O CONCEITO DE MÁ-FÉ EM SARTRE EM RELAÇÃO AO FILME PARASITA: REFLEXÕES SOBRE AS DESIGUALDADES SOCIAIS E A POBREZA.

Published: 1 March 2024| Version 1 | DOI: 10.17632/xtv7bwffpb.1
Contributor:
RODRIGO DE SIQUEIRA VIANNA

Description

This work seeks a reflection on human ethical responsibility in relation to social inequality. To do this, we will make correlations between the film Parasite and the concept of bad faith by the French philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre, great theorist of existentialism and author of several plays and novels. As a method, we will start by summarizing the film “parasite” by South Korean director Bong Joon-Ho, the film won the Oscar for best film in 2020. To briefly outline the concept of bad faith, we will begin by explaining the intentionality in Sartre's thought and his opposition to Edmund Husserl, later We will analyze bad faith and lies, and then compare conscience and bad faith. We will use the scientific article by psychologist and professor Alexandre Victor Romero, entitled “Introductory Aspects of Conscience and bad faith in the works of Jean-Paul Sartre”. We will also work with the article by the doctor in philosophy, João Flávio de Almeida, entitled “Sartre and bad faith in the Origin of Consciousness”. We will use the work “being and nothing” by Sartre to guide the two articles. Finally, we will make a philosophical analysis to answer whether in the film Parasite, social inequality is the result of responsibility ethics of each of the characters. Some of the arguments for such a response are the freedom, bad faith and conscience of the characters in the film.

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Artigo de conclusão do projeto de iniciação científica do Centro Universitário Internacional (UNINTER). Submissão em: 30/08/2022 Aceito em: 06/09/2022

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UNINTER Educacional SA

Categories

Philosophy

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