ABSTRACT

Sartre’s ontology begins from the situation of the subject, not as an abstract category but as embodied and individual. Each of us is such a subject, and each of us knows only the subject that he or she is. As a subject I exist, that is to say I stand out (the root meaning of “exist”) into a world that I encounter in its immediacy and its otherness. Objects in the world are what they are, but this implies also that they just are, that they have being. At first this being is apprehended only in its relation to me. Let me follow Sartre’s example and take a simple case, an everyday object such as a letter-opener. The letter-opener presents itself to me as existing, that is as standing out into a world of other objects (including my physical body), but its being is in the first instance a “being-for-me”.