What Kind of Relationship Exists Between Existentialism and Consciousness
Freedom, Being, and the Light of Inner Awareness
“Consciousness is the mirror in which existence sees itself — clear, uncertain, and infinite.”
— Ersan Karavelioğlu
Existentialism begins not with metaphysics but with existence itself — the living, breathing reality of being aware.
For Sartre, Heidegger, and Camus, consciousness (la conscience) is not an abstract entity but the space where existence unfolds.
To exist is to be conscious of existing, to realize one’s being in the world through choice, anxiety, and freedom.
In existential thought, consciousness is radically free.
Jean-Paul Sartre defines it as “nothingness” (néant) — not an object, but an opening, an absence that allows possibilities to arise.
Because consciousness is not fixed, the individual is condemned to be free:
“Man is nothing else but what he makes of himself.”
This freedom is both a privilege and a burden, demanding that each act reflects an authentic choice.
Existentialism draws heavily from Edmund Husserl’s phenomenology, which treats consciousness as intentional — always directed toward something.
Heidegger extends this idea: consciousness is not separate from the world but being-in-the-world (Dasein).
Thus, awareness is not passive reflection but active participation in reality’s unfolding.
In existential psychology, angst (existential anxiety) arises from self-awareness — the realization of one’s finitude and freedom.
Consciousness exposes the individual to the absurd: the tension between meaning and meaninglessness.
Yet, through this anxiety, one awakens to authentic existence; despair becomes the doorway to self-knowledge.
Existentialism emphasizes authenticity — living in alignment with one’s own consciousness rather than conforming to societal illusions.
To be authentic means to listen to the “silent voice” within, to face life’s uncertainty without self-deception.
As Kierkegaard wrote:
“The most painful state of being is remembering the future, particularly the one you’ll never have.”
Consciousness is the theatre of that remembrance — the space where potential meets reality.
For Heidegger, consciousness (as Dasein) is defined by temporality — an awareness stretched between past, present, and future.
This temporal structure gives life meaning, because it allows reflection, projection, and the anticipation of death.
Thus, existential consciousness is not static but dynamic, always in movement toward becoming.
Maurice Merleau-Ponty bridges phenomenology and existentialism by emphasizing embodied consciousness.
For him, awareness is not an abstract mind but a lived, sensory experience:
“The body is our general medium for having a world.”
Existence, therefore, is not only thought but felt — consciousness vibrates through flesh, breath, and perception.
Existentialism often arises from the absence of divine order — “God is dead,” Nietzsche declared.
Without preordained meaning, consciousness becomes the source of value.
The individual creates essence through choice, transforming awareness into moral and creative responsibility.
Sartre’s “Look of the Other” (le regard d’autrui) reveals that consciousness is both self-affirming and self-alienating.
When we perceive ourselves through another’s gaze, our freedom is threatened — we become an object.
Existential growth, therefore, requires reclaiming self-awareness not through approval but through inner authenticity.
Ultimately, existentialism views consciousness as the artist of existence.
Each moment of awareness reshapes reality; every choice becomes a brushstroke on the canvas of being.
In this sense, consciousness is not merely self-reflection — it is creation, transcendence, and responsibility combined.
“To be conscious is to create meaning in the silence of the universe.”
— Ersan Karavelioğlu
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