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

1,602,527 views ・ 2020-03-10

TED-Ed


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At the age of 21, Simone de Beauvoir became the youngest person
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to take the philosophy exams at France’s most esteemed university.
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She passed with flying colors.
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But as soon as she mastered the rules of philosophy,
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she wanted to break them.
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She’d been schooled on Plato’s Theory of Forms,
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which dismissed the physical world as a flawed reflection
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of higher truths and unchanging ideals.
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But for de Beauvoir, earthly life was enthralling, sensual,
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and anything but static.
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Her desire to explore the physical world to its fullest would shape her life,
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and eventually, inspire a radical new philosophy.
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Endlessly debating with her romantic and intellectual partner Jean Paul Sartre,
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de Beauvoir explored free will, desire, rights and responsibilities,
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and the value of personal experience.
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In the years following WWII,
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these ideas would converge into the school of thought
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most closely associated with their work: existentialism.
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Where Judeo-Christian traditions taught that
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humans are born with preordained purpose,
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de Beauvoir and Sartre proposed a revolutionary alternative.
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They argued that humans are born free,
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and thrown into existence without a divine plan.
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As de Beauvoir acknowledged, this freedom is both a blessing and a burden.
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In "The Ethics of Ambiguity" she argued that our greatest ethical imperative
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is to create our own life’s meaning,
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while protecting the freedom of others to do the same.
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As de Beauvoir wrote,
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“A freedom which is interested only in denying freedom must be denied.”
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This philosophy challenged its students to navigate the ambiguities and conflicts
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our desires produce, both internally and externally.
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And as de Beauvoir sought to find her own purpose,
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she began to question:
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if everyone deserves to freely pursue meaning,
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why was she restricted by society’s ideals of womanhood?
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Despite her prolific writing, teaching and activism,
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de Beauvoir struggled to be taken seriously by her male peers.
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She’d rejected her Catholic upbringing and marital expectations
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to study at university, and write memoirs, fiction and philosophy.
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But the risks she was taking by embracing this lifestyle
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were lost on many of her male counterparts,
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who took these freedoms for granted.
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They had no intellectual interest in de Beauvoir’s work,
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which explored women’s inner lives,
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as well the author’s open relationship and bisexuality.
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To convey the importance of her perspective,
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de Beauvoir embarked on her most challenging book yet.
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Just as she’d created the foundations of existentialism,
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she’d now redefine the limits of gender.
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Published in 1949, "The Second Sex" argues that, like our life’s meaning,
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gender is not predestined.
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As de Beauvoir famously wrote,
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“one is not born, but rather becomes, woman.”
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And to “become” a woman, she argued, was to become the Other.
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De Beauvoir defined Othering as the process of labeling women
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as less than the men who’d historically defined, and been defined as,
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the ideal human subjects.
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As the Other, she argued that women were considered second to men,
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and therefore systematically restricted from pursuing freedom.
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"The Second Sex" became an essential feminist treatise,
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offering a detailed history of women’s oppression
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and a wealth of anecdotal testimony.
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"The Second Sex"’s combination of personal experience
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and philosophical intervention
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provided a new language to discuss feminist theory.
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Today, those conversations are still informed by de Beauvoir’s insistence
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that in the pursuit of equality,
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“there is no divorce between philosophy and life.”
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Of course, like any foundational work,
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the ideas in "The Second Sex" have been expanded upon since its publication.
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Many modern thinkers have explored additional ways people are Othered
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that de Beauvoir doesn’t acknowledge.
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These include racial and economic identities,
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as well as the broader spectrum of gender and sexual identities we understand today.
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De Beauvoir’s legacy is further complicated
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by accusations of sexual misconduct by two of her university students.
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In the face of these accusations,
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she had her teaching license revoked for abusing her position.
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In this aspect and others, de Beauvoir’s life remains controversial—
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and her work represents a contentious moment in the emergence of early feminism.
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She participated in those conversations for the rest of her life;
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writing fiction, philosophy, and memoirs until her death in 1986.
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Today, her work offers a philosophical language
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to be reimagined, revisited and rebelled against—
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a response this revolutionary thinker might have welcomed.
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