Talk:Existentialism

Latest comment: 15 years ago by 59.126.204.63 in topic "Absurd" definition of life?

Is there a source for the point about Herman Hesse using an idea from Kierkegaard in his novel "steppenwolf". I have been searching and can not verify it. It would be nice to know what work of Kierkegaard was used and also any specific passages from the work that advance this idea.

famous extentialists (sorry I can't spell very well) change

Wasn't Oscar Wilde an Extentialist? Because in The Picture of Dorian Gray, especially in the preface, he talks about art and books being meaningless and that you should learn noting from them and that the novel is just something to read and not teach you anything

Wilde was talking about art, whereas existentialism posits that everything is meaningless: all life, including human existence and ultimately the art it produces. 71.193.107.49 (talk) 06:32, 29 October 2008 (UTC)Reply

Absurd? change

"Absurd" definition of life? change

I wouldn't say that all existentialists would say that life is absurd (like Buber or Tillich), but rather that the main focus is on THIS life and the way we live it. The absurd idea is line of thought from Sartre and Camus.

59.126.204.63 (talk) 14:08, 24 February 2009 (UTC)Reply

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