When Jean-Paul Sartre wrote “man is condemned to be free” in Existentialism is a Humanism in 1946, he argued that at every instance we invent ourselves by dint of the choices we make. Every action we take contributes to our shaping. We are not defined by what we think, dream, or hope. We are only defined by what we do. Existentialism is a doctrine of action. “There is no reality except in action,” he writes.
In Sartre’s time, however, people were not condemned to the internet, that black hole of infinite choices. Back in 1946, the average person didn’t get seduced by the life of the travel blogger on social media, the startup founder, family influencer, chateau owner, wine sommelier, personal trainer, and so forth. Instead, back in Sartre’s time,…
