The meaning of life according to Simone de Beauvoir - Iseult Gillespie

1,673,282 views ・ 2020-03-10

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:06
At the age of 21, Simone de Beauvoir became the youngest person
0
6688
3880
00:10
to take the philosophy exams at France’s most esteemed university.
1
10568
4470
00:15
She passed with flying colors.
2
15038
2010
00:17
But as soon as she mastered the rules of philosophy,
3
17048
2532
00:19
she wanted to break them.
4
19580
1770
00:21
She’d been schooled on Plato’s Theory of Forms,
5
21350
3030
00:24
which dismissed the physical world as a flawed reflection
6
24380
2900
00:27
of higher truths and unchanging ideals.
7
27280
2940
00:30
But for de Beauvoir, earthly life was enthralling, sensual,
8
30220
3850
00:34
and anything but static.
9
34070
1950
00:36
Her desire to explore the physical world to its fullest would shape her life,
10
36020
4340
00:40
and eventually, inspire a radical new philosophy.
11
40360
4296
00:44
Endlessly debating with her romantic and intellectual partner Jean Paul Sartre,
12
44656
4389
00:49
de Beauvoir explored free will, desire, rights and responsibilities,
13
49045
4230
00:53
and the value of personal experience.
14
53275
2830
00:56
In the years following WWII,
15
56105
2110
00:58
these ideas would converge into the school of thought
16
58215
2610
01:00
most closely associated with their work: existentialism.
17
60825
4640
01:05
Where Judeo-Christian traditions taught that
18
65465
2161
01:07
humans are born with preordained purpose,
19
67626
2559
01:10
de Beauvoir and Sartre proposed a revolutionary alternative.
20
70185
3920
01:14
They argued that humans are born free,
21
74105
2210
01:16
and thrown into existence without a divine plan.
22
76315
3230
01:19
As de Beauvoir acknowledged, this freedom is both a blessing and a burden.
23
79545
4790
01:24
In "The Ethics of Ambiguity" she argued that our greatest ethical imperative
24
84335
4657
01:28
is to create our own life’s meaning,
25
88992
2420
01:31
while protecting the freedom of others to do the same.
26
91412
3034
01:34
As de Beauvoir wrote,
27
94446
1690
01:36
“A freedom which is interested only in denying freedom must be denied.”
28
96136
5388
01:41
This philosophy challenged its students to navigate the ambiguities and conflicts
29
101524
4230
01:45
our desires produce, both internally and externally.
30
105754
3800
01:49
And as de Beauvoir sought to find her own purpose,
31
109554
2932
01:52
she began to question:
32
112486
1530
01:54
if everyone deserves to freely pursue meaning,
33
114016
2980
01:56
why was she restricted by society’s ideals of womanhood?
34
116996
4590
02:01
Despite her prolific writing, teaching and activism,
35
121586
3251
02:04
de Beauvoir struggled to be taken seriously by her male peers.
36
124837
3569
02:08
She’d rejected her Catholic upbringing and marital expectations
37
128406
3440
02:11
to study at university, and write memoirs, fiction and philosophy.
38
131846
4314
02:16
But the risks she was taking by embracing this lifestyle
39
136160
2720
02:18
were lost on many of her male counterparts,
40
138880
2420
02:21
who took these freedoms for granted.
41
141300
2200
02:23
They had no intellectual interest in de Beauvoir’s work,
42
143500
3070
02:26
which explored women’s inner lives,
43
146570
2210
02:28
as well the author’s open relationship and bisexuality.
44
148780
4020
02:32
To convey the importance of her perspective,
45
152800
2270
02:35
de Beauvoir embarked on her most challenging book yet.
46
155070
3530
02:38
Just as she’d created the foundations of existentialism,
47
158600
3310
02:41
she’d now redefine the limits of gender.
48
161910
3460
02:45
Published in 1949, "The Second Sex" argues that, like our life’s meaning,
49
165370
5304
02:50
gender is not predestined.
50
170674
2020
02:52
As de Beauvoir famously wrote,
51
172694
2092
02:54
“one is not born, but rather becomes, woman.”
52
174786
3620
02:58
And to “become” a woman, she argued, was to become the Other.
53
178406
4260
03:02
De Beauvoir defined Othering as the process of labeling women
54
182666
3723
03:06
as less than the men who’d historically defined, and been defined as,
55
186389
4137
03:10
the ideal human subjects.
56
190526
2485
03:13
As the Other, she argued that women were considered second to men,
57
193011
4165
03:17
and therefore systematically restricted from pursuing freedom.
58
197176
4370
03:21
"The Second Sex" became an essential feminist treatise,
59
201546
3398
03:24
offering a detailed history of women’s oppression
60
204944
2612
03:27
and a wealth of anecdotal testimony.
61
207556
2442
03:29
"The Second Sex"’s combination of personal experience
62
209998
3070
03:33
and philosophical intervention
63
213068
1820
03:34
provided a new language to discuss feminist theory.
64
214888
3480
03:38
Today, those conversations are still informed by de Beauvoir’s insistence
65
218368
4552
03:42
that in the pursuit of equality,
66
222920
1860
03:44
“there is no divorce between philosophy and life.”
67
224780
3928
03:48
Of course, like any foundational work,
68
228708
2810
03:51
the ideas in "The Second Sex" have been expanded upon since its publication.
69
231518
3980
03:55
Many modern thinkers have explored additional ways people are Othered
70
235498
3390
03:58
that de Beauvoir doesn’t acknowledge.
71
238888
2090
04:00
These include racial and economic identities,
72
240978
2790
04:03
as well as the broader spectrum of gender and sexual identities we understand today.
73
243768
5290
04:09
De Beauvoir’s legacy is further complicated
74
249058
2270
04:11
by accusations of sexual misconduct by two of her university students.
75
251328
4674
04:16
In the face of these accusations,
76
256002
1870
04:17
she had her teaching license revoked for abusing her position.
77
257872
4100
04:21
In this aspect and others, de Beauvoir’s life remains controversial—
78
261972
4320
04:26
and her work represents a contentious moment in the emergence of early feminism.
79
266292
5050
04:31
She participated in those conversations for the rest of her life;
80
271342
3520
04:34
writing fiction, philosophy, and memoirs until her death in 1986.
81
274862
4926
04:39
Today, her work offers a philosophical language
82
279788
2830
04:42
to be reimagined, revisited and rebelled against—
83
282618
3564
04:46
a response this revolutionary thinker might have welcomed.
84
286182
3651
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7