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Jean-Paul Sartre's conception of existentialist philosophy focused upon the radical freedom that faces every human being. In the absence of any fixed human nature or absolute, external standards, we must all become responsible for whatever choices we make. ... That, according to Sartre, means acting and living in bad faith...
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atheism.about.com/od/existentialistthemes/a/badfaith.ht...
atheism.about.com/od/existentialistthemes/a/badfaith.htm
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(There seems to be some overlap in Sartre's conception of bad faith and his conception of self-deception.); A person can live in bad faith which ...implies a constant and particular style of life. 18. "THE UNCONSCIOUS" IS NOT TRULY UNCONSCIOUS.
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www.sonoma.edu/users/d/daniels/sartre%20sum.html
www.sonoma.edu/users/d/daniels/sartre%20sum.html
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Though Sartre was not a serious reader of Hegel or Marx until during and after the war, ... Given the fundamental division of the human situation into facticity and transcendence, bad faith or inauthenticity can assume two principal forms: one that denies the freedom or transcendence component ("I can't do anything about...
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plato.stanford.edu/entries/sartre/
plato.stanford.edu/entries/sartre/
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To believe in anything outside his own will is to be guilty of 'bad Faith.' Existentialist despair and anguish is the acknowledgement that man is condemned to freedom. There is no God, ... Sartre gives two famous examples of bad faith. He pictures a girl sitting with a man who she knows very well would like to seduce her.
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www.blupete.com/Literature/Biographies/Philosophy/Sartr...
www.blupete.com/Literature/Biographies/Philosophy/Sartre.htm
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If I assume Sartre is only referring to Bad Faith, I can make sense of this passage. Otherwise… ; “The man who confesses that he is evil has exchanged his disturbing ‘freedom-for-evil’ for an inanimate character of evil”;
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qalmlea.blogspot.com/2009/03/sartre-bad-faith.html
qalmlea.blogspot.com/2009/03/sartre-bad-faith.html
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www.iep.utm.edu/s/sartre-ex.htm
www.iep.utm.edu/s/sartre-ex.htm
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Forward—Bad faith is the technical term coined by Kierkegaard's wayward twentieth-century disciple Jean-Paul Sartre which the state of human inauthenticity where one attempts to flee from freedom, ... We say indifferently of a person that he shows signs of bad faith or that he lies to himself. We shall willingly grant...
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www.philosophymagazine.com/others/MO_Sartre_BadFaith.ht...
www.philosophymagazine.com/others/MO_Sartre_BadFaith.html
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A brief discussion of the life and works of Jean-Paul Sartre, with links to additional information. ... Empasizing the radical freedom of all human action, Sartre warns of the dangers of mauvaise foi (bad faith), acting on the self-deceptive motives by which people often try to elude responsibility for what they do.
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www.philosophypages.com/ph/sart.htm
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Catalano also identifies a 'strong' sense of bad faith in Sartre's writings, however, which involves accepting and being complicit with our social roles so that we hide from our fundamental freedom in some greater and active way.
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eserver.org/clogic/4-2/coombes.html
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