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Sartre's Ontology: A Study of Being and Nothingness in the Light of Hegel's Logic

Evanston, [Ill.]: Northwestern University Press (1966)

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  1. Feminist ethical ontology: Contesting ‘the bare givenness of intersubjectivity’.Janet Borgerson - 2001 - Feminist Theory 2 (2):173-187.
    Philosophers exploring the ethical implications of closeness, or ‘given intersubjectivity’, favor an essential human predicament over an essential sexual dualism to explain their positions on responsibility for and response to the Other. This article proposes a feminist ethical ontology that rejects an essentialist base, turning instead to semiotics as a tool for describing the condition of human agency in a context of oppression. The discussion attends to the problems of downplaying the importance of difference and of blurring the distinction between (...)
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  • Le projet Épistémologique de Sartre.David Joannis - 1996 - Philosophiques 23 (2):305-315.
    Contrairement à l'opinion répandue, l'échec de l'éthique et de l'ontologie ne constitue pas l'aboutissement de la pensée de Sartre, mais plutôt son point de départ. En effet, l'enjeu du projet de Sartre est le problème de la connaissance.The failure of ethics and ontology, contrary to the common point of view, does not constitute the outcome of Sartre's philosophy but its starting point. Sartre's essential problematic is the problem of the foundation of knowledge.
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  • An Answer to the Problem of Other Minds.Maria Antonietta Perna - 2008 - PhaenEx 3 (1):1-31.
    The present paper sets out to counter the claim put forward by British philosopher of mind, Robert Kirk, according to which Sartre's notion of consciousness as for-itself, while offering some valuable insights regarding human existence, nonetheless fails to engage with the problem of how to establish the existence of such conscious beings on philosophical grounds. To the extent that it succeeds in meeting the challenge raised by Kirk's comment, the reading of Being and Nothingness offered here could be considered as (...)
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