Just posting this because I want to discuss it here, I know a little bit about it.
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So what do you know? I have never been able to understand what it even is, and why it matters, if it does.Just posting this because I want to discuss it here, I know a little bit about it.
As near as I can, and ever could make out, "Existence precedes essence." seems to mean, "Being precedes being." This could mean, I suppose, that a thing is one thing before it becomes another thing. But why make a fuss about that?
It's about philosophizing about one's beer, or at least that's how it started for Sartre.
Oh, and it's about asserting that existence precedes essence, and that meaning in life is a pure personal creation, not a discovery.
eudaimonia,
Mark
You should drink whiskey. That should make the problem go away.Ahh, yes yes. I do find in the middle of imbibing, what comes about is very profound inquisitive ponderings on philosophy, and life, lager seems to bring that out of me.
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As near as I can, and ever could make out, "Existence precedes essence." seems to mean, "Being precedes being." This could mean, I suppose, that a thing is one thing before it becomes another thing. But why make a fuss about that?
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You're going to have to explain what you mean by sociologicalThere are many dimensions of existentialism, there is no main objective. Existentialism is more of a sociological attempt at defining the meaning of one's existence, always very focused on the individual and subjective experience.
For a mildly hi-larious approach to existentialism, watch the movie "I Heart Huckabees."
Or just Google it.
Sociology is the systematic study of human societies. It is a branch of social science (often synonymous) that uses systematic methods of empirical investigation and critical analysis to develop and refine a body of knowledge about human social structure and activity, often with the goal of applying such knowledge to the pursuit of social welfare. Its subject matter ranges from the micro level of face-to-face interaction to the macro level of societies at large.You're going to have to explain what you mean by sociological
Sociology is the systematic study of human societies. It is a branch of social science (often synonymous) that uses systematic methods of empirical investigation and critical analysis to develop and refine a body of knowledge about human social structure and activity, often with the goal of applying such knowledge to the pursuit of social welfare. Its subject matter ranges from the micro level of face-to-face interaction to the macro level of societies at large.
Sociology is a broad discipline in terms of both methodology and subject matter. Its traditional focuses have included social stratification (or "class"), social relations, social interaction, religion, culture and deviance, and its approaches have included both qualitative and quantitative research techniques. As much of what humans do fits under the category of social structure or social activity, sociology has gradually expanded its focus to further subjects, such as the study of the media, health disparities, the internet, and even the role of social activity in the creation of scientific knowledge. The range of social scientific methods has also been broadly expanded. The linguistic and cultural turns of the mid-20th century brought increasingly hermeneutic and interpretative approaches to the study of society. Conversely, recent decades have seen the rise of new mathematically rigorous approaches, such as social network analysis.
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I don't think merely looking up the definitions in a dictionary is the right method for determining what Sartre means by "existence" and "essence," but granting that you did, this seems an incredibly odd and selective way of reading the definitions you looked up. Only the sixth definition of "essence" you quoted means anything like "being" or "existence."
Even just taking the first entries from each definition yields a non-tautalogous and rather interesting thesis -- namely, that things have actual being before they can be characterized in terms of intrinsic properties. Which, as it turns out, is not all that far from what Sartre means by existence preceding essence.
I meant sociology as the examination of human behavior. So more like psychological. My apologies for being fairly incompetent with the English language :/However, before I come down on this girl like a ton of bricks for being wrong, I thought I'd give her a chance to explain precisely what she means
But come on! How could a thing exist without properties? On the other hand a thing could have properties and not exist. For instance, it might be ubiquitous, omnipotent, omniscient, and insubstantial.
IWhat I actually said was that a thing (and we might as well call the things "humans," since for Sartre those are the things for which existence precedes essence) could exist without being characterized in terms of intrinsic properties.
(i.e., properties that it has just because it's the thing that it is, and not because of its relations to anything else)
This is actually where I think your dictionary method gets a little iffy, since I think essence here means something a bit more straightforward than that. What Sartre really means is that a human can exist without our being able to characterize it in terms of essential properties (i.e. properties that it has necessarily). This could be read in a few different ways -- either that properties of humans are all non-essential, or that humans come to gain essential properties as a result of their existence (or, as Sartre will say, as a result of their choices), or that "humanity" in general is essentially undefined -- we don't and can't know what essential properties mark out what it is to be "human."
All of these are interesting theses which are not obviously false or tautological. I'm inclined to believe they're also pretty problematic, and likely false, but they're interesting options, nonetheless.