The anguish of choice
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Unlock the full reading · $5.50 →The essay recounts Sartre's famous 1945 lecture 'Existentialism Is a Humanism,' delivered to an overflow crowd in post-war Paris. Sartre attempted to defend existentialism and construct a morality beyond nihilism, paradoxically offering guidance while insisting people guide themselves. He later regretted the lecture's viral success, fearing it reduced his complex philosophy to pullquotes and distorted his ideas.
Teaching:
• Sartre's insistence that people guide themselves mirrors the Ashtanga principle that the practice is self-directed—students must choose their own relationship to the method
• The post-war hunger for moral reconstruction parallels students seeking practice after personal crisis—both need structure without dogma
• Sartre's discomfort with his public image escaping him applies to how students perform asana versus how they experience it internally
• The paradox of offering guidance while demanding self-guidance is the teacher's dilemma in Mysore—creating conditions for autonomy rather than dependence
Writing seeds:
• Essay on the Mysore room as existential training ground: students must choose their practice daily without external validation or imposed meaning
• Post comparing Sartre's 'existence precedes essence' to embodied practice—the body's intelligence emerges through repetition, not predetermined design
• Piece on the teacher's role as creating conditions for student autonomy, not dispensing answers—paralleling Sartre's paradox of guidance
• Exploration of anguish in practice: the burden of choosing to show up, to breathe, to continue when no external authority compels you
Idea map:
• Sartre's rejection of predetermined essence connects to practice as emergent systems literacy—meaning arises through engagement, not beforehand
• The lecture's viral distortion mirrors how practice gets reduced to Instagram aesthetics—the method escapes its practitioners' control
• Existential anguish of choice parallels the daily decision to practice—no guru can make that choice for you, no philosophy justifies it in advance
• Sartre's concern about ideas becoming pullquotes reflects MJH's emphasis on practice as method over practice as content—the work resists summary
Source: https://aeon.co/essays/re-reading-sartres-lecture-existentialism-is-a-humanism
Teaching:
• Sartre's insistence that people guide themselves mirrors the Ashtanga principle that the practice is self-directed—students must choose their own relationship to the method
• The post-war hunger for moral reconstruction parallels students seeking practice after personal crisis—both need structure without dogma
• Sartre's discomfort with his public image escaping him applies to how students perform asana versus how they experience it internally
• The paradox of offering guidance while demanding self-guidance is the teacher's dilemma in Mysore—creating conditions for autonomy rather than dependence
Writing seeds:
• Essay on the Mysore room as existential training ground: students must choose their practice daily without external validation or imposed meaning
• Post comparing Sartre's 'existence precedes essence' to embodied practice—the body's intelligence emerges through repetition, not predetermined design
• Piece on the teacher's role as creating conditions for student autonomy, not dispensing answers—paralleling Sartre's paradox of guidance
• Exploration of anguish in practice: the burden of choosing to show up, to breathe, to continue when no external authority compels you
Idea map:
• Sartre's rejection of predetermined essence connects to practice as emergent systems literacy—meaning arises through engagement, not beforehand
• The lecture's viral distortion mirrors how practice gets reduced to Instagram aesthetics—the method escapes its practitioners' control
• Existential anguish of choice parallels the daily decision to practice—no guru can make that choice for you, no philosophy justifies it in advance
• Sartre's concern about ideas becoming pullquotes reflects MJH's emphasis on practice as method over practice as content—the work resists summary
Source: https://aeon.co/essays/re-reading-sartres-lecture-existentialism-is-a-humanism
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