"Engagez-vous, rengagez-vous…". Lignée et tradition cartésiennes dans L’être et le néant
Labyrinth
View Archive Info| Field | Value | |
| Title |
"Engagez-vous, rengagez-vous…". Lignée et tradition cartésiennes dans L’être et le néant
"Engagez-vous, rengagez-vous…". Lignée et tradition cartésiennes dans 'L’être et le néant' |
|
| Creator |
Perrin, Christophe
|
|
| Subject |
Philosophy
Jean-Paul Sartre, René Descartes, Being and Nothingness, cogito, consciousness Philosophy Jean-Paul Sartre, René Descartes, Being and Nothingness, cogito, consciousness |
|
| Description |
"Join up, they said! It’s a man’s life, they said!" Cartesian Lineage and Tradition in Being and NothingnessWhile Descartes is literally present in 27 of 722 pages that Being and Nothingness counts, Hegel appears in 43, Husserl in 46 and Heidegger in 47 of them. Without asserting, and thus without infirming the obvious influence of these three German thinkers on it, one year after his essay of phenomenological ontology, it is nevertheless the filiation and the manner of only the French phi-losopher that Sartre claims in front of Pierre Lorquet. So, which relative and which model is Descartes for him? And what relationship does Sartre exactly maintain with him? Following the track of the latter in the 1943 treatise, I want to ensure that “the individual of existentialism is Descartes’s true heir.”
"Join up, they said! It’s a man’s life, they said!" Cartesian Lineage and Tradition in Being and NothingnessWhile Descartes is literally present in 27 of 722 pages that Being and Nothingness counts, Hegel appears in 43, Husserl in 46 and Heidegger in 47 of them. Without asserting, and thus without infirming the obvious influence of these three German thinkers on it, one year after his essay of phenomenological ontology, it is nevertheless the filiation and the manner of only the French phi-losopher that Sartre claims in front of Pierre Lorquet. So, which relative and which model is Descartes for him? And what relationship does Sartre exactly maintain with him? Following the track of the latter in the 1943 treatise, I want to ensure that “the individual of existentialism is Descartes’s true heir”. |
|
| Publisher |
Axia Academic Publishers
|
|
| Contributor |
—
— |
|
| Date |
2015-08-16
|
|
| Type |
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Peer-reviewed Article Philosophic-Historical Approach Philosophic-Historical Approach |
|
| Format |
application/pdf
|
|
| Identifier |
http://www.axiapublishers.com/ojs/index.php/labyrinth/article/view/15
10.25180/lj.v17i1.15 |
|
| Source |
Labyrinth; Vol 17, No 1 (2015): Critique and Engagement: Jean-Paul Sartre 1905-2015; 51-70
1561-8927 2410-4817 10.25180/lj.v17i1 |
|
| Language |
fra
|
|
| Relation |
http://www.axiapublishers.com/ojs/index.php/labyrinth/article/view/15/18
|
|
| Coverage |
French Philosophy
Contemporary Philosophy Continental Philosophy French Philosophy Contemporary Philosophy Continental Philosophy |
|
| Rights |
Copyright (c) 2015 Christophe Perrin
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0 |
|
Axia Digital Library