that the war will stop all by itself
|
|
without us, that the Nazis will extend the hand of friendship to us, that
|
|
the privilaged of capitalist society will give up their privilages in the
|
|
joy of a new "night of August 4"? If we hope for all of this, all we have
|
|
to do is cross our arms and wait. Man cannot will unless he has first
|
|
understood that he can count on nothing but himself: that he is alone, left
|
|
alone on earth in the middle of his infinite responsibilities, with neither
|
|
help nor succor, with no other goal but the one he will set for himself,
|
|
with no other destiny but the one he will forge on this earth. It is this
|
|
certainty, this intuitive understanding of his situation, that we call
|
|
despair. You can see that it is no fine romantic frenzy but the sharp lucid
|
|
conciousness of the human condition. 'Just as anguish is indistinguishable
|
|
from a sense of responsiblity, despair is inseparable from will.' With
|
|
dispair, true optimism begins: the optimism of the man who expects nothing,
|
|
who knows he has no rights and nothing coming to him, who rejoices in
|
|
counting on himself alone and in acting alone for the good of all.
|
|
|
|
Are you going to condemn existentialism for saying men are free? But you
|
|
need that freedom, all of you. You hide it from yourselves hypocritically,
|
|
and yet you incessantly come back to it in spite of yourselves. When you
|
|
have explained a man's behavior by its causes, by his social situation and
|
|
his interests, you suddenly become indignant at him and you bitterly reproach
|
|
him for his conduct. And there are other men, on the contrary, whom you
|
|
admire and whose acts serve as models for you. All right then, that means
|
|
you don't compare the bad ones to plant lice and the good ones to useful
|
|
animals. If you blame them, or praise them, you do so because they could have
|
|
acted differently. The class struggle is a fact to which I subscribe
|
|
completely, but how can you fail to see that it is situated on the level of
|
|
freedom? You call us social traitors, saying that our conception of freedom
|
|
keeps man from loosening his chains. What stupidity! When we say a man who's
|
|
out of work is free, we don't mean that he can do whatever he wants and
|
|
change himself into a rich and tranquil bourgeois on the spot. 'He is free
|
|
because he can always choose to accept his lot with resignation or to rebel
|
|
against it.' And undoubtably he will be unable to avoid great poverty; but
|
|
in the very midst of his destitution, which is dragging him under, he is
|
|
able to choose to struggle - in his own name and in the name of
|
|
others - against all forms of destitution. He can also choose to be a man
|
|
who refuses to let destitution be man's lot. Is a man a social traitor just
|
|
because from time to time he remindes others of these basic truths? Then the
|
|
Marx who said, "We want to change the world," and who in this simple
|
|
sentence said that man is master of his destiny, is a social traitor. Then
|
|
all of you are social traitors, because that's what you think too just as
|
|
soon as you let go the apron strings of a materialism that was useful once
|
|
but now has gotten old. And if you didn't think so, then man would be a
|
|
thing - a bit of carbon, sulfur, phosphorus, and nothing more - and you
|
|
wouldn't have to lift a finger for him.
|
|
|
|
You tell me that I work in filth. That's what Alain Laubreaux used to say,
|
|
too. I could refrain from answering here, because this reproach is dirrected
|
|
at me as a person and not an existentialist. But you are so quick to
|
|
generalize that I must nevertheless defend myself for fear that the
|
|
opprobrium you cast upon me will redound to the philosophy I have adopted.
|
|
There is only one thing to say: I don't trust people who claim that
|
|
literature uplifts them by displaying noble sentiments, people who want the
|
|
theater to give them a 'show' of heroism and purity. What they really want
|
|
is to be pursuaded that it's easy to do good. Well no! It isn't easy.
|
|
Vichyssoise literature and, alas, some of today's literature would like to
|
|
make us think it is: it's so nice to be self satisfied. But it's an outright
|
|
lie. Heroism, greatness, generosity, abnegation; I agree that there is
|
|
nothing better and that in the end they are all what make sense out of human
|
|
action. But if you pretend that all a person has to do to be a hero is to
|
|
belong to the 'ajistes,' the 'jocistes,' or a political party you favour,
|
|
to sing innocent songs and go to the country on Sundays, you are cheapening
|
|
the virtues that you claim to uphold and are simply making fun of everyone.
|
|
|
|
Have said enough to make it clear that 'existentialism is no mournful
|
|
delectation but a humanist philosophy of action, effort, combat, solidarity?
|
|
After my attempt to make things clear, will we still find journalists making
|
|
allusions to the "despair of our eminent ones" and other claptrap? We'll
|
|
see. I want to tell my critics openly: it all depends on you now. After all
|
|
you're free too. And those of you who are fighting for the Revolution, as we
|
|
think we are fighting too: you are just as able as we are to decide whether
|
|
it shall be made in good or bad faith. The case of existentialism, an
|
|
abstract philosophy upheld by a few powerless men, is very slight and
|
|
scarcely worthy. But in this case as in thousands of others, depending on
|
|
whether you keep on lying about it or do it justice even as you attack it,
|
|
you will decide what man shall be. May you grasp this fact and feel a little
|
|
salutary anguish.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|