• Title of article

    Jean-Paul Sartre on the Meaning of Life: Objections from an Islamic Viewpoint

  • Author/Authors

    Asgariyazdi, Ali Associate professor - University of Tehran , Piroozvand, Soheila PhD candidate - University of Tehran

  • Pages
    24
  • From page
    191
  • To page
    214
  • Abstract
    Theories of the meaning of life are divided into two categories: nihilistic and anti-nihilistic. The latter is divided, in turn, into the view that life is meaningful and the view that life can be made meaningful. In this paper, we deploy a descriptive-analytic method to discuss JeanPaul Sartre’s view of nihilism. In his view, God does not exist, the human being is born and dies without a reason, and then his life ends when he turns into a being-in-itself. Sartre’s view is subject to a host of objections, including the following: his restriction of the domain of knowledge to the empirical cannot itself be empirically established; given their confinement in the material world, human beings cannot come up with a comprehensive plan for their life; and that the meaninglessness of life is a self-contradicting idea that cannot be true in the external world.
  • Keywords
    human , Jean-Paul Sartre , absurdity of life , purposefulness of creation
  • Journal title
    Religious Inquiries
  • Serial Year
    2020
  • Record number

    2524898