Philosophy for Lunch
You did not find yourself. You are making yourself. And the conditions under which that making is happening are not neutral. That is the core claim of Simone de Beauvoir's philosophy — and it reaches far beyond the question of gender it is most often associated with. It is a claim about what any self is, how it comes to be, and what it means to take responsibility for who you are becoming when the forces shaping you are largely invisible. In this solo episode, Claire takes the full measure of one of the twentieth century's most important and most underread thinkers. She covers what de Beauvoir's famous sentence — one is not born a woman, one becomes one — is actually arguing beneath the slogan; how de Beauvoir takes Sartre's existentialism and makes it philosophically stronger by insisting that freedom is always situated, always conditioned, never the unconstrained abstraction Sartre sometimes implied; and what the concept of bad faith looks like not as a theoretical failing but as a daily temptation — the comfort of letting your circumstances, your relationships, or your role define you so that you do not have to do the harder work of defining yourself. This episode also takes seriously something the popular reception of de Beauvoir often skips: the way her framework complicates moral judgment. If the self is always shaped by conditions the person did not fully choose, then understanding someone's choices requires attending to the conditions that constrained them — without dissolving personal responsibility entirely. Holding both at once is the philosophical work she is asking you to do. It is harder than either alternative, and more honest. The episode connects directly to last week's conversation on love — because if the self is always a project rather than a finished thing, then who you build a life with is not peripheral to the question of who you become. It is one of the most consequential philosophical decisions you will ever make. Claire solo. No prior philosophy required. SHOW NOTES Primary Sources * de Beauvoir, S. (2011). The Second Sex (C. Borde & S. Malovany-Chevallier, Trans.). Knopf. (Original work published 1949) (The complete translation — dense but essential. Even reading Part One and the Introduction will change how you think.) * de Beauvoir, S. (1948). The Ethics of Ambiguity (B. Frechtman, Trans.). Philosophical Library. (Shorter and more accessible than The Second Sex — the clearest statement of her own philosophical position.) * Sartre, J.-P. (2007). Existentialism Is a Humanism (C. Macomber, Trans.). Yale University Press. (Original work published 1946) (The best short entry point into the existentialist framework de Beauvoir is building on and revising.) Biographical & Contextual * Bair, D. (1990). Simone de Beauvoir: A Biography. Summit Books. * Rowley, H. (2005). Tête-à-Tête: Simone de Beauvoir and Jean-Paul Sartre. HarperCollins. Works Referenced in This Episode * Butler, J. (1990). Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity. Routledge. * Gilligan, C. (1982). In a Different Voice: Psychological Theory and Women's Development. Harvard University Press. * Hegel, G. W. F. (1977). Phenomenology of Spirit (A. V. Miller, Trans.). Oxford University Press. (Original work published 1807) New episodes every Sunday. Philosophy for Lunch · Big ideas. Human conversations.
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