True, many people do not appear especially anguished, but we maintain that they are merely hiding their anguish or trying not to face it. Certainly, many believe that their actions involve no one but themselves, and were we to ask them, “But what if everyone acted that way?” they would shrug their shoulders and reply, “But everyone does not act that way.”
As I read it, the many are fooling themselves. The "that way" refers simply to the self-denial practiced by "many people." And when challenged, they deflect and minimize. The point being, if I may read beyond the text, that "many people" are inauthentic and dishonest with themselves.Certainly, many believe that their actions involve no one but themselves,
Existentialists like to say that man is in anguish. This is what they mean: a man who commits himself, and who realizes that he is not only the individual that he chooses to be, but also a legislator choosing at the same time what humanity as a whole should be, cannot help but be aware of his own full and profound responsibility.
many people do not appear especially anguished, but we maintain that they are merely hiding their anguish or trying not to face it. — J. P. Sartre
how do "we" know that people are pretty much all anguished, even though they don't look like it? — Bitter Crank
"Oh, you are happy? You must be in denial."
Maybe what Sartre has to say here is hogwash? — Bitter Crank
Do you think everyone poor and bourgeois is free? How about people with serious illnesses, mental retardation, inbreeding, slaves, etc? Are there degrees of existential freedom? — bloodninja
Perhaps, but that does not mean that there are other ways of identifying when someone is in such a state. I have been victim of "anguish", and after a while, people start to see through the cracks of my shell. Such as acting different, being touchy, et cetera. So while it may not be a breeze, there definitely is a way to define anguish in other people....anguish is not an emotion that you can plaster a specific face on
True, many people do not appear especially anguished, but we maintain that they are merely hiding their anguish or trying not to face it. Certainly, many believe that their actions involve no one but themselves, and were we to ask them, “But what if everyone acted that way?” they would shrug their shoulders and reply, “But everyone does not act that way.”
I have absolutely no clue what Sartre means with the word “that” in the question. Does “this” mean the belief that their actions involve no one but themselves? So then it would be
“But what if everyone acted in a manner that their actions involved no one else except themselves?”
I really want to take the most out of this small transcript of his speech... — Marius
it can refer to any morally dubious action — Terrapin Station
Certainly, many believe that their actions involve no one but themselves
and were we to ask them, “But what if everyone acted that way?
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