sartre in English

noun

family name; Jean-Paul Sartre (1905-1980), French existential writer and philosopher, author of the novel "Nausea" (refused to accept the 1964 Nobel Prize in literature)

Use "sartre" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "sartre" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "sartre", or refer to the context using the word "sartre" in the English Dictionary.

1. 7 I imagine you're referring to Jean-Paul Sartre.

2. Adieux: A Farewell to Sartre chronicles the last 10 years of Jean-Paul Sartre's life

3. Vo svojom diele "Bytie a ničota" sa Sartre venuje zmyslu ľudského života

4. Explore 1000 Alone Quotes by authors including George Washington, Jean-Paul Sartre, and Wayne Dyer at BrainyQuote.

5. Aberjean-Paul Sartre war einer der ersten, vielleicht sogar der erste, der versuchte, eine Rekonstruktion des 3 Gesammelte Werke, Bd

6. For Sartre, this phenomenological experience of shame establishes a proof for the existence of other minds and defeats the problem of solipsism.

7. The technology used in SARTRE is already at an advanced stage and the project partners predict that the system could be road ready in a few years.

8. Aggadoth du Talmud de Babylone: La source de Jacob-ʼEin Yaakov (Collection Les Dix paroles ) (French Edition) [ANONYME, Elkaïm-Sartre, Arlette, Ouaknin, Marc-Alain] on Amazon.com

9. 14 In the 1960s, there were three worldly-known persons from France, namely president Charles de Gaulle, the sex symbol Brigitte Bardot, and the philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre.

10. According to atheist existentialists like Sartre, the “Absurdity” of human existence is the necessary result of our attempts to live a life of meaning and purpose in an indifferent, uncaring universe

11. Some authors have pointed to similarities between the Buddhist conception of nothingness and the ideas of Martin Heidegger and existentialists like Sartre, although this connection has not been explicitly made by the philosophers themselves.

12. Analogon (plural analoga or Analogons) An analogue. quotations ▼ (philosophy) According to Sartre, an equivalent of perception (such as a painting or a mental image) that is necessary for the process of imagination to take place.

13. Disordered Acquisitiveness now firmly pathologized as hoarding creates in the afflicted what the writer Jean Paul Sartre called "inauthenticity" and "bad faith." Living for and in lieu of dead inanimate matter, is a way we consciously deny our corrupt fleshy transient natures

14. One feature that garnered initial interest in a French context (which propagated rather quickly to scholars of French literature and philosophy working in American universities) was Derrida's efforts to displace the understanding of Heidegger's work that had been prevalent in France from the period of the ban against Heidegger teaching in German universities, which amounts in part to an almost wholesale rejection of the influence of Jean-Paul Sartre and existentialist terms. In Derrida's view, deconstruction is a tradition inherited via Heidegger (the French term "déconstruction" is a term coined to translate Heidegger's use of the words "Destruktion" - literally "destruction" - and "Abbau" - more literally "de-building").