4.22 AVERAGE

informative reflective medium-paced

aashi123435's review against another edition

DID NOT FINISH: 83%

Boring. Almost finished the book and I still don’t know what existentialism is. Instead I’ve been bombarded with the history of existentialist thinkers, which is useless when I don’t know or care who they are yet.
challenging hopeful informative inspiring reflective slow-paced

still don't understand what phenomenology is ;((

The author has managed to make intellectual history both riveting and beautiful. I loved the book and learned a great deal about the lives and ideas of its colorful cast of characters: Sartre, Beauvoir, Heidegger, Camus, Husserl, Merleau-Ponty, and many others.
challenging informative inspiring reflective slow-paced

This book is a bit dangerous, because existentialism is dangerous. Existentialism is dangerous because it makes people feel more powerful than they are. There is not enough attention to social structures. In other words, there is not enough attention in existentialism to power. But the book is extremely well written. The biographies are rich and detailed. The understanding provided of the philosophical ideas, including very tricky such ideas like those of Heidegger, are reproduced well. It does a great job of describing the different forms of phenomenology. But I've stopped re-reading it (I was just reading it on loop for a while) because it makes me lose track of social structure and puts me too much into a mood of individualism.

Excellent. Cannot recommend enough if you want to read about existentialism in a sort of primer - was comparatively easy to understand - while learning about the context within which the discipline’s greatest tomes were written. I couldn’t put it down.
challenging hopeful informative medium-paced

If allowed, I'd give this 4 1/2 stars. Not 5 only because, is anything perfect? Well, this book nearly is. For a little over 300 pages I lived with the great thinkers - certainly not all great people - of phenomenology and existentialism and I loved it. Philosophy with a light touch intertwined with biography which considering the ideas these people held about the primacy of our experience of the world (simple take on it on my part), makes tremendous sense. Enlightening, moving, and highly applicable to our world today.

The lives, loves & lessons of the existentialist set, from Sartre & Beauvoir to Camus. Less bio (although there’s plenty of that) than a mix of the people & philosophies that captivated Europe through much of the 20th century. The author makes a lively case to rescue existentialists from intellectual mothballs. (I guess they’ve fallen out of fashion lately.) But between “Being and Time” & “Being and Nothingness,” the arguments kinda sailed over my head. More fun are the anecdotal nuggets (Which philosopher was a Nazi?) that break up the deep thoughts.