The only sense in which the word say love means anything is if you act in a way that indicates that you love somebody. I think here he's also saying that, like, pretended feelings and real feelings are the same. Not in the sense that theyare, like, definitionly the same, because, you know, it's only the action that matters.
David and Tamler don black turtlenecks and light up a couple of Gauloises to talk about Jean Paul Sartre's classic essay “Existentialism is a Humanism.” Why are choices so fundamental to our experience? What does Sartre mean when he says that “existence precedes essence”? Why does he try to shoehorn universalizability into a view that’s clearly hostile to it?
Plus, how much free time is good for you? Is that even the right question?
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