ABSTRACT

Existentialist Ontology and Human Consciousness
The majority of the distinguished scholarly articles in this volume focus on Sartre's early philosophical work, which dealt first with imagination and the emotions, then with the critique of Husserl's notion of a transcendental ego, and finally with systematic ontology presented in his best-known book, Being and Nothingness. In addition, since his preoccupation with ontological questions and especially with the meanings of ego, self, and consciousness endured throughout his career, other essays discuss these themes in light of later developments both in Sartre's own thought and in the phenomenological, hermeneutic, and analytic traditions.

chapter |26 pages

Sartre's ontology

The revealing and making of being

chapter |17 pages

The Question of the Transcendental Ego

Sartre's Critique of Husserl

chapter |13 pages

The Sartrean Cogito

A Journey between Versions

chapter |13 pages

Nothingness and emptiness

Exorcising the shadow of God in Sartre