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CONCEPT

Facticity and Transcendence

The two irreducible dimensions of human existence — the given (body, history, circumstance) and the projecting (consciousness going beyond the given toward possibilities that do not yet exist).
Human existence in Sartre's account is not pure freedom but the perpetual tension between two dimensions. Facticity is everything given rather than chosen — the body one inhabits, the historical moment, economic conditions of childhood, first language, the specific configuration of abilities and limitations that constitute one's starting position. Facticity is real; it is not an illusion to be overcome by force of will. Transcendence is the capacity of consciousness to go beyond the given, to project toward possibilities that do not yet exist, to refuse to accept the factical situation as final. Facticity without transcendence would be the existence of a thing. Transcendence without facticity would be the existence of a god. Human beings are neither — they are situated freedoms, exercising transcendence within, against, and through the specific constraints of their given situation.
Facticity and Transcendence
Facticity and Transcendence

In The You On AI Encyclopedia

The tension between facticity and transcendence produces two corresponding forms of bad faith. The first reduces transcendence to facticity — 'I am a product of my environment,' 'the system determined what I could become.' This denies freedom by absolutizing constraint. The second reduces facticity to transcendence — 'anyone can succeed if they work hard enough,' 'you can be anything you want to be.' This denies constraint by absolutizing freedom. Both conceal the actual structure of human existence, which is neither unlimited freedom nor total determination but the working of freedom within given conditions.

The distinction cuts against both caricatures of Sartrean freedom. Sartre did not argue that humans could be anything they wanted unconstrained by circumstance. He argued that no circumstance, however severe, eliminates the consciousness that must choose how to respond to it. The developer in Lagos that Segal describes faces a different factical situation than the developer in San Francisco — limited infrastructure, limited capital, limited institutional support. These are real. What does not differ is the freedom that operates within those constraints.

Existence Precedes Essence
Existence Precedes Essence

The amplifier asymmetry that the AI moment produces is visible only through this distinction. AI widens transcendence without proportionally widening facticity. The builder can now imagine and build what she previously could only imagine. Her range of possibility has expanded. What has not expanded is her facticity — her biases, her blind spots, her unexamined assumptions, her body's finitude, her historical position. The asymmetric expansion is the source of both the exhilaration and the danger: a structure rising higher on the same foundation, more impressive and more precarious at the same time.

Origin

Developed throughout Being and Nothingness (1943), especially in the discussions of the body, the past, and the situation. Sartre drew on Heidegger's analysis of thrownness (Geworfenheit) but recast it as one pole of a two-dimensional structure rather than a unitary existential condition.

Key Ideas

Facticity as given condition. Body, history, language, economic situation — the unchosen conditions within which freedom operates.

Transcendence as projection. The capacity to go beyond the given toward unrealized possibilities — the structure that makes consciousness more than a thing.

The tension between facticity and transcendence produces two corresponding forms of bad faith

Tension, not synthesis. The two dimensions do not resolve into a higher unity; human existence is the permanent working of one within the other.

Bad faith as reduction. Collapsing either dimension into the other — absolutizing constraint or absolutizing freedom — is the characteristic form of self-deception.

Further Reading

  1. Jean-Paul Sartre, Being and Nothingness (Washington Square Press, 1956)
  2. Simone de Beauvoir, The Ethics of Ambiguity (Citadel, 1948)
  3. Simone de Beauvoir, The Second Sex (Vintage, 2011)
  4. Jonathan Webber, Rethinking Existentialism (Oxford, 2018)
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