Basic Writings of Existentialism, unique to the Modern Library, presents the writings of key nineteenth- and
twentieth-century thinkers broadly united by their belief that because life has no inherent meaning that humans
can discover, we must determine meaning for ourselves.
This anthology brings together into one volume the most influential and commonly taught works of existentialism.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Fear and trembling : Problema I
p. 7
Fear and trembling : Problema II
p. 24
The sickness unto death : A. Despair is the sickness unto death
p. 41
The sickness unto death : B. The universality of this sickness (despair)
p. 51
The sickness unto death : C. The forms of this sickness (despair)
p. 58
On the geneaology of morals : First essay : "Good and evil," "Good and bad"
p. 111
On the geneaology of morals : Second essay : "Guilt," "Bad conscience," and the like
p. 145
Notes from the underground : Part I : Underground
p. 193
The Brothers Karamazov : The grand inquisitor
p. 231
Saint Manuel Bueno, Martyr
p. 257
Being and time : The possible being-a-whole of Da-sein and being-toward death
p. 299
Existentialism
p. 341
Being and nothingness : Self-negation
p. 369
Being and nothingness : The encounter with the other
p. 391
The ethics of ambiguity : Ambiguity
p. 413
The myth of Sisyphus : An absurd reasoning
p. 441
The myth of Sisyphus : The myth of Sisyphus
p. 489
Invisible man : Prologue
p. 495
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