Comparison: Jean-Paul Sarte & Martin Buber's Theories

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I will argue that Buber’s position is more insightful because his theory of human relations lays the foundation for an ethical system. I will first examine Sartre’s notion of intersubjectivity. Second, I will examine Buber’s view, comparing and contrasting it to Sartre’s view in two respects. I will first compare how the Other changes the subject’s worldview. My second comparison will deal with the idea that intersubjective relations for Sartre and Buber involve the subject viewing the universe through the Other. Lastly, moving away from the compare and contrast section, I will show how Buber’s model is more likely to give rise to an ethical relationship than Sartre’s model.

In order to explicate Sartre’s notion of intersubjectivity I will follow the progression that Sartre takes in Being and Nothingness. I will first distinguish between “being-for-itself” and “being-for-others”. Second, I will provide an explication of the subject’s encounter with the Other as an object. Third, I will explain the significance of “the look”. Here I will show how the look provides the foundation for the self. I will also show how the look of the Other affects the subject’s freedom.

One of the aims of Being and Nothingness is to describe consciousness, or human subjectivity. Sartre distinguishes two different modes of consciousness in order to accurately describe human subjectivity. These two modes are being-for-itself and being-for-others. Being-for-itself refers to a transcendent conscious being (Oaklander, 238). Transcendence is the antithesis of facticity. I will describe facticity first, in order to make the concept of transcendence more tractable. Facticity denotes the concrete details of the subject’s being including past decisions, plac...

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...d suddenly seems spacious and empty without the presence of his lover. The lover therefore views his world in relation to the beloved. It is as if the beloved permeates his perception like a sweet smell permeates a room. Buber describes this permeation vividly, writing “man dwells in his love” (Buber, 59) and that the “You is spread over me” (Buber, 55). This does not mean that the I perceives only the You or that the lover only perceives his beloved. It means that the lover views the world in relation to his lover as well as through his lover. Buber confirms, it is “not as if there were nothing but he; but everything else lives in his light” (Buber, 55). In other words, the world is coloured by the beloved. APPLY TO GENERAL?

While Buber claims that we conceive the world through the Other, Sartre argues that we come to view ourselves through the Other.

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