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The Ethics Of Ambiguity Paperback – June 1, 2000
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- Print length162 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherCitadel
- Publication dateJune 1, 2000
- Dimensions5.39 x 0.45 x 8.02 inches
- ISBN-10080650160X
- ISBN-13978-0806501604
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Product details
- Publisher : Citadel (June 1, 2000)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 162 pages
- ISBN-10 : 080650160X
- ISBN-13 : 978-0806501604
- Item Weight : 4.8 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.39 x 0.45 x 8.02 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #656,983 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #181 in French Literary Criticism (Books)
- #2,166 in Philosophy of Ethics & Morality
- #2,219 in Essays (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Simone Lucie Ernestine Marie Bertrand de Beauvoir (/boʊvˈwɑːr/; French: [simɔn də bovwaʁ]; 9 January 1908 – 14 April 1986) was a French writer, intellectual, existentialist philosopher, political activist, feminist and social theorist. Though she did not consider herself a philosopher, she had a significant influence on both feminist existentialism and feminist theory.
De Beauvoir wrote novels, essays, biographies, autobiography and monographs on philosophy, politics and social issues. She is known for her 1949 treatise The Second Sex, a detailed analysis of women's oppression and a foundational tract of contemporary feminism; and for her novels, including She Came to Stay and The Mandarins. She is also known for her open relationship with French philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre.
Bio from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Photo by unknown. uploader Claudio Elias [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons.
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Customers find the book profound, useful, and brilliant. They say it teaches them much about existentialism and is packed with meaning.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book profound, useful, and brilliant. They also describe it as a hard read but worth it. Readers mention the book is beautifully written and authoritative.
"...in understanding this field of philosophy, Beauvoir’s short but authoritative text should be a must in the reading list." Read more
"...about the quality of the translation other than that everything read very clearly in English, unlike some translations...." Read more
"This book is deep. Really deep. If all of our actions impact others, how can we act as if we're truly free?..." Read more
"This is a useful text for those who want to learn more about ethics and the work of solving social problems...." Read more
Customers find the book enlightening, insightful, and brilliant. They say the essays are compelling, relevant, and packed with meaning. Readers also describe the author as a revolutionary thinker and an astute analysis of the human condition.
"...the absurdity of existence from a new direction, and gives the reader a novel perspective on the same principles...." Read more
"Very solid philosophical argument by our dear de Beauvoir...." Read more
"...The Ethics of Ambiguity" is the most concise overview of Existentialist ethics I have read...." Read more
"...Worth the read. Short, but dense. Meaningful." Read more
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Every high schooler - or college student - should read this
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“The continuous work of our life,” says Montaigne, “is to build death.” “Man knows and thinks this tragic ambivalence which the animal and the plant merely undergo,” Beauvoir argues, as she introduces ambiguity of human condition. The ambiguity is similar to Camus’ absurd – a realization that there is no universal meaning to human existence or action. Beauvoir goes on to investigate the source for humans’ belief in the universal nature of their actions. “Man’s unhappiness, says Descartes, is due to his having first been a child,” she quotes and explains how we as humans feel happily irresponsible as children, feel protected against the risk of existence but how the same happy ignorance makes us a prisoners of error in our adulthood. In other words, she argues that sooner or later every man realizes that the childhood he grew up with was a world created for him by his parents or adults and that in reality he is not bound to any universality of rules or ethics. He is free, free to will his own world, chart his own rules, yet he can only do that on the basis of what he has been – a child. “The child does not contain the man he will become, yet it is always on the basis of what he has been that a man decides upon what he wants to be,” she says. This freedom although should be liberating, ends up becoming a disturbing realization, one that lifts the veil of finite ceiling over man’s head and leaves him abandoned in the infinite world. In this abandoned anxiety, despite realizing his freedom, man tends to gravitate towards enslaving himself in the childhood condition instead of living freely. Beauvoir classifies this man into a hierarchy in order to build an argument to explain the true nature of existentialist freedom.
The lowest man in the hierarchy is called a sub-man - a blind uncontrolled force that anyone can get control of. “The sub-man makes his way across a world deprived of meaning towards a death which merely confirms his long negation of himself,” she says. The attitude of sub-man passes over to the next class in hierarchy, what she calls the serious-man. While sub-man lives in a perpetual anxiety, the serious-man renounces his freedom to a cause. The serious man claim the absolute and ceaseless denies his freedom, “like the mythomaniac who while reading a love-letter pretends to forget that he has sent it to himself. He is no longer a man but a father, a boss, a member of a Christian Church or the Communist party. The serious man wills himself to be the God but he is not one and he knows it.” The attitude of serious-man transcends into the next category - the nihilist. The nihilist, unlike serious-man, under the burden of his freedom decides to be nothing, denies the world, himself and focuses on annihilation of the world. A nihilist who realizes the universal and absolute end which freedom is, further rises up in the hierarchy to become an adventurer. Adventures, she describes is an attitude closest to a genuinely moral attitude – an indifferent and disinterested encounter with the world that defines the true existentialist freedom. The adventures is perhaps Sisyphus – the man who is ceaseless rolling a stone to the top of the mountain, not in revolt but in lucid indifference.
The same adventures though, she says also carries the seed of destruction and favorable circumstances are enough to transform an adventures into a dictator. However, she argues that if an adventurer turns into a dictator, he fails to assert his freedom and becomes a slave of tyranny, thereby inadvertently denies his own freedom. “Passion is converted into genuine freedom only if one destines his existence to other existences through the being – whether thing or man – at which he aims, without hoping to entrap it in the destiny of the in-itself,” she says and goes on arguing with elaborate detail on why the only way existentialism can exist, the only way a freedom can be asserted is by asserting it not for one but for all mankind. “A freedom which is occupied in denying freedom is itself so outrageous that the outrageousness of the violence which one practices against it is almost canceled out.” From explaining the ambiguity of existence, to its reason and reaction, Beauvoir ends with the argument that all this makes existentialism a philosophy that is not individualistic but a philosophy for the collective good, in other words, the ethics of ambiguity – the argument also at the center of Sartre’s ‘Existentialism is a Humanism.’
All in all, the book touches on the core principles of existentialism, tackles the absurdity of existence from a new direction, and gives the reader a novel perspective on the same principles. For anyone interested in understanding this field of philosophy, Beauvoir’s short but authoritative text should be a must in the reading list.
"The Ethics of Ambiguity" is the most concise overview of Existentialist ethics I have read. In "Being and Nothingness" Sartre eschewed an ethical system in favor of focusing almost exclusively on ontological relationships. Here, Beauvoir takes "Being and Nothingness" and extends it into an ethical system.
There are two major parts to "Ethics of Ambiguity". The first part focuses on different degrees of personal freedom. Degrees of understanding range from: the sub-man, serious man, nihilist, adventurer, passionate man, and, finally, the independent man. The independent man understands his own freedom. He also understands the necessity of freedom for other men for him to be free.
The second part of the book is a description of how to use personal freedom. Man must live for a concrete objective. This objective is constantly transcending and can never be captured. The object of transcendence is determined by individual freedom within the context of social freedom.
Beauvoir's prescriptions to political change remain both critical and revolutionary. She constantly stresses the need to evaluate the situation and not act rash. The individual must not submit to dogma. However, a choice must be made. Many times the choice will not be ideal and blood must be shed. Beauvoir's Existentialism does not feign from making tough choices.
Top reviews from other countries
Overall this is an empowering read/philosophy: You are free! It's your responsibility to create the meaning of your life. Beware of pursuits that dehumanize or oppress humanity or individual freedoms: "a freedom which is interested only in denying freedom must be denied"
A good book if you're lost in the absurd. She's goes through several different ways of being lost: the 'sub-man', the 'serious man', the 'passionate man', etc.
Important book which does not get the credit it deserves.





