Newsletter Brandon Seltenrich Newsletter Brandon Seltenrich

DE Weekly: Simone de Beauvoir, Sedimentation, & Blank Slate Theory

One of the themes you will see repeated in existentialist texts is that we are born into this world with a radical freedom, “thrown” totally free into life to make whatever we like of it. If there is no inherent meaning to life, the existentialists argue, that means we are free to find and create our own meaning.

How simple is it, though, to create meaning in our lives? Is there anything blocking our path, standing in our way? It turns out, there is.

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Newsletter Brandon Seltenrich Newsletter Brandon Seltenrich

DE Weekly: Rumination, Feeling Stuck, & Letting Go

As humans, we have a tendency to think about the past. This isn’t necessarily a bad thing. But, when we dwell on the past for long enough, we can be prone to feeling regret. We can want time back that we can’t have; we can yearn for time that is no longer ours.

I recently listened to an episode of the Modern Wisdom podcast with Chris Williamson that featured a psychologist named Dr. Rick Hanson, who shared a story about a Buddhist monk.

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Newsletter Brandon Seltenrich Newsletter Brandon Seltenrich

DE Weekly: Merleau-Ponty, Behavior, & Sedimentation

In existentialism, as in any philosophy, there are established truths which are endorsed by most of its influential thinkers. The absurdity of life, the acceptance of death, and the ability to make our own meaning are some examples of this. Sedimentation is another.

Along the same vein as facticity, which I wrote about a few weeks ago, sedimentation is a concept that represents another force in our lives that influences the way we live and interact with the world around us.

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