Existentialism, a difficult system to define, has been developing over the
last fifty years. As it evolved it attracted followers from many different
backgrounds. To day its influence has subtly affected much popular thought and
expression. As F. H. Heinemann observes
Among contemporary philosophies none has made a greater impact on religion and
theology than existentialism (F. H. Heinemann, Existentia1ism and the Modeni
Predicament, NY: Harper and Row, Publishers, 1953, p. 219).
Because of its pervasive influence and incompatibility with orthodox
Christianity, existentialism should be answered in a Christian response to
secular religion.
The Difficulty of Definition
One of existentialism's problems is that it is difficult to define or
categorize concisely. Philosopher Walter Kaufmann comments:
Existentialism is not a philosophy but a label for several
widely different revolts against traditional philosophy. Most of the living
"existentialists" have repudiated this label, and a bewildered outsider might
well conclude that the only thing they have in common is a marked aversion for
each other. To add to the confusion, many writers of the past have frequently
been hailed as members of this movement, and it is extremely doubtful whether
they would have appreciated the company to which they are consigned. In view
of this, it might be argued that the label "existentialism" ought to be
abandoned altogether.
Certainly, existentialism is not a school of thought nor
reducible to any set of tenets. The three writers who appear invariably on
every list of "existentialists" – Jaspers, Heidegger, and Sartre – are not in
agreement on essentials. Such alleged precursors as Pascal and Kierkegaard
differed from all three men by being dedicated Christians; and Pascal was a
Catholic of sorts while Kierkegaard was a Protestant's Protestant. If, as is
often done, Nietzsche and Dostoevsky are included in the fold, we must make
room for an impassioned anti-Christian and an even more fanatical
Greek-Orthodox Russian imperialist. By the time we consider adding Rilke,
Kafka, and Camus, it becomes plain that one essential feature shared by all
these men is their perfervid individualism.
The refusal to belong to any school of thought, the
repudiation of the adequacy of any body of beliefs whatever, and especially of
systems, and a marked dissatisfaction with traditional philosophy as
superficial, academic, and remote from life – that is the heart of
existentialism (Walter Kaufmann, Existentialism from Dostoevsky to Sartre, NY:
The World Publishing Company, 1956, pp. 11, 12).
Others echo Kaufmann's sentiment:
Every existentialist develops his own terminology because he
finds everyday language inadequate, in the same way he rebels against a
day-to-day view of the world .. if one reads the existentialists without
exasperation, one is almost certainly misreading them (I. M. Bochenski,
Contemporary European Philosophy, Berkeley and Los Angeles. University of
California Press, 1956, p. 154, note 5).
Bochenski goes on to say:
...existentialism must not be identified with any one body of existentialist
doctrine, for example, that of Sartre, for as we shall see there are profound
differences between individual points of view (ibid., p. 156).
Existentialism Defined
Existentialism may be explained according to the themes and
concerns of its proponents. Existentialists are concerned with existence,
change, freedom and self-cognizance, among other things. William and Mabel
Sahakian describe existentialism in the following manner:
Existentialists accept the conclusion that "existence
precedes essence," and some go even further and affirm that essence does not
exist, that only existence has reality. All Existentialists emphasize the
person as subject. The subject exists, and for some, he alone exists; that is
to say, if any essence whatever exists, it is the individual's subjective
state of existence (William S. Sahakian and Mabel L. Sahakian, Ideas of the
Great Phi1osophers, NY: Barnes and Noble, Inc., 1966, p. 167).
Philosopher B. A. G. Fuller recognizes the problems in defining
existentialism, but also recognizes certain existential theses:
There is no single existentialist position. The philosophy
varies with its proponents, some of whom insist that they are not
existentialists at all. But there is a common fund of doctrine that identifies
them, nevertheless, and indicates quite clearly their relation to the
classical philosophic tradition. Their major and differentiating thesis is the
metaphysical pronouncement that "existence is prior to essence," while in the
established tradition "essence is prior to existence." What this means for the
existentialist is that human nature is determined by the course of life rather
than life by human nature (B. A. G. Fuller, A History of Philosophy, NY: Holt,
Rinehart and Winston, 1955, p. 603).
I. M. Bochenski, in his book European Phi1osophy relates six of the common
existential themes.
1) The commonest characteristic among the various existentialist
philosophies of the present is the fact that they all arise from a so-called
existential experience which assumes a different form in each one of them It
is found by Jaspers, for instance, in awareness of the brittleness of being,
by Heidegger through experiencing "propulsion toward death," and by Sartre
in a anger: "nausea." The existentialists do not conceal the fact that their
philosophies originate in such experiences. That is why existentialist
philosophy always bears the stamp of personal experience, even in Heidegger.
2) The existentialists take so-called existence as the supreme object of
inquiry, but the meaning which they attach to the word is extremely difficult
to determine. However, in each case it signifies a peculiarly human mode of
being. Man – a term which is rarely used and is generally replaced by
"thereness" (Dasein), "existence," "ego," "being for oneself" – is unique in
possessing existence; more precisely, man does not possess, but he is his
existence. If man has an essence, either this essence is his existence or it
is the consequence of it.
3) Existence is
conceived as absolutely actualistic; it never is but freely creates itself, it
becomes; it is a projection; with each instant it is more (and less) than it
is. The existentialists often support this thesis by the statement that
existence is the same as temporality.
4) The difference between this actualism and that of life-philosophy is
accounted for by the existentialists' regarding man as pure subjectivity and
not as the manifestation of a broader (cosmic} life process in the way that
Bergson does, for example. Furthermore, subjectivity is understood in a
creative sense; man creates himself freely, and is his freedom.
5) Yet it would be thoroughly misguided to conclude from this that the
existentialists regard man as shut up within himself. On the contrary, man is
an incomplete and open reality; thus his nature pins him tightly and
necessarily to the wor1d, and to other men in particular. This double
dependence is assumed by all representatives of existentialism, and in such a
way that human existence seems to be inserted into the world, so that man at
all times not only faces a determinate situation but is his situation. On the
other hand they assume that there is a special connection between men which,
like the situation, gives existence its peculiar quality. That is the meaning
of Heidegger's "togetherness," Jasper's "communication," and Marcel's "thou."
6) All existentialists repudiate the distinction between subject and
object, thereby discounting the value of inte11ectua1 know1edge for
philosophical purposes. According to them true knowledge is not achieved by
the understanding but through experiencing reality; this experience is
primarily caused by the dread with which man becomes aware of his finitude and
the frailty in that position of being thrust into the world and condemned to
death [Heidegger] (Bochenski, European Phi1osophy, pp. 159, 160).
To summarize
Bochenski, he identifies six major themes of existentialism: 1) experience as
the ground of discovery; 2,) existence as the supreme object of inquiry; 3)
existence preceding essence; 4) man as pure subjectivity and not part of a
cosmic life process; 5) the interdependence of man and his world; and 6) a
devaluation of intellectual knowledge.
Finally, we will turn to philosopher Samuel Stumpf for his recognition of
the fact that existentialists reject traditional philosophy:
Whether they
were theists or atheists, the existentialists all agreed that traditional
philosophy was too academic and remote from life to have any adequate meaning
for them. They rejected systematic and schematic thought in favor of a more
spontaneous mode of expression in order to capture the authentic concerns of
concrete existing individuals. Although there is no "system" of existentialist
philosophy, its basic themes can, nevertheless, be discovered in some
representative existentialist thinkers (Samuel Enoch Stumpf, Socrates to
Sartre, NY: McGraw-Hill, 1966, p. 455).
The Scope of Our Study
Our aim is to simplify an admittedly complex subject. Because of the
intricate and sometimes contradictory assertions made among existentialists,
we have decided to examine the themes of their reasoning as described by six
leading philosophers often cited as shapers of existentialist thought. This
method of treating the subject will avoid the sweeping and often erroneous
generalizations made about this school of thought, but may result in some
oversimplification.
Existentialism is -more far-reaching than these six representative writers
indicate. Moreover, some of these individuals would repudiate the label
existentialist, finding it stultifying, although they deal with the same
general themes from some of the same perspectives. We conclude with a
Christian perspective on the thematic presuppositions of existentialism.
Religious
Existentialists
Many Christians have never studied philosophy formally and are unfamiliar
with the mainstream of existentialist thought. However, they have heard of a
stream of existential thought that appears to be paradoxical. It is known as
religious or Christian existentialism. Many Christians have at least a vague
familiarity with some of the ideas of Karl Barth, Paul Tillich, and Rudolph
Bultmann. We will not argue whether or not one can be religious and an
existentialist at the same time. There are competent observers on both sides
of the question. Almost every knowledgeable observer, from either side, will
agree that religious existentialism is not the same as orthodox
existentialism. Even the term "orthodox existentialism" is a problem since the
field is so diverse and the prominent existential thinkers don't agree about
what existentialism is. Nevertheless, religious existentialists are concerned
with some of the same themes as are non-religious existentialists. They just
address them from different (religious) perspectives.
The Sahakians separate these two types of existentialists in much the
same way as we will. They write:
Two main schools
of Existentialist philosophy may be distinguished; the first is religious as
delineated by the father of Existentialism, Soren Aabye Kierkegaard
(1813-1855); the second is atheistic, as expounded by its most articulate
contemporary spokesman, Jean-Paul Sartre. A number of outstanding
Existentialists in each of these schools disclaim the Existentialist label;
some adherents of the religious view prefer to be known as Neo-Orthodox
philosophers (Sahakian and Sahakian, Ideas, p. 167).
Fuller confirms this view, expanding on the perspectives of the religious
existentialists:
In its theistic
form, existentialism has been an important factor in the neo-orthodox
awakening that has marked theology since the first war. Its emphasis on the
negative qualities of man, on human estrangement and the tragedy of human
existence, have supported the resurgence of the dogma of original sin and the
entire structure of eschatological theology (Fuller, Philosophy, pp. 603,
604).
Christian philosopher Milton Hunnex reveals how existentialism has
penetrated modern theological circles:
Unable to
assimilate either the naturalism of Aristotle or that of the scientific
revolution, Protestant theology eventually turned to idealism as the modern
philosophy best adapted to Christian belief. Modern liberalism made its home
among the idealists during the nineteenth century. After World War I it became
apparent that idealism was ill suited to the twentieth century, and
theologians as well as philosophers abandoned it. They turned instead to
existentialism as the kind of philosophy that did appear to fit the mood and
needs of the twentieth century. Existentialism seemed to be the best
philosophy for getting at the problems of men caught up in swift-moving change
(Milton D. Hunnex, Existentia1ism and Christian Belief, Chicago: Moody Press,
1969, pp. 13, 14).
Although
we have chosen to examine this religious existentialist view of the
controversy, we recognize that there are those who see no compromise between
existentialism and religious belief. While we believe that they make some
valid points, we feel the claims of the so-called religious existentialists
still need to be dealt with, even if they do arise from a misunderstanding of
existentialism and religion. Hazel Barnes recognizes the two sides of the
controversy:
I confess that I
sympathize with the fundamentalist ministers who argue that whatever else it
may be, this new religion is not Christianity and should be given some other
name. (Hazel Barnes, An Existentialist Ethics, Chicago, IL: University of
Chicago Press, 1978, p. 383).
We agree
that historic Christianity cannot embrace the presuppositions and core of
existentialist concern. However, there is much that claims the name
"Christian" today that is not truly Christian in the biblical sense, but that
must be dealt with by the biblically-centered Christian. We agree with Hazel
Barnes that Sartrean existentialism (atheistic) cannot ever be reconciled with
any form of theistic belief. She comments:
I do not believe
that religious existentialism is compatible with a position based on Sartrean
premises. I do not find in Tillich's Being-itself a concept which is logically
tenable or a reality existentially meaningful. I cannot see that Heidegger's
Being is a valid or more valuable alternative to Sartre's Being-in-itself
(ibid., p. 382).
As a final qualification, we recognize the distinction between
theologians or religious thinkers who have existential orientations
(existential theologians) and a true existential theology, which, almost by
definition, cannot exist. We conclude, with Heinemann, who draws the general
conclusion, that:
Existentialist
Theology does not exist. But the question remains to be answered: Can it
exist? I am afraid the answer must be: No. The principle of existence is a
call, an appeal (Jaspers), or in Kantian terminology, a regulative principle.
It appeals to people to care for their inner life, for their freedom, their
true self, their authentic existence, for their neighbors and their
predicament. It admonishes us never to forget in thought and action the
primacy of human persons as ends in themselves. It is not a constitutive
principle, it defends the person against the menace of any kind of system and
cannot therefore itself be the basis of a system. Existential Theology does
not and cannot exist, but existential theologians should exist, that is
theologians whose chief interest does not lie in dogmatics and in the external
observance of rituals, but in the souls of men, in their predicament and in
the willingness to help them. Existentia1 theologies have always existed
(Heinemann, Existialism, p. 225).
With
the above factors in mind, we will look at three religious existentialists,
Sren Kierkegaard, Paul Tillich, and Gabriel Marcel.
Sren Kierkegaard (1 813-1855)
Sren Aabye Kierkegaard was born in Copenhagen, Denmark, and was raised in
an unusual religious family. His father had a morose obsession that God had
cursed and doomed him and his family. The young Sren spent his youth convinced
that continual, almost debilitating, depression was his fate. Of his youth he
wrote.
From a child I
was under the sway of a prodigious melancholy, the depth of which finds its
only adequate measure in the equally prodigious dexterity I possessed of
hiding it under an apparent gaiety and joie de vivre. So far back as I can
barely remember, my one joy was that nobody could discover how unhappy I felt
[Soren Kierkegaard, The Point of View for My Work as An Author: A Report to
History, NY: Harper and Row, Publishers, 1962, p. 76).
When Kierkegarrd
entered the University of Copenhagen in 1830, he bowed to the wishes of his
father and studied theology. However, his first love was philosophy, in which
he excelled. He began to believe that he was predestined or chosen to change
people for the better through philosophy. Late in life he reflected on his
life, which he saw as developing dialectically,* and traced the path made "by
the hand of God":
About my vita ante acta (i.e. from childhood until I became an author) I
cannot expatiate here at any length, however remarkable, as it seems to me,
was the way I was predisposed from my earliest childhood, and step by step
through the whole development, to become exactly the sort of author I
became....
An observer will perceive how everything was set in motion and how
dialectically: I had a thorn in the flesh, intellectual gifts (especially
imagination and dialectic) and culture in superabundance, an enormous
development as an observer, a Christian upbringing that was certainly very
unusual, a dialectical relationship to Christianity which was peculiarly my
own, and in addition to this I had from childhood a training in obedience,
obedience absolute, and I was armed with an almost foolhardy faith that I was
able to do anything.... Finally, in my own eyes I was a penitent. The
impression this now makes upon me is as if there were a Power which from the
first instant had been observant of this and said, as a fisherman says of a
fish, Let it run awhile, it is not yet the moment to pull it in. And strangely
enough there is something that reaches far back in my recollection, impossible
as it is for me to say when I began this practice or why such a thing ever
occurred to me: I prayed to God regularly, i.e. every day, that He would give
me zeal and patience to perform the work He would assign me.
Thus I became an author (ibid., pp. 76, 82, 83).
Even in his most despondent moments, Kierkegaard said, he still had
faith in God. But although he believed God existed and controlled the
universe, he also believed he was doomed to depression. Speaking of his early
beliefs, cultivated by his despondent father, he wrote:
What wonder then
that there were times when Christianity appeared to me the most inhuman
cruelty – although never, even when I was farthest from it, did I cease to
revere it, with a firm determination that (especially if I did not myself make
the choice of becoming a Christian} I would never initiate anyone into the
difficulties which I knew and which, so far as I have read and heard, no one
else has alluded to. But I have never definitely broken with Christianity nor
renounced it. To attack it has never been my thought. No, from the time when
there could be any question of the employment of my powers, I was firmly
determined to employ them all to defend Christianity, or in any case to
present it in its true form (ibid., pp. 76,77).
In 1836, on the brink of suicide, he experienced the first of several
religious encounters. The power of this experience led him to develop a system
of morals (ethics) by which he determined to live his life.
In 1838 he had another religious experience that turned him toward a
greater Christian commitment. He was also engaged to be married, but broke it
off, feeling that marriage would interfere with his "mission" in life.
In later life,
Kierkegaard viewed his writings as representing the three phases of human
commitment: the aesthetic, the ethical, and the religious. His works, he
believed, were in one way autobiographical, showing his own dialectical growth
through the three stages. In another way, his writings were prototypical of
the life experience that should be sought by each human being. And in still a
third way, portions of his writings were not meant to represent his
viewpoints at all, but were meant to encourage the reader to expand his own
thinking patterns, entertain new belief systems, and thus dialectically grow
toward the ultimate religious commitment, where he would find true peace.
Most of Kierkegaard's writings were published under pseudonyms as part of his
technique to encourage new thought. In 1843 he published Either/Or which, as
he described it, expressed "the fact that I had become thoroughly aware how
impossible it would be for me to be religious only up to a certain point. Here
is the place of Either/Or. It was a poetical catharsis, which does not,
however, go farther than the "ethical" [ibid., p. 18). In 1844 he published
The Concept of Dread and Phi1osophical Fragments; in 1845 Stages of Life's
Way; in 1846 Conc1uding Unscientific Postscript; in 1848 Anti-Climacus and
Christian Discourses; and The Point of View was published after his death.
These are the major writings of Kierkegaard.
Kierkegaard's writings had only limited influence during his lifetime.
However, they were translated into other languages, mostly after his death,
and his influence became tremendous. Because of this great later influence and
his concerns with the existential themes of existence and the "authenticated"
man, he became known as "the Father of Existentialism." Remember though, that
he consistently referred to himself as a religious and even Christian thinker
and would definitely not have aligned himself with the atheistic
existentialists such as Sartre had he been alive in the twentieth century. His
faith did not conform to historical and biblical Christianity, but it was
religious faith nonetheless.
Kierkegaard's Philosophy
William S Sahakian has concisely
summarized Kierkegaard's main tenets:
The essence of
Kierkegaard's philosophy can be seen in his doctrine that there are three
stages of life experience: (1) aesthetic, (2} ethical, and (3} religious.
These represent three attitudes toward life, three philosophies of life. Some
of us progress from one stage to the next, while others never go beyond the
first stage. Kierkegaard sometimes fused the second and third stages,
referring to them as the religio-ethical. The third stage is superior to the
other two stages. All of them reflect man's attempt to win salvation, to gain
satisfaction for life's greatest good, while it is still within reach.
Kierkegaard discussed the three stages in a number of his writings, but he
devoted a most famous work, Either/Or, to a detailed analysis of the first two
stages (William S. Sahakian, History of Phi1osophy, NY: Barnes and Noble
Company, Inc., 1968, p. 343).
I. The Aesthetic
The man in the first stage, the aesthetic, is looking for fulfillment
from his outside activities and from within himself. He may seek romance,
pleasure, or intellectual pursuits as means to satisfy himself. However, these
activities are not enough. They are not ultimately satisfying. The man
becomes bored with himself and his activities. This boredom turns to despair.
If not checked, the despair ends in suicide.
II. The Ethical
What is the remedy for this aesthetic despair! Kierkegaard replied that
commitment gives meaning to life. Commitment to some arbitrary absolute, and
the ordering of one's life around that commitment, brings one out of the
aesthetic stage and into the second or ethical stage. The person achieves
selfhood through commitment. The individual becomes aware. His choices are
made with passion and emotional commitment. The person now chooses and acts,
thereby establishing his selfhood and integrity. He is a man of duty. This is
the type of person described by psychotherapist Viktor Frankl, who
revolutionized European psycho-analytic theory after World War II. He calls
the ethical urge the "will to meaning" and says:
Man's search for
meaning is a primary force in his life and not a "secondary rationalization"
of instinctual drives. This meaning is unique and specific in that it must and
can be fulfilled by him alone; only then does it achieve a significance that
will satisfy his own will to meaning. There are some authors who contend that
meanings and values are "nothing but defense mechanisms, reaction formations
and sublimation." But as for myself, I would not be willing to live merely for
the sake of my "defense mechanisms," nor would I be ready to die merely for
the sake of my "reaction formations." Man, however, is able to live and even
to die for the sake of his ideals and values! (Viktor E. Frankl, Man's Search
for Meaning: an Introduction to Logotherapy, NY: Simon and Schuster, Inc.,
1963, pp. 154, 155).
III. The
Re1igious
The third and greatest stage, the stage where man finally finds
contentment, is the religious stage. The person commits himself, as in the
second stage, and is looking for fulfillment, as in the first stage, but in
this religious stage his commitment is to One who is able to satisfy
completely: God. In this stage man is finally content because of his
commitment to God. Selfhood cannot be achieved ultimately and completely
within the self. The self must be committed to the One beyond, to God.
Kierkegaard and Hegel
Kierkegaard's philosophy was in opposition to that of the German
philosopher Hegel, although they both used a system of dialectics. Samuel
Stumpf points out:
At the
University of Copenhagen Kierkegaard was trained in Hegel's philosophy and was
not favorably impressed by it. When he heard Schellings's lectures at Berlin,
which were critical of Hegel, Kierkegaard agreed with this attack upon
Germany's greatest speculative thinker. "If Hegel had written the whole of his
Logic and then said... that it was merely an experiment in thought," wrote
Kierkegaard, "then he could certainly have been the greatest thinker who ever
lived. As it is, he is merely comic." What made Hegel comic for Kierkegaard
was that this great philosopher had tried to capture all of reality in his
system of thought, yet in the process lost the most important element,
namely, existence. For Kierkegaard, the term existence was reserved for the
individual human being. To exist, he said, implies being a certain kind of
individual, an individual who strives, who considers alternatives, who
chooses, who decides, and who, above all, commits himself. Virtually none of
these acts were implied in Hegel's philosophy (Stumpf, Socrates, p. 455).
William Sahakian
made some good contrasts between the concerns of Hegel and the concerns of
Kierkegaard:
Kierkegaardian
philosophy is fundamentally in direct antithesis to Hegelianism. Whereas Hegel
placed the emphasis on speculative thought, Kierkegaard placed it on
existence. Hegel discerned truth in the rational system, Kierkegaard in
paradox. The former sought the universe, the latter the individual or
particular. The former saw in logic a mediation of antitheses or formulated an
unbroken logic (Hegelian dialectic]; the latter replaced it with the leap or
logical gap (qualitative dialectic) . Either/Or was the Kierkegaardian answer
to the Hegelian synthesis or mediation. Hegel found truth in the Absolute and
objectivity, while Kierkegaard found it in the relative and subjective. Hegel
emphasized necessity, Kierkegaard freedom. Other Kierkegaardian concepts,
which replaced Hegelian ones were: repetition for recollection, concealment
for openness, possibility for actuality, indirect communication (Socratic
maimetic] for direct communication, transcendence of God for the immanence of
God, and mediacy (or reflection) or immediacy (Sahakian Phi1osophy, p. 347).
Kierkegaard and Truth
Kierkegaard defined truth as "subjectivity." For him it was paradoxically
the only thing one could be sure about and yet the one
thing one was anxious about. Sahakian explains:
Truth is
subjectivity; the highest expression of subjectivity is passion. To think
Existentially is to think with inward passion. Objectivity accents what is
said, but subjectivity accents how it is said. The inward how is passion;
decision is found only in subjectivity. Subjectivity is the truth; truth is
defined as "an objective uncertainty held fast in an appropriation-process of
the most passionate inwardness." Uncertainty creates anxiety which is quieted
by an exercise of faith. The preceding definition of truth also serves as a
definition of faith. There is no faith without risk, choice, passion, and
inwardness; nor is there truth without them Uncertainty always accompanies
subjectivity, calling for the leap of faith (ibid., p. 348)
The Christian
philosophers Norman Geisler and Paul Feinberg point out a very important
feature of Kierkegaardian "truth." They note that Kierkegaard never denies
such a thing as objective truth: he merely denies its importance over what he
calls "subjective" truth.
While not denying
that there is such a thing as objective scientific truth, the existentialist
does not consider that kind of truth important, at least not nearly as
important as subjective truth. Indeed, Kierkegaard declared "truth is
subjectivity." By that he did not mean that any subjective belief is true, but
that unless one believes something subjectively and passionately he does not
possess the truth. Truth is always personal and not merely propositional. One
never gains truth by mere observation, but by obedience: never by being a
spectator, but only by being a participator in life. Truth is found in the
concrete, not in the abstract: in the existential, not in the rational. In
fact, one places himself in the truth only by an act of his will, by a "leap
of faith." It is not deliberation of the mind but a decision of the will by
which one comes to know truth (Norman L. Geisler and Paul D. Feinberg,
Introduction to Phi1osophy, Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book House, 1980, p.
46}.
In summary, Kierkegaardian philosophy is much more complicated than at
first meets the eye. One especially must be aware that common and
philosophical vocabularies take on new definitions for Kierkegaard. The
evangelical Christian who declares that Jesus Christ is the tvzth means
something quite different from what Kierkegaard means. KIerkegaard's
three-fold path to personal fulfillment sounds good until it is examined from
within the context of the claims of the Bible or until attempts are made to
authenticate it by history and objective reason.
Paul Tillich (1886-1965)
One of the most influential liberal theologians of the twentieth century
was Paul Tillich. Because of his orientation in both existentialist themes and
Christian tradition, he rightly can be called an existential theologian. F.
H. Heinemann notes:
The title
'existentialist theologian' would fit... Paul Tillich. His unique case is
that of a philosopher-theologian who started as a religious socialist and ends
up as an existential theologian. Being a philosopher as well as a theologian,
he tries to correlate philosophy and religion, embraces existentialism as the
true philosophy whose task it is to penetrate the structure of human existence
(Heinemann, Existentialism, p. 219).
Alston and Nakhnikian give some of Tillich's Lutheran, liberal theology,
and philosophical background:
Paul Tillich is
one of the most influential Christian thinkers of our time – perhaps the most
influential in English-speaking countries. Born in a small village in eastern
Germany in 1886, the son of a Lutheran pastor, he received a theological and
philosophical education, and was ordained in the Evangelical Lutheran Church
in 1912. After serving as an army chaplain during World War I, Tillich taught
theology and philosophy at several German universities – Berlin, Marburg,
Dresden, and Frankfurt. He incurred the wrath of the Nazis, and when Hitler
came to power in 1933 he emigrated to the United States. On his arrival in
America he became a Professor of theology at Union Theological Seminary. From
this post Tillich has exercised an enormous influence on religious thought in
this country. [William P. Alston and George Nakhnikian, Readings in Twentieth
Century Philosophy, NY: The Free Press, 1963, p. 347).
Anxiety
Anxiety is one of the very important themes in existentialism. Although
different existentialists handle the theme in different ways, Tillich's
discussion of anxiety in his Systematic Theology gives a very thorough
discussion of the subject from an existential point of view. Philosopher B. A.
G. Fuller summarizes Tillich's discussion:
Anxiety.
Accepting the familiar description of the post-war era, both for Europe and
America, as an "age of anxiety," Tillich describes anxiety as fundamentally
the "existential awareness of nonbeing," the "awareness that nonbeing is a
part of one's own being." The awareness of one's own transitoriness and of
one's own having to die produces a natural anxiety, an anxiety of ultimate
nonbeing. Naked anxiety, which belongs to the nature of being as such and is
an experience of unimaginable horror, strives vainly to convert itself into
fear, because fear has an object and can therefore be met and overcome by
courage. But anxiety itself has no object.
The Anxiety of Fate and Death. Anxiety appears in three forms, dependent upon
the direction in which "nonbeing threatens being." The anxiety of fate and
death proceeds from the threat of nonbeing against man's "ontic" affirmation.
It is basic, universal, and entirely inescapable. The contingency of man, that
the causes which determine him are without any rationality or ultimate
necessity, yields the relative anxiety of fate. The fact of death, present
with man during every moment of life as well as at the moment of dying,
produces an absolute anxiety of nonbeing. The basic question of courage is
whether there is a courage to be in the face of this absolute threat against
being.
The Anxiety of Emptiness and Meaninglessness. The second type of anxiety is in
its relative form the anxiety of emptiness and in its absolute form the
anxiety of meaninglessness. Emptiness is the product of a threat to
participation in creativity. Meaninglessness, which lies always in the
background of emptiness as death lies always behind fate, is the loss of a
spiritual center for life, the loss of an ultimate concern, of the meaning
fundamental to all meanings. This anxiety is the threat of nonbeing to the
spiritual life, a threat that follows from man's finitude and estrangement and
leads to despair. To escape it, one attempts an escape from his own freedom
and thereby sacrifices his genuine existence.
The Anxiety of Guilt and Condemnation. The third type of anxiety issues
from the threat of nonbeing against man's self-affirmation, in its relative
form, the anxiety of guilt; in its absolute form, the anxiety of condemnation.
Man as finite freedom is free to determine himself in the fulfillment of his
destiny. The anxiety of guilt and condemnation is produced by the failure to
realize one's potentiality. It is a self-rejection, a despair in the loss of
proper identity. Despair is the product of the three anxieties, interrelated
to foster and support one another. Despair is the complete absence of hope. By
suicide one might escape the anxiety of death, but he would be caught in the
anxiety of guilt and condemnation.
Anxiety and Cultural History. Life, Tillich holds, is largely an attempt
to avoid despair. From it there is no escape, yet most people experience it in
its intensity only infrequently if at all. In the history of western culture
the three types of anxiety have always been present, but each has dominated
one of the three major eras. The classical era, the era of absolutism and
tyranny, was characterized by the anxiety of fate and death, and ended with
the attempt to achieve the Stoic courage. The Middle Ages, under the influence
of the Judeo-Christian (Moral) religion, was brought to a close under the
domination of the anxiety of guilt and condemnation, induced by the breakdown
of the unity of religion. Today it is the anxiety of emptiness and
meaninglessness that casts its shadow over a world that has lost its spiritual
content. (B. A. G. Fuller, Philosophy, pp. 609-610').
God
Tillich's definition of God was much more broad than that of evangelical
Christianity or the Bible. In fact, Tillich's concept of God was not even
first and foremost personal. God for Tillich was "the ground of all being,"
"the source of your being," "your ultimate concern." As such, Tillich saw no
room for atheists or agnostics, for he believed that it was impossible for one
to have no ultimate concerns. In his The Shaking of the Foundations he
stated:
The name of this
infinite and inexhaustible depth and ground of all being is God. That depth is
what the word God means. And if that word has not much meaning for you,
translate it and speak of the depths of your life, of the source of your
being, of your ultimate concern, of what you take seriously without any
reservation...If you know that God means depth, you know much about Him You
cannot then call yourself an atheist or unbeliever. For you cannot think or
say: Life has no depth! Life itself is shallow. Being itself is surface
only.
...The name of
this infinite and inexhaustible ground of history is God. That is what the
word means, and it is that to which the words Kingdom of God and Divine
Providence point. And if these words do not have much meaning for you,
translate them and speak of the depth of history, of the ground and aim of our
social life, and of what you take seriously without reservation in your moral
and political activities. Perhaps you should call this depth hope, simply
hope (Paul Tillich, The Shaking of the Foundations, NY: Charles Scribner's
Sons, 1953, pp. 57, 59).
As is true with
most themes in existentialism, Tillich's idea of God is deeply colored by the
existential theme of subjectivity. Subjectivity is so important in
existentialism that it almost becomes the most important theme, affecting all
other existential thought.
Grace
Tillich not only redefined the traditional view of God, but he also put an
existential interpretation to the concept of grace. His grace is universal,
subjective, and flows from and to each individual; When he talks of the
"acceptance" of grace, he is not talking about the forgiveness of God made
possible by the sacrifice of Jesus Christ upon the cross. He is talking about
the subjective experience of acceptance that one feels during a crisis.
Grace strikes us when we are in great pain and
restlessness... It strikes us when we feel that our separation is deeper than
usual, because we have violated another life, a life which we loved,
or from which we were estranged. It strikes us when our disgust for our own
being, our indifference, our weakness, our hostility, and our lack of
direction and composure have become intolerable to us .. Sometimes at that
moment a wave of light breaks into our darkness, and it is as though a voice
were saying: "You are accepted. You are accepted, accepted by that which is
greater than you, and the name of which you do not know. Do not ask for the
name now; perhaps you will find it later... Simply accept the fact that you
are accepted!" In the light of this grace we perceive the power of grace in
our relation to others and to ourselves.... We experience the grace of being
able to accept the life of another, even if it be hostile and harmful to us,
for, through grace, we know that it belongs to the same Ground to which we
belong, and by which we have been accepted (ibid., pp. 161, 162,)
In summary, we can see that Tillich's concerns (just a few of which have been
highlighted here) are common to existential themes and that his applications
of those themes to religion change the very essence or fundamentals of
Christian belief. It cannot be denied that he was a religious existentialist.
But it is also true that he was not an evangelical Christian, committed to the
biblical fundamentals of our faith.
Gabriel Marcel (1 889-1973)
Another religious philosopher who had strong influence in the growth of French
existentialism was Gabriel Marcel (1889-1973). Marcel, a French Catholic
existentialist, criticized many of his fellow existentialists. His primary
philosophical loyalty to existentialism seemed to be the stress he placed on
the value of the individual. Philosopher Anthony Flew comments:
..Marcel considered existentialism to be compatible with Christian doctrines.
The aim of life is "communication" between men as well as between man and God,
but relationships must be based on and retain the freedom and uniqueness of
individuals, not be dependent on the joint acceptance of rules and goals
(Anthony Flew, ed., A Dictionary of Philosophy, NY: St. Martin's Press, 1982,
p. 204).
Jean T. Wilde
and William Kimmel make the following additional appraisal of Marcel:
Gabriel Marcel, a
Christian existentialist, shares with the atheist existentialist Sartre the
responsibility for the further development in France of that trend in
philosophy represented by this anthology. A convert to Roman Catholicism,
Marcel has nevertheless maintained a philosophical independence from the
official philosophy of the church and has developed original avenues of
thought that bear the unmistakable stamp of their author's temperament and
spirit. He is not only a philosopher but also a successful dramatist and a
fine musician (Jean T. Wilde and William Kimmel, eds., trans., The Search for
Being, NY. The Noonday Press, 1962,, p. 417.
It is
important to remember that while Wilde and Kimmel, as well as Flew, note
Marcel's alignment with Christianity, they also note that this alignment was
not with historic Christianity. Marcel actually denied those doctrines
evangelicals consider vital.
Marcel's philosophy was much less systematic than other existentialists
such as Tillich, so we will just touch on some of his concerns. Marcel was
more of an observer than a shaper of philosophy or theology. His greatest
concerns were those which were involved in existentialism and which earned him
a place among existentialist thinkers.
Rather than
systematic discourses, Marcel's works are collections of observations and
notes. Avoiding the traditional metaphysical categories and principles, his
thought revolves around a number of root ideas which are not so much ideas as
modes of concrete experience: estrangement, nostalgia, and homecoming;
presence and absence; appeal and response; fidelity and betrayal; availability
and unavailability; despair, recollection, courage, and hope. It is within the
framework of these modes of experience that human life unfolds and it is
here, rather than in the abstract manipulations of technical reason, that
Being as personality and community can reveal itself. In reflection upon these
dimensions of experience, Marcel evokes a sense of the mystery that envelops
and unfolds within experience, that informs, illumines and fulfills
experience, the mystery that is not alien to existence because it is itself
that from which existence has its being. By recovering this inner bond between
existence and mystery, one uncovers the source of his own meaning and creative
power (ibid., p. 419).
I. M Bochenski gives an excellent discussion of the basic ideas of
Marcel. He has done such a good job of summarizing Marcel that we will quote
from him extensively:
Marcel holds that
being-an-object and existence are two entirely different dimensions of being.
This is seen most clearly in the fundamental problem of embodiment
(incarnation). The relation between my body and myself cannot be described as
either being or having. I am my body, yet I cannot identify myself with it.
The question about embodiment has led Marcel to a rigorous distinction between
the problem and the mystery. A problem concerns what lies wholly before me,
something which I scan objectively as an observer. A mystery, on the other
hand, is "something in which I am involved (engage}." Only mysteries are of
any philosophic relevance and thus philosophy must be transobjective,
personal, dramatic, indeed tragic. "I am not witnessing a spectacle": we
should remind ourselves of this every day, says Marcel. The possibility of
suicide is the point of departure of every genuine metaphysics. Such a
metaphysics must be neither rational or intuitive. It is the result of a kind
of second reflection [reflexion seconde).
Marcel has not worked out this metaphysics, but he has adumbrated its
methodology. It is to give an answer to the basic ontological demand, namely,
that there must be being, there must be something which cannot be explained
away in some easy way as, for example, psychoanalysis explains away psychic
phenomena. We are certain that there is being through the mysterious reality
of the "I am ' – not through cogito ergo sum. In this way the opposition of
subject and object, of idealism, is overcome. Human reality reveals itself as
the reality of a homo viator, of being which is always in process of
becoming. Every philosophy which misinterprets this truth, which tries to
explain man by means of a system, is incapable of understanding man.
We are led to the understanding of human being above all through the
study of human relationships which are signified by judgments in the second
person, in the thou. These unobjective thou-relationships are creative, for
through them I create myself and also help another to create his own freedom.
Here Marcel is close to the Jewish philosopher Martin Buber (b. 1878) who had
enunciated similar theses even before Marcel. The center of the
thou-relationship is faithfulness (fiddlite). It appears as the embodiment of
a higher free actuality, since the faithful one creates himself in freedom.
Hope is even more basic than faithfulness, for the latter is built upon hope.
Marcel holds that hope has ontological significance. It shows that the victory
of death in the world is merely apparent and not final. Marcel regards his
doctrine of hope as the most important result of his work. Here he departs
radically from Sartre and Heidegger and apparently even from Jaspers.
The human thou can also be objectivized and become an it. But for this
there is a definite limit, behind which stands the absolute thou which can no
longer be taken as an object, namely God. We cannot through reason prove the
existence of God One encounters God on the same plane as the other, the plane
of the thou, in loving and in honoring through participation in true being
which may already take its rise in the questioning attitude of the philosopher
(Bochenski, Eurpoean Philosophy, p. 183, 184).
The Secular Existentialists
By far the
largest group of thinkers categorized as extentialists are those with no
religious orientation at all, the secular existentialists. Some of them ignore
religion completely, others are forcefully atheistic. The secular
existentialists are concerned with the same themes as the religious
existentialists, but their presuppositions and belief systems preclude any
supernatural or any idea of God.
In our overview, we will examine three secular existentialists: Martin
Heidegger, Karl Jaspers and Jean-Paul Sartre.
Martin Heidegger (1889-1976)
Martin Heidegger was one of the most influential promoters of contemporary
existentialism. He wrote in German but his works have been translated into
English. His most famous, Being and Time, has become one of the most popular
expressions of English/American existentialism in the philosophical world.
Alston and Nakhnikian note the scope of Heidegger's spreading influence:
In Latin America
and Europe, excluding, of course, the Soviet Union and her European
satellites, one of the dominant contemporary philosophers is Heidegger.
Heidegger's influence ranges widely over philosophers, theologians (including
Paul Tillich), and certain psychotherapists. In the English-speaking world,
too, there are philosophers who regard Heidegger with as much respect as do
his Continental and Latin-American admirers (Alston and Nakhnikian, Readings,
p. 679).
Heidegger's writings had a great effect on both the religious
existentialist Rudolph Bultmann, who attempted to build a theology from
Heideggerian existentialism, and Jean-Paul Sartre, the French secular
existentialist and novelist.
Heidegger studied under the philosopher Edmund Husserl before he became
rector of Freiburg University in 1933. His main treatise, Sein und Zeit(Being
and Time), was published in 1927. Although Being and Time reflected the
influence Husserl and Kierkegaard made on Heidegger, it also showed he
differed from those men in some important ways.
Heidegger's existentialism is unique and complex. It is difficult for
even professional philosophers to understand:
Heidegger is an
extremely original thinker. The problem of his historical affiliations is not
of primary concern here and we need only mention that he borrows his method
from Husserl, that he is in many ways influenced by Dilckey, and that his
general thesis is largely inspired by Kierkegaard. Heidegger is equipped
with an unusual knowledge of the great philosophers of the past, among whom he
frequently quotes Aristotle, although he interprets him in very arbitrary
fashion. A stir was caused by the volume which he devoted to Kant, Kant und
das Problem der Metaphysik (1929).
Few philosophers are so hard to understand as Heidegger (Bochenski,
European Philosophy, p. 161).
Because
Heidegger's philosophy is so difficult to understand, interpretations of his
thought vary and even contradict one another. Philosopher/historian A. Robert
Caponigri remarks:
Heidegger's
thought has given rise to extensive interpretations, varying much among
themselves and frequently at variance with the line of exegesis which
Heidegger himself has suggested. From the point of view of doctrine and
interests, his thought falls into two phases. The line of demarcation is drawn
(but not too sharply),... by the Holderlin lecture in 1936. The first phase
centers about the great work of 1927: Sein und Zeit. This work is still
considered as presenting the essential Heidegger. It most clearly exhibits his
originality as a thinker in his "existential analysis" of human behavior with
respect to the "unveiling of truth" and his ontological" mode of treating
phenomenology. It is the basis for the wide influence he has enjoyed. The
second phase possesses no strict unity but shows Heidegger's concern with a
number of themes, both historical and analytical, stemming from his main
concern: being and truth (A. Robert Caponigri, A History of Western
Philosophy: Philosophy from the Age of Positivism to the Age of Analysis,
Notre Dame, in: University of Notre Dame Press, 1971, p. 264).
Along with the difficulty in understanding Heidegger, and the added difficulty
of interpretation, we find that Heidegger did not view himself as an
existentialist!
Heidegger
believes that the term "existentialist" does not apply to his philosophy ..
Heidegger grants that "existentialism ' is an apt label for what Sartre
represents, but not for his own position. Heidegger is interested in Being. He
approaches the problem of Being through the study of Dasein, Heidegger's word
for human existence, "the being of what we ourselves are" (Alston and
Nakhnikian, Readings, p. 680}.
Because of these problems, we will not deal extensively with Heidegger
although he bears mentioning because of his influence on
other existentialists. Recognizing our limits of space and purpose, we will
confine our discussion to three concerns of Heidegger: Dasein, angst, and
death. The reader is referred to the bibliography for books that deal more
extensively with Heidegger.
Dasein
The most important concept unique to Heidegger's system is Dasein (a word
Heidegger used to refer to the human being, or the existing-ness of the human,
which causes or becomes his essence]. William Sahakian describes Dasein:
Dasein. The idea
of Being is an old one to a philosopher grounded in Scholasticism, as
Heidegger was. But Heidegger was interested in the meaning of Being, its
sense, or its purpose – i.e., what renders it intelligible. Furthermore, he
was interested primarily in the human Being, for the nature of the human Being
leads to other levels of Being or reality. Only Dasein (his term for the human
Being) can be said to have or not to have meaning; hence Being is meaningful
solely in terms of human existence.
Dasein (being-there), that is, the human Being or the human existent,
Heidegger identified as. (1) concern (Sorge), (2) being-toward-death (Sein zum
Tode), (3) existence (Existenz), and (4) moods (Stimmungen). The human
Being's essence is in his existence, for numerous possibilities are open to
him whereby he may choose different kinds of Being for himself. The
possibilities of what he may become are the pivotal points by which the human
Being is oriented. Heidegger was greatly interested in interpreting time in
terms of temporality; consequently, in addition to the problem of Being
(Dasein), time is of utmost importance. Accordingly, his interest was in the
Being and temporality of Dasein (human existence) (Sahakian, Phi1osophy, p.
349).
Angst
Angst is another term with heavy existential meaning for Heidegger. The
German word refers to anxiety, dread and hopeless fear of the future. This
concept is important to Heidegger because it forms the impetus for much of
human metaphysical development. It is the goad toward human existential
encounter.
In existentialist
philosophy, (angst is) the dread occasioned by man's realization that his
existence is open towards an undetermined future, the emptiness of which must
be filled by his freely chosen actions. Anxiety characterizes the human
state, which entails constant confrontation with possibility and the need for
decision, with the concomitant burden of responsibility (Flew, Philosophy, p.
13).
Death
As it is with most existential thought, death is important in Heidegger's
system. His secular (non-supernatural) presuppositions, and his commitment to
existence preceding essence give Heidegger no view of reality for an
individual before birth or after death. According to his scheme, the man who
recognizes this fact, freely accepts its inevitability, and seeks nothing
beyond, is then free to choose his own existence. He is no longer bound by
fear of death or imaginary retributive punishment after death. He is able to
choose his actions, thereby choosing his existence and ultimately his essence.
This is man with dignity.
For Heidegger,
man is the being that knows he is going to die. He dies not only at the end
of life, but every day of it. Death is certain, yet indefinite. Because it is
inevitable it marks the contingency of life. Life is cast up between nothing
and nothing. Death is its boundary and is its supreme possibility. To freely
accept death, to live in its presence, and to acknowledge that for it there is
no substitute and into it one must go alone, is to escape from all illusions
and to achieve genuine dignity and authentic existence (Fuller, Philosophy, p.
608).
Jean-Paul Sartre (1 905-1980)
The man who most popularized an atheistic brand of existentialism was the
French philosopher, Jean-Paul Sartre. Sartre's major work, Being and
Nothingness, was written in 1943 while he was a prisoner of the Germans during
World War II. Some of his other writings, including Existentialism is Humanism
and the novel, No Exit, reflect an indebtedness to both Kierkegaard and
Heidegger. Sartre's great ability enabled him to have a clear understanding of
the history of philosophy. Marjorie Greene reports:
[Sartre] does
indeed use the thinkers of the past (and present) for his own ends, but at
the same time he sees them with extraordinary clarity. In his references, say,
to Kant or Spinoza, he not only uses their thought as a springboard for his
own, but also exhibits a solid and scholarly penetration into their
principles and views. His relation to Marx is less straightforward, as we
shall see, but in general one finds in his philosophical works an interweaving
of themes in which the original strands stand out for themselves with unusual
distinctness, while at the same time they are being worked into a
characteristically Sartrean pattern (Marjorie Green, Sartre, NY: Franklin
Watts, Inc., 1973, p. 33).
Absurdity
One major tenet of Sartre's existentialism is that life is absurd. In his
novel, Nausea, Sartre brings out the absurdity of life through his main
character, Roqueritin. Robert Davidson writes,
The story of
Roquentin, the hero of Nausea, is not told as an end in itself. Actually it
expresses Sartre's own view concerning human existence. This story provides a
descriptive or phenomenological account of a man's growing realization of the
absurdity of human life in itself, and of his awakening to the fact that if a
man's life is to have any meaning or purpose, the individual himself must
confer that meaning upon it. A sense of the absurd, the absurdity of life and
of man himself, permeates Sartre's early existentialism In Nausea he portrays
this as an immediate insight in one's own experience. As he sat in a public
park one day, staring at the long black roots of an old chestnut tree,
Roquentin became acutely aware of the absurdity of his own existence:
"Absurdity was not an idea in my head nor the sound of a voice. It was this
long, lean, wooden snake curled up at my feet – snake or claw or talon or
root, it was all the same. Without formulating anything I knew that I had
found the clue to my existence, to my nausea to my life. And indeed everything
I have ever grasped since that moment comes back to this fundamental
absurdity" (Robert F. Davidson, Phi1osophies Men Live By, NY. Holt, Rinehart
and Winston, Inc., 1974, p. 362).
Man is Autonomous
The absurdity of the universe leads Sartre to another major tenet of
existentialism, namely, that man is autonomous. Sartre wrote:
The
existentialist, on the contrary, thinks it very distressing that God does not
exist, because all possibility of finding values in a heaven of ideas
disappears along with Him; there can no longer be an a priori Good, since
there is no infinite and perfect consciousness to think it. Nowhere is it
written that the Good exists, that we must be honest, that we must not lie:
because the fact is we are on a plane where there are only men. Dostoevsky
said, 'If God didn't exist, everything would be possible.' That is the very
starting point of existentialism Indeed, everything is permissible if God
does not exist, and as a result man is forlorn, because neither within him nor
without does he find anything to cling to. He can't start making excuses for
himself. In other words, there is no determinism, man is free, man is freedom
On the other hand, if God does not exist, we find no values or commands to
turn to which legitimize our conduct. So, in the bright realm of values, we
have no excuse behind us, nor justification before us. We are alone, with no
excuses ( Jean-Paul Sartre, Existentialism and Human Emotions, NY. The
Citadel Press, n.d., pp. 22,, 23).
Freedom
Man comes into the scene and defines himself. He lives in absolute
freedom Sartre states:
That is the idea
I shall try to convey when I say that man is condemned to be free. Condemned,
because he did not create himself, yet, in other respects is free; because,
once thrown into the world, he is responsible for everything he does. The
existentialist does not believe in the power of passion. He will never agree
that a sweeping passion is a ravaging torrent which fatally leads a man to
certain acts and is therefore an excuse. He thinks that man is responsible
for his passion (ibid., p. 2,3).
Existence Before Essence
Another major tenet of Sartre's existentialism is that existence precedes
essence. This means that man, by his own choices, defines his character, his
essence and the person he is becoming. His choices determine his make-up.
Sartre argues:
Atheistic
existentialism, which I represent, is more coherent. It states that if God
does not exist, there is at least one being in whom existence precedes
essence, a being who exists before he can be defined by any concept, and that
this being is man, or as Heidegger says, human reality. What is meant here by
saying that existence precedes essence! It means that, first of all, man
exists, turns up, appears on the scene, and, only afterwards, defines himself.
If man, as the existentialist conceives him, in indefinable, it is because at
first he is nothing. Only afterward will he be something, and he himself will
have made what he will be. Thus, there is no human nature, since there is no
God to conceive it. Not only is man what he conceives himself to be, but he is
also only what he wills himself to be after this thrust toward existence
(ibid., pp. 15-16).
In Being and Nothingness, Sartre states
Human freedom
precedes essence in man and makes it possible. The essence of the human being
is suspended in freedom (Jean-Paul Sartre, Being and Nothingness, NY:
Philosophical Library, Inc., 1956, p. 25).
He continues
with the ramifications of this assertion:
[It is that)
choice that is called "will." But if existence really does precede essence,
man is responsible for what he is. Thus, existentialism's first move is to
make every man aware of what he is and to make the full responsibility of his
existence rest on him. And when we say that a man is responsible for himself,
we do not only mean that he is responsible for his own individuality, but that
he is responsible for all men (ibid., p. 16).
Fulfillment
Sartre believed that man could receive his own self-fulfillment, as
Sahakian reports:
Notwithstanding
the pessimistic views in most of Sartre's writings his existentialism ends on
a note of optimism, for his Existentialism is Humanism concludes with the
declaration that existentialism does not plunge man into despair but is an
optimistic doctrine of action, that man is his own lawmaker, a creator of
values, living in a human universe of human subjectivity, and capable of
self-fulfillment (Sahakian, Philosophy, p. 357).
Thus, man
makes his own fulfillment. Those who try to accomplish this through religion
are guilty of bad faith, as Flew defines:
Bad faith. In
the existentialism of Sartre, a form of deception of self and others; the
attempt to rationalize human existence through religion, science, or any
belief in operative forces that impose meaning and coherence. Man shapes his
own destiny through a succession of free choices for which he is totally
responsible. In 'bad faith' he denies the necessity of relying on his own
moral insight and fallible will, trying to escape the burden of responsibility
by regarding himself as the passive subject of outside influences, and his
actions as being predetermined by these rather than freely chosen by himself
(Flew, Philosophy, p. 35).
Forlornness
One of the major themes Sartre dealt with is also (not surprisingly) one
for which he is perhaps best known, the theme of forlornness. It arises out of
existential individuality and subjectivity. In some ways, it resembles
Kierkegaard's second and unsatisfying stage, where man realizes he is alone,
determines an ethic, but has nothing on which to depend. Sartre himself
presented a moving description of this forlornness in the previously cited
Existentialism and Human Emotion:
To give you an
example which will enable you to understand forlornness better, I shall cite
the case of one of my students who came to see me under the following
circumstances: his father was on bad terms with his mother, and moreover, was
inclined to be a collaborationist; his older brother had been killed in the
German offensive of 1940, and the young man, with somewhat immature but
generous feelings, wanted to avenge him. His mother lived alone with him, very
much upset by the half-treason of her husband and the death of her older son;
the boy was her only consolation.
The boy was faced with the choice of leaving for England and joining the
Free French Forces – that is, leaving his mother behind – or remaining with
his mother and helping her to carry on. He was fully aware that the woman
lived only for him and that his going-off – and perhaps his death – would
plunge her into despair. He was also aware that every act that he did for his
mother's sake was a sure thing, in the sense that it was helping her to carry
on, whereas every effort he made toward going off and fighting was an
uncertain move which might run aground and prove completely useless; for
example, on his way to England he might, while passing through Spain, be
detained indefinitely in a Spanish camp; he might reach England or Algiers and
be stuck in an office at a desk job. As a result, he was faced with two very
different kinds of action: one, concrete, immediate, but concerning only one
individual; the other concerned an incomparably vaster group, a national
collectivity, but for that very reason was dubious, and might be interrupted
en route. And, at the same time, he was wavering between two kinds of ethics.
On the one hand, an ethics of sympathy, of personal devotion; on the other, a
broader ethics, but one whose efficacy was more dubious. He had to choose
between the two.
Who could help him choose? Christian doctrine? No. Christian doctrine
says, "Be charitable, love your neighbor, take the more rugged path, etc.,
etc." But which is the more rugged path? Whom should he love as a brother?
The fighting man or his mother? Which does the greater good, the vague act of
fighting in a group, or the concrete one of helping a particular human being
to go on living? Who can decide a priori? Nobody. No book of ethics can tell
him. The Kantian ethics says, "Never treat any person as a means, but as an
end." Very well, if I stay with my mother, I'll treat her as an end and not as
a means; but by virtue of this very fact, I'm running the risk of treating the
people around me who are fighting, as means; and, conversely, if I go to join
those who are fighting, I'll be treating them as an end, and, by doing that, I
run the risk of treating my mother as a means.
If values are vague, and if they are always too broad for the concrete and
specific case that we are considering, the only thing left for us is to trust
our instincts. That's what this young man tried to do; and when I saw him, he
said, "In the end, feeling is what counts. I ought to choose whichever pushes
me in one direction. If I feel that I love my mother enough to sacrifice
everything else for her – my desire for vengeance, for action, for adventure
– then I'll stay with her. If, on the contrary, I feel that my love for my
mother isn't enough, I'll leave.
But how is the value of a feeling determined! What gives his feeling for
his mother value> Precisely the fact that he remained with her. I may say that
I like so-and-so well enough to sacrifice a certain amount of money for him,
but I may say so only if I've done it. I may say "I love my mother well enough
to remain with her" if I have remained with her. The only way to determine the
value of this affection is, precisely, to perform an act which confirms and
defines it. But, since I require this affection to justify my act, I find
myself caught in a vicious circle. (Sartre, Existentia1ism, pp. 24-27).
From this we can
see the futility inherent in Sartre's existential
thought. Since "existence precedes essence," and the individual is enveloped
within "subjectivity" and must find his essence of "authenticity," he is truly
alone. Many people have embraced existentialism for a time, sincerely thinking
that its view of life is accurate. However, many leave existentialism because
it offers a solution, meaning, and commitment which is not truly satisfying.
Even Sartre, toward the end of his life, swung very close to theistic
commitment. The magazine National Review reported it this way:
Throughout his mature career, the philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre was a
militant atheist. Politically, although he quarreled with Marxist materialism,
his rhetoric was often indistinguishable from the most heavy-handed Stalinist
boilerplate.
However, during the philosopher's last months there were some surprising
developments. In 1980, nearing his death, by then blind, decrepit, but still
in full possession of his faculties, Sartre came very close to belief in God,
perhaps even more than very close.
The story can be told briefly, and perhaps reverently. An ex-Maoist, Pierre
Victor, shared much of Sartre's time toward the end. In the early spring of
1980 the two had a dialogue in the pages of the ultra-gauchiste Nouvel
Observateur. It is sufficient to quote a single sentence from what Sartre said
then to measure the degree of his acceptance of the grace of God and the
creatureliness of man: "I do not feel that I am the product of chance, a speck
of dust in the universe, but someone who was expected, prepared, prefigured.
In short, a being whom only a Creator could put here: and this idea of a
creating hand refers to God.
Students of existentialism, the atheistic branch, will note that in this one
sentence Sartre disavowed his entire system, his engagements, his whole life.
Voltaire converted on his deathbed; one never knows, the brilliant old rascal
is supposed to have said. Sartre did not convert, at least outwardly, but came
to understand. Everything ought to be forgiven him.
The epilogue is much less edifying. His mistress, Simone de Beauvoir, behaved
like a bereaved widow during the funeral. Then she published La ceremonie des
adieux in which she turned vicious, attacking Sartre. He resisted Victor's
seduction, she recounts, then he yielded. "How should one explain this senile
act of a turncoat?" she asks stupidly. And she adds: "All my friends, all the
Sartrians, and the editorial team of Les Temps Modernes supported me in my
consternation."
Mme. de Beauvoir's consternation v. Sartre's conversion. The balance is
infinitely heavier on the side of the blind, yet seeing, old man. (National
Review, June 11, 1982, p. 677).
Karl Jaspers (1883-1969)
Karl Jaspers began his academic career by studying law at Heidelberg and
Munich. He later studied medicine at several German universities and soon made
important contributions to pathological and psychiatric research. He was
professor of philosophy at Heidelberg from 1921 until the Nazis came into
power. After World War II he returned to Heidelberg and in 1948 he moved to
Basel. He was one of the foremost representatives of extentialism.
B. A. G. Fuller comments upon those who influenced Jaspers' thought:
His
philosophical activity was influenced from the beginning by careful studies of
Kant and Hegel, but Kierkegaard and Nietzsche have dominated his thought by
directing it constantly upon the problem of the human condition. His
philosophy has been more than anything else an attempt to answer their
question of the nature of human existence. His answers reflect his Kantianism.
(Fuller, Philosophy, p. 604).
One aspect of Jaspers' philosophy is that it is more balanced than that
of some of his existentialist comrades. I. M Bochenski reports
The thought of
Karl Jaspers is on the whole much more balanced than that of the majority of
his fellow existentialists; for example, he critically analyzes their view of
science, to which he accords a far more important place than they do. His
books contain a wealth of remarkable analyses and are written in comparatively
simple language free from the characteristic neologisms which make the other
authors so difficult to read. An obvious concern for metaphysics and a sort of
natural theology also serve to distinguish him from the others who share the
same label. Even so, he exhibits the fundamental attitudes and convictions
common to all existentialists (Bochenski, European Phi1osophy, p. 185).
His Method
In 1932 jaspers completed a major philosophical work entitled,
Philosophic. In it he examined in depth the common philosophical method,
relating it to his own brand of existentialism. Robert A. Caponigri comments:
Jaspers'
philosophical thought proper begins to emerge with the work PPiilosophie and
is developed in the subsequent works. These works do not, however,
constitute a progressive movement toward a systematic position. Jaspers'
thought is thematic, not systematic. The basic themes of his thought are
three: 1) science and its relation to man's understanding of himself, 2)
existence, and 3) transcendence. The most fruitful approach to Jaspers'
thought lies in the exploration of his meditative enrichment of these themes.
(Caponigri,
Philosophy, p. 257).
His Philosophy
Jean T. Wilde and William Kimmel sum up the philosophy of Karl Jaspers:
For Jaspers
philosophy is net the attempt to give definitive form to a body of knowledge
about man in his universe. Philosophy is rather a way, an activity of the
human mind moving toward the ultimate truth which can never become an object
of knowledge, but which can be encountered in that process of thought which he
calls "transcending thinking." Truth is always on the way, always in movement
and never becomes final, not even in its most wonderful crystallizations.
Thought is never at rest in its own content.
God, Man, and the World, while they may become objects of our attention
can never become objects of knowledge. Their authentic being, their
fundamental reality, always recedes beyond the limits of objectification,
defying confinement and circumscription. They are, therefore, objects of
encounter during the process of reflective thinking but encountered at the
limits or boundaries of knowledge. The objects of knowledge or reflection,
whether the products of scientific, aesthetic, mythical, philosophical,
psychological, or merely commonsense experience are not ends and results but
limiting forms whose reality lies not in their positive form or content but in
their power to point beyond themselves toward Transcendence – the goal of
philosophical thought.
But just as God – Transcendence, the all encompassing One in which and
from which all things have their being and meaning – transcends
objectification, so also the Self in its authenticity, its Existenz, can never
become an object for itself. One encounters the Self at the "boundary
situations" of existence, at the limits of knowledge and action, at those
points where all knowledge and action fails, or founders – in the presence of
absolute chance, conflict, suffering, guilt, death. At these boundary
situations of finite existence one is driven either to despair or to a
discovery of authentic Selfhood in freedom. In other words, in the concrete
situation, where the forms of knowledge fail, the formulas do not apply, the
path is no longer predetermined, one is forced to decide, and in this free
decision out of the Self one discovers the true Self, the Being which one is.
Between the Being that I am (Existenz) and the Being that is the all
[Tmnscendence) lies the World embodied in the constructed and interpreted
forms of knowledge. This World, however, is also evanescent and, in a sense,
unstable, but its forms serve as a mediation between the Self that I am and
the Transcendence toward which my thought moves. As forms of mediation the
forms of knowledge of the World are indispensable; but as forms of mediation
none is final or absolute or binding. Their status is that of "cyphers,"
symbols that are open to Transcendence and through which reflection can
encounter Transcendence. Only when they are "interpreted" as a cypher-script
of Being rather than accepted as self-sufficient objects of knowledge is their
status and that of the World they embody understood. But the interpretation
itself is never final or accomplished. Nor can there be an interpretation for
man-ingeneral. Each individual in his encounter with the World must interpret
them anew, for only in the act of interpretation does the Transcendence which
hovers around the forms reveal itself through them. There is necessary, then,
both the expectant receptivity of the Self to the cypher and the recognition
of the forms of knowledge as being cyphers of Being.
True philosophy, then, for Jaspers, is a hovering (Schweben) of the mind
around the given forms of knowledge and the forming forms of one's own
thought, a gliding of thought in expectant search for that truth about the
Self, the World and God which reveals itself as the Being that is for the
Being that I am (Wilde and Kimmel, Search, p. 451-3).
Jaspers and
Sartre
F. H. Heinemann has compared the existential philosophies of Jaspers and
Sartre, and he shows some interesting differences between them:
| Jaspers |
Sartre |
| Keep space open for the Comprehensive |
There is no Comprehensive |
| Do not identify yourself with an
object of your knowledge! |
Commit yourself! |
| Do not reject any form of the Comprehensive! |
Reject all those forms which restrict your liberty! |
| Do not accept any defamation of
existence! |
Describe reality in its ugliness, absurdity and obscenity! |
| Do not allow yourself to be cut off from the transcendent! |
You are cut off from the Transcendent, for it is
non-existent. |
| (Heinemann, Existentialism, p. 129) |
|
| Despite the differences between Jaspers and
Sartre (and in fact, among many existentialists), there are common themes
that run throughout their philosophies. |
Christian Response
The themes of existentialism are themes that the God of the Bible
addresses in His Word. God is concerned about individuals. God is concerned
about an individual's happiness, contentment and inner peace. God is concerned about an
individual's fulfillment. However, existentialism is not biblical Christianity.
Though not a Christian, philosopher Hazel Barnes notes that distinction:
My first
objection to the theological claims of Tillich, Robinson, Bonhoeffer, and
Bultmann – to use them as examples and speaking of what they share in common
without implying that they are in full agreement – is that they claim to be
Christian while denying what has been essential in Christianity whereas they
subtly retain Cbristian assumptions when they profess to establish philosophical
truths independent of sectarian commitments.
In their plea for a revolution in Christian thought, these theologians seem at
times to argue for a position scarcely discernible from naturalism. The idea of
a God "out there" somewhere in or beyond space, or the concept of any Being
which is separate from us and the world is as offensive to Bishop Robinson as
the medieval God who dwelt "up there" in Dante's three-level universe. Tillich
argues against all use of "supernatural" concepts of God. Bultmann urges that we
must "demythologize." Bonhoeffer suggests that Christianity should advance to
the point where it no longer needs the "religious premise," that the Christian
must "plunge himself into the life of a godless world, without attempting to
gloss over its ungodliness with a veneer of religion or trying to transfigure
it" (Barnes, Ethics, pp. 382, 383).
Bochenski gives another slant to a critical look at existentialism. He talks
about some of the philosophical problems posed but not
answered by the usual existential concepts:
As often happens,
existentialism has gone too far in the rejection, inherently justified, of the
past. For many existentialist philosophers there seems to be nothing in
principle worth considering except those... questions of fate we have already
alluded to. Their whole philosophy seems to center on death, suffering,
failure. Thereby they neglect another essential factor in European culture,
namely that sense of the objective and scientific which the Greeks had in such
eminent degree. Often existentialism goes so far... that it seems to be more an
Indian than a European philosophy, that is, a kind of thought which seems to be
exclusively, even in its logic, a kind of therapeutic device. It is for such
reasons that existentialism encounters justified reproach among many, perhaps
most, serious European philosophers.
Another unique trait of existentialist philosophy is its definite technical
philosophical character. Here many valuable insights and results are
discernible. Unquestionably philosophy has been enriched by numerous superior
analyses in psychology and phenomenology, and some fields have in fact been
subjected to study for the first time through these efforts, for example, pure
personal relationships between human beings – "being-with-another,"
"being-for-another," "thou," "communication." A study of problems has thus
arisen which constitutes a definite advancement in philosophy. Equally
fundamental are the critical attacks on positivism and on idealism by the
existentialists. Against the first they have successfully defended the
irreducibility of human existence to matter, and respecting the second they have
asserted with great power and conviction the priority of existence to thought.
They have occupied themselves with ontology in various ways and some have not
only worked it out in detail but have capped their efforts with a metaphysics
(Bochenski, European Philosophy, p. 199).
Christianity is based on a completely different set of presuppositions
from those of existentialism. While existentialism stresses subjective inner
experience, Christianity links subjective inner experience with objective and
testable supernatural events in history (such as the resurrection of Jesus
Christ) and with God-given and God-developed reason. Biblical Christians have
faith. Existentialists also have faith. But faith, however sincere, is not
enough. Faith must have an object and that object must be worthy of faith. Jesus
Christ alone, the creator and sustainer of the universe and every individual in
it, is worthy of ultimate faith.
We have dealt with the historicity of the Christian faith and its
reasonableness in previous works (see, for example, Josh's Evidence, More than
a Carpenter, and The Resurrection Factor; and Josh and Don's Reasons and
Answers). Christianity presents a cohesive world view which fits the reality
around us. Existentialism does not. We are convinced that Christianity alone
makes the greatest sense out of the world we live in and out of our own inner
thoughts and feelings. Christian philosopher Richard Purtill has capably
summarized our perspective:
.... reason is on
the side of Christianity.... If we begin to ask fundamental questions about the
universe, and follow the argument where it leads us, then it will lead us to
belief in God; that if we examine the evidence of history and of human
experience, we will be compelled to acknowledge that the only satisfactory
explanation of the evidence leads us to Christianity.
Such Christians
admit that there is still a gap between intellectual assent and commitment to a
Christian way of life, but they believe that reason is neither opposed to such a
commitment or irrelevant to it – rather, it is the best possible ground for it
(Richard Purtill, C. S. Lewis's Case for the Christian Faith, San Francisco:
Harper and Row, Publishers, 1981, pp. 12, 13).
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