Once again, I have not made myself clear enough. I have no problem with Sartre himself, but rather the immediate connection regularly made between him and the general philosophical approach for which he was known.
Very similar to attacks on a particular genre of culture\art, based on faulty misconceptions about specific representatives of said genre (i.e "Detective stories are pulp". Can one consider "The Brothers Karamazov" and "Crime and Punishment" the same type of pulp? Both are early examples of the genre, with the same motifs as present-day whodunits.)
no subject
I have no problem with Sartre himself, but rather the immediate connection regularly made between him and the general philosophical approach for which he was known.
Very similar to attacks on a particular genre of culture\art, based on faulty misconceptions about specific representatives of said genre (i.e "Detective stories are pulp". Can one consider "The Brothers Karamazov" and "Crime and Punishment" the same type of pulp? Both are early examples of the genre, with the same motifs as present-day whodunits.)