Fusing sociology, psychoanalysis and philosophy, Professor Renata Salecl shows that individual choice is rarely based on a simple rational decision with a predictable outcome.
Bio
Renata Salecl
Renata Salecl is Centennial Professor at the department of law at the London School of Economics.
She is also Senior Researcher at the Institute of Criminology at the Faculty of Law in Ljubljana, Slovenia and also often teaches at Visiting Professor at Cardozo School of Law in New York.
She has been Fellow at Wissenschafts Kolleg in Berlin (1997/8), Visiting Professor of Law at Humbolt University in Berlin, Visiting Humanities Professor at George Washington University in Washington, DC, Visiting Professor at Duke University in Durham, NC and Fellow at Remarque Institute at NYU.
Philosophical movement oriented toward two major themes, the analysis of human existence and the centrality of human choice. Existentialism's chief theoretical energies are thus devoted to questions about ontology and decision. It traces its roots to the writings of Søren Kierkegaard and Friedrich Nietzsche. As a philosophy of human existence, existentialism found its best 20th-century exponent in Karl Jaspers; as a philosophy of human decision, its foremost representative was Jean-Paul Sartre. Sartre finds the essence of human existence in freedomin the duty of self-determination and the freedom of choiceand therefore spends much time describing the human tendency toward bad faith, reflected in humanity's perverse attempts to deny its own responsibility and flee from the truth of its inescapable freedom.
Choice = freedom. No choice = no freedom. People from former unfree societies are puzzled with what to do with their freedom and not with their choice. Freedom could seem to be painfull and meaningless but it is an only choice for a free man.