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On Existentialism

Philosophical Studies, 1983
Abstract Existentialism is the claim that quidditative properties and singular propositions are ontologically dependent upon the individuals they involve. In this essay, I consider two arguments for existentialism and find them both unconvincing.
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Existentialism and Higher Education: A Renewed Intersection in Well-Being

Journal of humanistic psychology, 2020
Enhanced well-being for students, staff, and faculty has become a focal point on many campuses across North America. Well-being promotion tends to focus on the “wellness” half of well-being, practices related to individual health, stress-management ...
Glen L. Sherman
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Existential universals. Biosemiosis and existential semiosis

Chinese Semiotic Studies, 2017
Abstract This paper is divided into five parts. The introduction presents some implications of the relational nature of human beings as well as other living beings, and establishes a connection between biosemiotics and existentialist thinking.
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Existentialism as Philosophy of the Possible

, 2020
In this paper Abbagnano outlines his conception of “positive existentialism” as a philosophy of freedom and of responsible choice, in opposition to any form of dogmatism.
N. Abbagnano, Daniele Fulvi
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Epistemic Existentialism

Episteme, 2019
Subjectivist permissivism is a prima facie attractive view. That is, it's plausible to think that what's rational for people to believe on the basis of their evidence can vary if they have different frameworks or sets of epistemic standards.
L. Callahan
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‘My Quest for Recognition’: Existentialism in Tsitsi Dangarembga’s The Book of Not

, 2020
Read together, Tsitsi Dangarembga’s trilogy provides an extended meditation on how colonial and postcolonial worlds affect the existential life of the colonized subject.
L. Saint
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There are existential constructions and existential constructions: Presumption-invoking existentials in English

Folia Linguistica, 2013
The article investigates an unusual and poorly studied class of existential-like expressions in English, exemplified in the title. It is contended that these expressions represent a distinct grammatical sign or construction, with a distinct semantic meaning of its own that is not derivable from the meaning of the plain existential.
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Existential Regret: A Crossroads of Existential Anxiety and Existential Guilt

Journal of Humanistic Psychology, 2004
This article examines the experience of existential regret, defined as a profound desire to go back and change a past experience in which one has failed to choose consciously or has made a choice that did not follow one’s beliefs, values, or growth needs. The person experiences a combination of existential anxiety and existential guilt.
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[Our] age of anxiety: existentialism and the current state of international relations

Journal of International Relations and Development, 2021
Bahar Rumelili
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