Books by Sarah Richmond (translator)
Being and Nothingness
by Jean-Paul Sartre & Sarah Richmond (translator)
***đ A Five Books Book of the Year ***
This is a new translation of Being and Nothingness: “When you read the book having read large parts of the previous translation, it feels like putting on a pair of new glasses”Â
“This is a book that was published during the Second World War in occupied Paris by Sartre, who has since become known as a great existentialist thinker alongside his lifelong friend and lover Simone de Beauvoir. Being and Nothingness became the Bible of existentialism…Although this book is threateningly abstract in places, itâs also fundamentally practical. Itâs about the nature of what it is to be human…For me personally, I became interested in studying philosophy because I wanted to try and understand some of Being and Nothingness and Sartreâs ideas…Youâd be surprised how many philosophers have been inspired by Sartre, even though they’ve gone on to become very different sorts of philosophers from him…Being and Nothingness has got these amazing novelistic passages. Most famously, thereâs the example of the cafĂ© waiter. Sartre is sitting in a cafĂ©, watching a waiter who he thinks is in âbad faith.â Itâs a kind of self-deception, a denial of his own freedom to be other than he is in terms of his role and what other people expect him to be.” Read more...
The Best Philosophy Books of 2018
Nigel Warburton, Philosopher
Interviews where books by Sarah Richmond (translator) were recommended
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1
Down Girl: The Logic of Misogyny
by Kate Manne -
2
Aristotle's Way: How Ancient Wisdom Can Change Your Life
by Edith Hall -
3
I Am Dynamite!: A Life of Nietzsche
by Sue Prideaux -
4
Hiking with Nietzsche: On Becoming Who You Are
by John Kaag -
5
Being and Nothingness
by Jean-Paul Sartre & Sarah Richmond (translator)
The Best Philosophy Books of 2018, recommended by Nigel Warburton
The Best Philosophy Books of 2018, recommended by Nigel Warburton
What can Nietzsche and Aristotle teach us about how to live? Should everyone read Being and Nothingness? From a philosophical approach to misogyny to an interrogation of whether it’s morally acceptable to have a Facebook account, philosopher Nigel Warburton introduces us to the best philosophy books of 2018.