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Sartre on Bad Faith

Philosophy 58 (224):253 - 258 (1983)

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  1. The Paradox of Bad Faith and Elite Competitive Sport.Leon Culbertson - 2005 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 32 (1):65-86.
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  • Being a Celebrity: Alienation, Integrity, and the Uncanny.Alfred Archer & Catherine M. Robb - 2023 - Journal of the American Philosophical Association 9 (4):597-615.
    A central feature of being a celebrity is experiencing a divide between one's public image and private life. By appealing to the phenomenology of Sartre and Merleau-Ponty, we analyze this experience as paradoxically involving both a disconnection and alienation from one's public persona and a sense of close connection with it. This ‘uncanny’ experience presents a psychological conflict for celebrities: they may have a public persona they feel alienated from and that is at the same time closely connected to them (...)
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  • Bad Faith in Film Spectatorship.William Pamerleau - 2020 - Film-Philosophy 24 (2):122-139.
    This article seeks to develop an under-appreciated aspect of spectator activity: the way in which viewers make use of film to enter or sustain a project of bad faith. Based on Jean-Paul Sartre's account of bad faith in Being and Nothingness (1943), the article explains the aspects of bad faith that are pertinent to viewer activity, then explores the way viewers can make use of filmic depictions to facilitate self-denial. For example, spectators may emphasize the fact that persons are depicted (...)
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  • Bad Faith.Michael Hymers - 1989 - Philosophy 64 (249):397 - 402.
    In 'Sartre on Bad Faith' Leslie Stevenson attempts to formulate the Sartrean notion of bad faith. According to Stevenson, someone is in bad faith, if she reflectively denies some state of affairs, of the truth of which she is pre-reflectively aware. Jeffrey Gordon counters with the criticism that, although Stevenson's analysis of Sartre is correct, it is a position which is philosophically indefensible. I argue that Stevenson's reflective denial account falls to Gordon's criticism, but that it is also inadequate as (...)
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  • (1 other version)Bad Faith: A Dilemma.Jeffrey Gordon - 1985 - Philosophy 60 (232):258-262.
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  • The ‘Faith’ of Bad Faith.Carole Haynes-Curtis - 1988 - Philosophy 63 (244):269-275.
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