Deck 28: Simone De Beauvoir: Existentialist, Feminist

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Question
By "ambiguity" de Beauvoir means

A) that all our words for women have multiple meanings.
B) that human beings are both immanent in the world and transcend it in consciousness.
C) that nothing can ever be definitively settled so far as ethics goes.
D) that it is hard to settle down and really be serious about life.
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Question
Nihilism is

A) an attempt to escape from the ambiguity that we are.
B) forced upon us by the death of God.
C) the premise on which an authentic life must be built.
D) something "given" with the absurdity of the world.
Question
Being serious about one's life

A) requires the virtues of honesty and courage.
B) means looking death squarely in the face.
C) is a way of hiding one's freedom from oneself.
D) is the very opposite of fanaticism.
Question
Value appears in the world

A) if only we look at it without prejudice, forsaking our own little projects.
B) as a correlate of human projects.
C) in virtue of the world's dependence on God.
D) in so many ways that no one can determine an absolute value.
Question
The fundamental project for human beings is

A) to live as much like an adventurer as possible.
B) to justify one's life independently of what anyone else thinks of it.
C) to reconcile ourselves to the absurdity of existence.
D) to justify one's life by becoming necessary to others.
Question
Violence, de Beauvoir says,

A) never settles anything.
B) is never justified, even if violence is done to one.
C) may be required to oppose oppression.
D) is valuable in itself as an expression of the will to power.
Question
Woman has become the "second sex" because

A) women are biologically weaker than men.
B) men have overcome the strong resistance to oppression that women have engaged in throughout the centuries.
C) Scripture tells us that Eve was made for Adam.
D) it has suited both sexes to have it that way.
Question
That woman has been defined as "the Other" means

A) she has been understood to have only a relative existence.
B) no one can understand her.
C) the very essence of woman is written in how she is regarded.
D) she needs others as they need her.
Question
Patriarchy

A) signifies the dominance of the male.
B) abolished the ownership of women.
C) began by chance.
D) began in violent revolution.
Question
What does de Beauvoir understand by ambiguity? And why is that a problem?
Question
How does de Beauvoir resist the attempt to make Pyrrhus' projects of conquest look absurd?
Question
Describe the serious person as understood by de Beauvoir. And why is it so easy to slip into seriousness?
Question
Why do I need others who are free?
Question
What should one do when some use their freedom to deny the freedom of others?
Question
Why is it that biology is not destiny?
Question
What is de Beauvoir's criticism of classical psychoanalysis?
Question
Characterize patriarchy.
Question
What is the key to the emancipation of women?
Question
Compare what de Beauvoir says about nihilism, seriousness, and adventurism to Kierkegaard's treatment of despair and Heidegger's analysis of inauthenticity.
Question
When Sartre and de Beauvoir (and others) were bringing existentialism to public notice in the 1940s, it was often greeted as a philosophy of gloom and despair. In the light of what you now know of de Beauvoir, do you think this is justified? Why or why not?
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Deck 28: Simone De Beauvoir: Existentialist, Feminist
1
By "ambiguity" de Beauvoir means

A) that all our words for women have multiple meanings.
B) that human beings are both immanent in the world and transcend it in consciousness.
C) that nothing can ever be definitively settled so far as ethics goes.
D) that it is hard to settle down and really be serious about life.
that human beings are both immanent in the world and transcend it in consciousness.
2
Nihilism is

A) an attempt to escape from the ambiguity that we are.
B) forced upon us by the death of God.
C) the premise on which an authentic life must be built.
D) something "given" with the absurdity of the world.
an attempt to escape from the ambiguity that we are.
3
Being serious about one's life

A) requires the virtues of honesty and courage.
B) means looking death squarely in the face.
C) is a way of hiding one's freedom from oneself.
D) is the very opposite of fanaticism.
is a way of hiding one's freedom from oneself.
4
Value appears in the world

A) if only we look at it without prejudice, forsaking our own little projects.
B) as a correlate of human projects.
C) in virtue of the world's dependence on God.
D) in so many ways that no one can determine an absolute value.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
The fundamental project for human beings is

A) to live as much like an adventurer as possible.
B) to justify one's life independently of what anyone else thinks of it.
C) to reconcile ourselves to the absurdity of existence.
D) to justify one's life by becoming necessary to others.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Violence, de Beauvoir says,

A) never settles anything.
B) is never justified, even if violence is done to one.
C) may be required to oppose oppression.
D) is valuable in itself as an expression of the will to power.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Woman has become the "second sex" because

A) women are biologically weaker than men.
B) men have overcome the strong resistance to oppression that women have engaged in throughout the centuries.
C) Scripture tells us that Eve was made for Adam.
D) it has suited both sexes to have it that way.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
That woman has been defined as "the Other" means

A) she has been understood to have only a relative existence.
B) no one can understand her.
C) the very essence of woman is written in how she is regarded.
D) she needs others as they need her.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Patriarchy

A) signifies the dominance of the male.
B) abolished the ownership of women.
C) began by chance.
D) began in violent revolution.
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k this deck
10
What does de Beauvoir understand by ambiguity? And why is that a problem?
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11
How does de Beauvoir resist the attempt to make Pyrrhus' projects of conquest look absurd?
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12
Describe the serious person as understood by de Beauvoir. And why is it so easy to slip into seriousness?
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13
Why do I need others who are free?
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14
What should one do when some use their freedom to deny the freedom of others?
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15
Why is it that biology is not destiny?
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16
What is de Beauvoir's criticism of classical psychoanalysis?
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17
Characterize patriarchy.
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18
What is the key to the emancipation of women?
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19
Compare what de Beauvoir says about nihilism, seriousness, and adventurism to Kierkegaard's treatment of despair and Heidegger's analysis of inauthenticity.
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20
When Sartre and de Beauvoir (and others) were bringing existentialism to public notice in the 1940s, it was often greeted as a philosophy of gloom and despair. In the light of what you now know of de Beauvoir, do you think this is justified? Why or why not?
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 20 flashcards in this deck.