CONCEPT
Sartrean Authenticity
Not a state one achieves but an ongoing, never-completed practice of confronting one's own freedom and refusing to let the flight into bad faith stand unchallenged.
Authenticity in Sartre's philosophy is not a state one reaches and then possesses. It is not a personality trait, a lifestyle choice, or the product of a particular set of values. It is a practice — ongoing, never-completed, perpetually failing. The authentic person is not the person who has eliminated
bad faith; she is the person who catches herself in
bad faith and refuses to let the evasion stand. This understanding lowers the bar from impossible to demanding. Sartre did not believe any human being could live in permanent authenticity. The structures of bad faith are woven into the fabric of
consciousness itself. Authenticity is not the absence of self-deception but the willingness to struggle against it, knowing the struggle will never produce final victory. The practice is particularly urgent in the AI age, where the opportunities for self-deception have multiplied faster than the capacity to detect them.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The practice has specific form. Segal's account of the 3 a.m. sessions with