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Comdemned to be free Sartre’s concept of Freedom and Responsibility

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1 Comdemned to be free Sartre’s concept of Freedom and Responsibility
Through Dostoyevsky's narrative

2 Matt: The Grand Inquisitor recalls the three temptations which Christ rejected in order for human beings to have free will. However, The Grand Inquisitor states that free will is a impossible burden on mankind. The Grand Inquisit or says that Christ should have demanded that people follow him for security. The Grand Inquisitor also states that man need a supernatural being and Christ refused to show man that he was supernatural being. In the end of Christ and The Grand Inquisitor’s conversation the Grand Inquisitor states that the church has been executing the work of satan as a way to create security and order for mankind. It almost seems that the sole purpose for the Church is to instill fear in the public to create order. This opposes Christ’s views on allowing the people their free will, and giving man a right to choose. Colleen: The story of the Grand Inquisitor kind of resembles the story that Christ tells in the New Testament. Both stories use a fictional version to talk about a philosophical concern.The similarity between Ivan’s story and Christ’s stories is the uneasy relationship between Ivan and religion. Like Christ, Ivan is concerned with understanding the way we outline what is wrong and right. Ivan ultimately rejects both Christ’s and God’s existence. He cannot accept a supreme being with absolute power who would allow suffering that occursall the time on Earth. Jeremy: The church is composed of men, who attempt to accomplish their own interpretations of Christ’s will. Since they are not Christ himself, they misread what his intentions really are. The Inquisitor describes freedom as a burden, given to mankind by Christ and he questions why Christ didn’t just give man no choice so they could have complete security to be saved. Jeremy: Christ’s refusal to take control over all the kingdoms in the world is an example in itself that the power over yourself is more important than the power over other things or people. Dorian: During the inquisitor’s rant Christ doesn’t utter a word, and when asked for a response just kisses the old man which grants him freedom. The kiss changes the old inquisitor Dan: He feels like God made a mistake and gave man the knowledge of good and evil as opposed to peace. Dorian: The church views his return as a threat Jacqueline: but as the story goes on they talk about people needing to have something to believe in which doesn’t really give them any freedom because what they “believe” isn’t living freely. People need someone or something to tell them how to live life.

3 My fear is free and manifests my freedom; I have put all my freedom into my fear, and I have chosen myself as fearful in this or that circumstance. Under other circumstances I shall exist as deliberate and courageous, and I shall have put all my freedom into my courage. In relation to freedom there is no privileged psychic phenomenon. All my "modes of being" manifest freedom equally since .they are all ways of being my own nothingness.

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8 Without any help whatsoever, it is entirely abandoned to the intolerable necessity of making itself be-down to the slightest detail. Thus freedom is not a being; it is the being of man-i.e., his nothingness of being.

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10 What is the difference in the way Christ on one side and the inquisitor on the other see humanity?

11 human reality in and through its very upsurge decides to define its own being by its ends.

12 for human reality, to be is to choose oneself
Do you remember Nietzsche and the overman?

13 The essential consequence of our earlier remarks is that man being condemned to be free carries the weight of the whole world on his shoulders; he is responsible for the world and for himself as a way of being. We are taking the word "responsibility" in its ordinary sense as "consciousness (of) being the incontestable author of an event or of an object."

14 nothing foreign has decided what we feel, what we live, or what we are.

15 Furthermore this absolute responsibility is not resignation; it is simply the logical-requirement of the consequences of our freedom. What happens to mc happens through me, and I can neither affect myself with it nor revolt against it nor resign myself to it. Moreover everything which happens to me is mine.

16 The most terrible situations of war, the worst tortures do not create a nonhuman state of things; there is no non-human situation. It is only through fear, flight, and recourse to magical types of conduct that I shall decide on the non-human, but this decision is human, and I shall carry the entire responsibility for it.

17 If I am mobilized in a war, this war is my war; it is in my image and I deserve it. I deserve:it first because I could always get out of it by suicide or by desertion; these ultimate possibles are those which must always be present for us when there is a question of envisaging a situation. For lack of getting out of it, I have chosen it. This can be due to inertia, to cowardice in the face of public opinion, or because I prefer certain other values to the value of the refusal to join in the war (the good opinion of my relatives, the honor of my family, etc.). Anyway you look at it, it is a matter of a choice. This choice will be repeated later on again and again without a break until the end of the war.

18 the peculiar character of human reality is that it is without excuse.


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