Chapter 16
Jean-Paul Sartre:
Inventing Our Own Meanings
in a Meaningless World


    What do we mean by saying that existence precedes essence?
    We mean that man first of all exists, encounters himself,
    surges up in the world—and defines himself afterwards.
    If man as the existentialist sees him is not definable,
    it is because to begin with he is nothing.
    He will not be anything until later,
    and then he will be what me makes of himself.
    Thus, there is no human nature....Man simply is.

    [from Sartre's essay "Existentialism is a Humanism"]

     Jean-Paul Sartre (1905-1980) is another French existentialist,
whose approach to life resembles Albert Camus'.
We discover ourselves thrown into a meaningless and absurd existence,
but this gives us an opportunity to re-create ourselves from the core.

     The center of a human person, for Sartre, is will, decision, project.
Since the world provides no automatic meanings
(unless we accept some of the assumed meanings from our culture),
we are responsible for creating our own life-meanings out of nothing.
We define, invent, and create ourselves by selecting our own life-goals.
And our freely-chosen life-purposes are self-grounding,
having no ultimate meaning or value in the universe.
Only we can assign value to a life-purpose.
And these Authentic projects will continue only as long as we affirm them.
Whenever we stop focusing and integrating our lives around our projects,
they disappear as easily as yesterday.

     We become more Authentic, according to Sartre, to the degree
that we integrate all the dimensions of our lives into one project:

    Our particular projects,
    aimed at the realization in the world of a particular end,
    are united in the global project which we are.
    But precisely because we are wholly choice and act,
    these partial projects are not determined by the global project.
    They must themselves be choices;
    and a certain margin of contingency, of unpredictability,
    and of the absurd is allowed to each of them.

    [Jean-Paul Sartre  Being and Nothingness, translated by Hazel Barnes
    (New York: Philosophical Library, 1956) p. 481]   

JEAN-PAUL SARTRE: INVENTING OUR OWN MEANING by JAMES PARK                       67



    This is the first page of the chapter on Sartre in
Becoming More Authentic: The Positive Side of Existentialism.
If you would like to see the whole table of contents, click this title.

    If you wish to cite anything from this page,
use the page number at the bottom of the page:
James Park Becoming More Authentic: The Positive Side of Existentialism
(Minneapolis, MN: Existential Books: Existential Books, 20075th edition)
p. 67.


Created September 11, 2008; revised 3-3-2017;


Go to the beginning of this website
James Leonard Park—Free Library