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  1. Jul 19, 2023 · Examples of existentialism include believing in individual choice, believing you can choose your own meaning of life, questioning the existence of god, and falling into despair due to overwhelm at having to define your own life.

  2. Apr 27, 2023 · Existentialism is a philosophical movement that asks fundamental questions about morality and the meaning of life, like “how should I live?” and “what is it all for?” Founded in the nineteenth century, existentialism took shape mainly in the first half of the twentieth century.

  3. May 17, 2023 · Existentialism has been applied to many different fields, including psychology, literature, politics, and education. In psychology, existentialists believe that understanding an individual's life story is essential to providing effective therapy. In literature, existentialists emphasize themes such as alienation and despair.

  4. I. Definition. Existentialism is a European philosophy that started in the mid-1800s and hit its stride in the years around World War II. It has two parts: Life has no inherent meaning. Nothing we do matters in an absolute sense. There is no God, no objective morality, and no cosmic “purpose” in life. That’s OK.

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  6. We’ll begin by reviewing the origins of Existentialism in the 19th century and how in the post-war 20th century it emerged as a reaction to the idealized view of academic philosophy which (according to existentialists) tended to be based on rational thought disconnected from the everyday human experience.

  7. Jan 6, 2023 · In viewing the self not as a substance or thing but as a self-interpreting, meaning-giving activity that is always already bound up in the world, existentialism has also informed key developments in narrative and hermeneutic philosophy.

  8. Placing Existential Psychology in Context: Height Psychology Goes Deeper Than Depth Psychology; The roots of existentialism as a philosophy began with the Danish philosopher Søren Kierkegaard (1813-1855). Kierkegaard was intensely interested in man’s relationship with God, and its ultimate impossibility.