"If you layd out as if it'sa a carefully structured argument, thenlik, i will respond to it by finding the flaws in the argument," he says. "i just couldn't like, cause i did, i was interested in that stuff, but i don't think i could get through it even close." The book is published by Simon & Schuster at £16.99.
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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