Month: October 2025

Jean-Paul Sartre: Freedom, Responsibility, and the Modern Conscience

Jean-Paul Sartre (1905–1980) turned the collapse of religious certainty into a demand for moral self-authorship. This essay sketches his life, clarifies his philosophy (“existence precedes essence”), traces the steps by which he reached his insights—from bleak fiction to public ethics—and considers possible misunderstandings that remain. It concludes with a sober appraisal: we need not act from anxiety or ideology; real action springs from the will to live.

The Consolations of Narrative

Religion and metaphysics are not revelations from beyond but the stories we tell ourselves to soften the facts of mortality and failure. The diversity of human behaviour arises from the shifting interplay between genes and experience — a balance science can describe but not yet measure. Even in an age of reason, we continue to weave meaning into suffering because we cannot bear the thought that there may be none.

From Daimons to Nothingness: Consciousness Between Imagination and Being

From Daimons to Nothingness traces the human search for consciousness across three horizons — mythic, scientific, and existential. From Patrick Harpur’s daimonic imagination to the neuroscience of the brain and Sartre’s void within being, it explores how awareness bridges reality and illusion, hope and finality, ending in a lucid acceptance of our brief, luminous existence between two darknesses we call life.