midnightreads1803's review against another edition

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informative reflective fast-paced

4.25

loftycomet's review against another edition

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challenging informative inspiring

5.0

divinefemcel's review against another edition

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informative slow-paced

3.5

dietrich03's review against another edition

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challenging reflective

4.5

sssummer's review against another edition

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3.0

Reread

It's still an interesting read. A little bit of Kant lite and also psychology lite. Taking away a star because upon further rereading it's easier to notice some contradictions, particularly in regard to existentialism and ethics. It's a really slippery text and I wouldn't be surprised if I one day read it again. I like the Camus and Beauvoir readings on existentialism a lot more.

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10x more motivated to finish reading for class if I can mark it as read on GoodReads.

This was hypothetically a short read (my edition was a pdf with 72 pages), and yet it took me a scary amount of time to get through. This was largely due to the complicated nature of what Sartre is trying to say, although I also blame his style. I understand that this book is a transcript of a lecture, so that's probably why it was easier to read than the chapter from Being and Nothingness that I had to read for class (The Look -which had me crying and screaming btw because oh my God it was so difficult to understand. And with that chapter I blame him and his writing style. B&N was written in the 60s but there is written philosophy from the nineteenth century or earlier that were on issues just as, if not more, complicated and are actually legible.))

Anyways, this read was getting dry, until the question and answer period of the lecture when Pierre Naville showed up. Damn, he popped off on Sartre and it was so good. Suddenly this was a debate with them going back and forth and it got 10x more entertaining. I think someone should do a recreation of this lecture or something because I would have killed to be able to watch this interaction. But Pierre Naville is my hero.

Other thoughts:

-was proud tbh for getting the Marxism ties they were making and understanding why they were referencing it.

-will def have to reread this to understand it better. In which case I might make this review more substantial or erudite (or save that for my essay? Still undecided if GR is the place for that type of analysis, not sure yet.) I will definitely later include some of the quotes that stood out to me though.

- why this has a high rating in spite of the fact that at least on the initial read I disagree with most of it, is because it's still actually a pretty engaging work. "It is also true in the sense that we do not
believe in the idea of progress. Progress implies improvement, but man[kind] is always the same, confronting a situation that is forever changing, while choice always remains a choice in any situation".
Regardless if you agree or disagree, his thoughts are interesting. Oh, also his solider/student case is a really really great moral dilemma type of situation, which he also uses really well to illustrate his points.

- I am more confused about existentialism actually is than ever. It seems to entail a lot.

-WHOA Sartre comes off as a pretentious prick. So dismissive and uncharitable to his opponents. I was kinda shook by that. It could be harsher in writing than it was verbally though, so I'll give the benefit of the doubt.

marmk's review against another edition

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4.0

I read this as more of a formality than for enjoyment. My high rating comes from my respect for existentialism as a philosophy and less for any powerful prose here. That being said, Sartre did well making existentialist lit acceptable to a general public, which should be a given considering it’s core is a universe. Essential for anyone interested in existentialism, although The Stranger commentary was pretty dry.

perpetually_isolated_being's review against another edition

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inspiring reflective fast-paced

4.25

nathanielhughes00's review against another edition

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5.0

‘I think, therefore, I am’ - René Descartes

Sartre builds upon Descartes’ previous philosophy of the status of being in this book, based on his lecture in 1945. The anecdote of the student battling between two heavy-weighing decisions, of staying with his mother and moving to England to help fight for the liberation of France, hit hard. The awareness of being and knowledge of the self was something that I found rather difficult to grasp (and at times, tedious) in ‘nausea’. It would have been beneficial if I were to have read this first, despite this being released subsequently. Interestingly, Sartre mentions ‘nausea’ and its criticism of humanism (or a certain kind of humanist - specifically, I suppose, the autodidact) and considers the duality of humanism. This alone, made me want to re-read the novel despite only having read it a little under a year ago. All in all, this book works as an excellent introduction to existentialism, though personally, Sartre’s style fits far better for an essay than it does for a novel.

Well worth a read :)

etta_'s review against another edition

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challenging slow-paced

4.0

gabidmgomes's review against another edition

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informative reflective fast-paced

3.75