Introduction: Analytic vs. Continental from an Imaginative and Psychoanalytic Perspective Talia Morag
1. Logical, Phenomenological, and Metalogical Negation: Sartre with Frege (and Badiou) Paul M. Livingston
2. Sartre’s Activity-Based Model of Experience Stephen White
3. Self-Consciousness and Uses of "I": Sartre and Anscombe Valérie Aucouturier
4. Peculiar Access: Sartre, Self-Knowledge, and the Question of the Irreducibility of the First-Person Perspective Pierre-Jean Renaudie and Jack Reynolds
5. Some Problems of Other Minds Katherine J. Morris
6. Scepticism as Nihilism: Sartre’s Nausea Reads Cavell David Macarthur
7. The Secret Passion: Sartre, Huston, and the Freud Screenplay Robert Sinnerbrink
8. Sartre’s Bad Faith, the Freudian Unconscious, and a Case of #METOO Talia Morag
9. Anguish and Anxiety Anthony Hatzimoysis
10. Sartre, James, and the Transformative Power of Emotion Demian Whiting
11. Sartre and Political Imagining Genevieve Lloyd
12. Sartre's Solution to the Antinomy of Social Reality in the Critique of Dialectical Reason Sebastian Gardner
Biography
Talia Morag (PhD, Sydney University) is a Senior Lecturer in philosophy at Australian Catholic University. She works on philosophical psychology, ethics, liberal naturalism, psychoanalysis, emotion, and social psychology. She is the author of Emotion, Imagination, and the Limits of Reason (Routledge, 2016), and received the Annette Baier Prize (2020).
“Sartre and Analytic Philosophy collects together essays that will be of interest both to Sartre scholars and to scholars working on self-consciousness, intersubjectivity, emotion, imagination, and related topics in the philosophy of mind.”
Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews






