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Episode 140: De Beauvoir on the Ambiguous Human Condition

Episode 140: De Beauvoir on the Ambiguous Human Condition

The Partially Examined Life Philosophy Podcast · Mark Linsenmayer

May 30, 20162h 8m

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Show Notes

On The Ethics of Ambiguity (1947), parts I and II. For Wes Alwan's summary of this book, go here. We return to existentialism! Instead of describing our predicament as "absurd," de Beauvoir prefers "ambiguous": We are a biological organism in the world, yet we're also free consciousness transcending the given situation. Truly coming to terms with this freedom means not only understanding that you transcend any label, but also recognizing that your freedom requires the freedom of others. The full foursome discuss whether this attempt to ground an existentialist ethics works.

End song: "Reasonably Lonely," by Mark Lint.