Newsletter Brandon Seltenrich Newsletter Brandon Seltenrich

DE Weekly: Icarus, Folly, & Radical Freedom

“Man is condemned to be free;” wrote Jean-Paul Sartre, “because once thrown into the world, he is responsible for everything he does. It is up to you to give [life] a meaning.” In an existence where we are “thrown,” left to our own devices to make use of our radical freedom, where do we go? What do we do? When do we stop?

The existentialists celebrated the radical freedom we are born into, hyper fixating on the fact that we may create a life of meaning through the choices we make.

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Newsletter Brandon Seltenrich Newsletter Brandon Seltenrich

DE Weekly: Frankl, Logotherapy, & Tragic Optimism

Last week, I wrote about Viktor E. Frankl’s book Man’s Search for Meaning, which he published in 1946. It details his experiences in a concentration camp during World War II and shares his psychological analysis of not only himself, but of other prisoners and of human beings faced with adversity in general.

This week, I want to expand on what I wrote previously by focusing specifically on the two sections of the book which follow the main narrative: “Logotherapy in a Nutshell” and Frankl’s 1984 postscript “The Case for a Tragic Optimism.”

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Newsletter Brandon Seltenrich Newsletter Brandon Seltenrich

DE Weekly: Frankl, Suffering, & Man’s Search for Meaning

“He who has a Why to live for can bear almost any How.” I recently read Viktor E. Frankl’s book Man’s Search for Meaning, and he cited this quote from Friedrich Nietzsche a few times throughout the narrative, reminding himself and the reader just how important a sense of meaning can be.

Frankl wrote Man’s Search for Meaning in 1946 as more of a therapeutic outlet than anything else. The book details his experiences in a concentration camp during the Second World War; above all, the book tries to answer the question: “How was everyday life in a concentration camp reflected in the mind of the average prisoner?”

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DE Weekly: Kierkegaard, Surrender, & the Leap of Faith

“Who am I, and what is my fate?” In last week’s newsletter, I wrote about how existentialism sought to answer this question through examining all facets of existence. I introduced the French philosopher and Catholic theologian Blaise Pascal, and his philosophical argument commonly referred to as “Pascal’s wager.”

To refresh your mind (or to catch you up to speed), Pascal’s wager is an argument that posits we, as humans, engage in a gamble regarding the existence of and our belief in God, a belief which ultimately defines our fate.

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DE Weekly: Pensées, Reason, & Pascal’s Wager

Existentialism has arrested the thoughts of readers because the questions it poses are fundamental to our existence. Joining all questions into one, readers are forced to ask themselves, “Who am I, and what is my fate?”

Centuries before the existentialist authors we normally think of came around, a French philosopher and Catholic theologian named Blaise Pascal lived and wrote on the same existential questions.

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DE Weekly: Rope, Hitchcock, & the Übermensch

Existentialism explored what would be required of us in a world without meaning. What would we do––and what should we do––if there were really no inherent meaning, no natural moral order to adhere to?

Some existentialists came up with sound answers; Albert Camus espoused personal responsibility and a good faith search for meaningful ways to live honestly and fully.

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DE Weekly: Reflections, Thoughts, & Beliefs

Hello, friends. This edition of the newsletter marks one year since I sent out the first one. It started as the first step in what I’ve always had a drive to do: to share my thoughts and my love for philosophy with people who appreciate it the same way I do. In the past year, it’s fulfilled all that and more.

Through Daily Existentialist Weekly, or DE Weekly for short, I’ve been able to cover not just existentialism, but all other kinds of philosophy and pop culture that ties into it.

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DE Weekly: Consciousness, Faith, & Free Will

The major question the existentialists sought to answer was, “What is the meaning of life?” Complementary to that question is another: does life even have meaning? Of course, they weren’t the first philosophers to ask this question. People had been thinking about this for thousands of years before them.

There are a lot of different ways to approach the potentiality of a grand, overarching meaning to life itself. Existentialism attempted to ground meaning in what we can actually see; it placed our perception above all else and used it to explain what might give each of our lives meaning.

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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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DE Weekly: The Good, the True, & the Beautiful

What lies at the core of every philosophical inquiry, every invented line of thinking, and every word on every page of every philosophical treatise ever written? I would argue that philosophy’s aim throughout human history has been to ascertain “the Good, the True, and the Beautiful.”

The Good, the True, and the Beautiful is a classical philosophical concept with roots in Ancient Greece, conceptualized by Socrates and later by Plato and Aristotle.

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