• Banno
    24.9k
    When I were lad... (spoken in best Yorkshire brogue)

    We all had a copy of Being and Nothingness on our shelf, and went to see No Exit every second month.

    But he never gets a mention any more.

    I was tempted to ask if anyone still reads Being and Nothingness. But of course no one ever actually read Being and Nothingness.

    Does anyone else find his absence from the forums a bit odd? His star status was once far greater than any other philosopher, with the possible exception of Russell. Yet he never gets a mention now.

    Odd, that someone of his status should be so forgotten.

    Who else has so fallen from grace?
  • neonspectraltoast
    258
    Maybe sometimes people get too close to truth and are ignored in favor of being lost.
  • jgill
    3.8k
    I was tempted to ask if anyone still reads Being and Nothingness. But of course no one ever actually read Being and Nothingness.Banno

    I did, back in the late 1950s. Existentialism and the Look made an impression and influenced my attitude toward solo climbing. The simple presence of another living soul alters experience.
  • Banno
    24.9k
    Yeah, sure you did :joke: . I got to page two hundred and fifty something.

    But yes, the Look remains the most penetrating dismissal of solipsism imaginable.
  • Deletedmemberzc
    2.5k


    I read three quarters of Being and Nothingness in my twenties and pick it up again here and there. The most famous things he said and wrote are ugly things. Ugly is fun but lacks the staying power of the beautiful.
  • Snakes Alive
    743
    Sartre was popular, but among professional philosophers he was never well-respected. There are videos of Derrida just saying he was a bad philosopher, and Heidegger apparently thought he was an idiot.

    And it's often what goes in professional philosophy that trickles down to discussion elsewhere.
  • David Mo
    960
    I was tempted to ask if anyone still reads Being and Nothingness. But of course no one ever actually read Being and Nothingness.Banno

    Not only have I recently re-read Being and Nothingness, but I'm reading the Critique of Dialectical Reason right now. I guess I am getting prematurely senile.
  • Banno
    24.9k
    I guess I am getting prematurely senile.David Mo
    :grin:

    I'm sure senility would help.
  • David Mo
    960
    There are videos of Derrida just saying he was a bad philosopher, and Heidegger apparently thought he was an idiot.Snakes Alive

    Derrida's views on other philosophers seem irrelevant to me. I have only read half of Derrida's book about the gift and I found it insufferable pedantry. Post-moderns are usually like that.

    As for Heidegger, he began by praising Sartre's intelligent insight on his philosophy, and moved to insults when he realized that Sartre was also criticizing him. He was an insufferable egomaniac. Sartre criticized him for defending a hidden theology that despised man. If you have read only some pages of Being and Time you will have realized that the first criticism is accurate. As for the second, Heidegger confirmed it to the letter when he began to exalt Hitler.
    It seems to me that Sartre still has a lot to say for anyone who has the patience to read his writings, which are not always easy or, of course, entertaining.

    By the way, two months BV (Before Virus) I attended a performance of Nekrassov in my town in a theater filled to overflowing and long minutes of applause. Sartre lives! I was surprised.

    What makes Sartre the black beast of most philosophers of his time and of today is his defence of the revolutionary path to socialism and of violence against colonialism. His insistence on the responsibility of intellectuals is not to the liking of contemporary intellectuals who live very well on the heights.
  • David Mo
    960
    With Sartre it is like with Freud, everyone abominates them, but everyone uses concepts like bad faith, condemned to be free, hell is the others, etc. that have come from Sartre. There must be be a reason for that.
  • David Mo
    960
    The most famous things he said and wrote are ugly things.ZzzoneiroCosm

    What if we're ugly and we don't want to see it?
  • Snakes Alive
    743
    Another true believer has entered the room, I see...
  • David Mo
    960
    I don't see what you see... Vision problems?
  • Streetlight
    9.1k
    With Sartre it is like with Freud, everyone abominates them, but everyone uses concepts like bad faith, condemned to be free, hell is the others, etc. that have come from Sartre. There must be be a reason for that.David Mo

    I was going to mention exactly this. Just as Freudian lingo is part and parcel of everyday vocabulary (unconscious, libido, ego, id, on the couch, etc), so too is Sartre's language part of the furniture, even though he's not studied all that much. The return of the repressed.
  • Banno
    24.9k
    What if we're ugly and we don't want to see it?David Mo

    @unenlightened?
  • Umbra
    15
    This is interesting, because I have just returned to Being and Nothingness after many, many years, and literally just made a post regarding the book on another thread before seeing this one. All things considered, it's still a fantastic read.
  • Heracloitus
    499
    Who else has so fallen from grace?Banno

    Henri Bergson.
  • Umbra
    15
    Deleuze made Bergson popular to talk about again for a while, but I don't know if it stuck or encouraged people to actually read him again. Likely not. Personally, while I enjoy reading Deleuze, nothing of his has changed the way I think compared to reading Matter and Memory for the first time.
  • David Mo
    960

    A friend translated a book by Deleuze. It was a translation much appreciated by the critics and quoted by experts. Privately he admitted that he hadn't understood anything he was translating. The same thing happened to me with the original. It's just that we weren't true believers.
  • unenlightened
    9.2k
    Who else has so fallen from grace?
    — Banno
    emancipate

    Marcuse, Russel himself. It turns out that dirty old men don't make he greatest moral philosophers. Wittgenstein survives maybe because he was gay.
  • Umbra
    15
    Ha! I'm not surprised. I will say Deleuze excels at criticism (e.g., his books on Proust and Kant are fantastic) but he never manages to convince me with his overtly philosophical works.
  • Umbra
    15
    Who else has so fallen from grace?Banno

    Just to add to the list here--maybe Levinas (sadly)?
  • David Mo
    960
    Who else has so fallen from grace?Banno

    Every philosopher who does not enter the Olympus of Anglo-Saxon philosophy. In the mid-20th century, there were channels of communication between Europe and the Anglo world. Today there is a wall higher than the Berlin Wall. The one who does not write in Anglo-Saxon journals does not exist. The one who is not quoted in Anglo-Saxon journals goes on into the world of Oblivion.

    It is not a question of ideology ...only. It is a question of cultural domination mechanics.
  • 180 Proof
    15.3k
    I was tempted to ask if anyone still reads Being and Nothingness. But of course no one ever actually read Being and Nothingness.Banno
    I'd struggled all the way to the end of BnN 1.5x (on my own, not for a class) during my first year at university. The ordeal had left me respecting but hating that old wall-eyed, boujee-comrade. :sweat:

    Odd, that someone of his status should be so forgotten.

    Who else has so fallen from grace?
    Banno
    M. Merleau-Ponty

    J. Dewey

    M. Buber

    T. Paine

    P-HT, Baron d'Holbach
  • Streetlight
    9.1k
    M. Merleau-Ponty180 Proof

    Nah man, M-P is everywhere.
  • 180 Proof
    15.3k
    Well, so is Sartre. A respected archive for citations but not - no longer - a cause célèbre in contemporary philosophical circles (or, at least, not for the authors I read).
  • jkg20
    405
    :up:
    Every philosopher who does not enter the Olympus of Anglo-Saxon philosophy.
    Even some who found themselves on those peaks at the beginning of the 20th century ended up being thrown down the mountain. Something very sinister appears to have happened to so called analytic philosophy after WWII.
  • jkg20
    405
    Some examples of who am I talking about: Grace and Theodore De Laguna. Grace even wrote the companion piece to Quine's "Two Dogmas of Empiricism". Theodore was one of the most important philosophers in the USA at the begnning of the century, nobody gives a toss about him now, but he was saying "meaning is use" back in the 1920s.
  • Number2018
    560

    Odd, that someone of his status should be so forgotten.Banno
    What is your answer? Why is he forgotten?
bold
italic
underline
strike
code
quote
ulist
image
url
mention
reveal
youtube
tweet
Add a Comment

Welcome to The Philosophy Forum!

Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.