Bad Faith and Character in Jonathan Webber’s Sartre

Sartre Studies International 26 (1):38-60 (2020)
  Copy   BIBTEX

Abstract

I have two aims: to analyze Jonathan Webber’s analysis of bad faith and compare it to my own, traditional, account and to show that Webber’s focus on character, as a set of dispositions or character traits that incline but do not determine us to view the world and behave in certain ways, contributes further to understanding Sartre’s ‘bad faith’. Most Sartre scholars have ignored any emphasis on ‘character’. What is distinctive and emphatic in Webber’s interpretation is his insistence ‘on bad faith’ as a ‘social disease’ distorting the way one views, interprets, and even thinks about the world.. But, again, this pattern is not deterministic. Early in his work, Webber tells us that Sartre does not claim that we have bad faith by ‘ascribing character traits where there are none but by pretending to ourselves that we have ‘fixed natures’ that e.g. preclude the behaviour or character trait of which one is being accused.Though hardly disagreeing radically with Webber I do offer critical considerations. While Webber focuses on character, I focus on Sartre’s contention that the ‘most basic’ or ‘first act’ of bad faith is ‘to flee from what [the human being] cannot flee, from what it is’, specifically human freedom. And I disagree partially with Webber’s articulation of the ‘spirit of seriousness’, and strongly with both Sartre’s and his supporting claim that bad faith cannot be cynical. I also demur from Webber’s overemphasis on the ‘social’. For me, the root of all bad faith is our primitive ontological condition; namely, that at its very ‘upsurge’, human reality, anguished by its ‘reflective apprehension’ of its freedom and lack of Being, is disposed to flee from its nothingness in pursuit of identity, substantiality - in short, Being.

Links

PhilArchive



    Upload a copy of this work     Papers currently archived: 93,867

External links

Setup an account with your affiliations in order to access resources via your University's proxy server

Through your library

Similar books and articles

Is Bad Faith Necessarily Social?Ronald Santoni - 2008 - Sartre Studies International 14:23-39.
Is bad faith necessarily social?Ronald E. Santoni - 2008 - Sartre Studies International 14 (2):23-39.
Being-for-itself and the Ontological Structure.Ronald E. Santoni - 2020 - Sartre Studies International 26 (2):40-50.
Sociality, Seriousness, and Cynicism.Jonathan Webber - 2020 - Sartre Studies International 26 (1):61-76.
Bad Faith Good Faith.Ronald E. Santoni - 1995 - Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
Bad Faith in Film Spectatorship.William Pamerleau - 2020 - Film-Philosophy 24 (2):122-139.

Analytics

Added to PP
2020-07-24

Downloads
46 (#336,233)

6 months
8 (#506,113)

Historical graph of downloads
How can I increase my downloads?

Citations of this work

Sociality, Seriousness, and Cynicism.Jonathan Webber - 2020 - Sartre Studies International 26 (1):61-76.

Add more citations

References found in this work

No references found.

Add more references