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Authenticity (philosophy)

Authenticity is a concept of personality in the fields of psychology, existential psychotherapy, existentialist philosophy, and aesthetics. In existentialism, authenticity is the degree to which a person's actions are congruent with their values and desires, despite external pressures to social conformity. The conscious self comes to terms with the condition of Geworfenheit, of having been thrown into an absurd world (without values and meaning) not of their own making, thereby encountering external forces and influences different from and other than the Self.[2] A person’s lack of authenticity is considered bad faith in dealing with other people and with one's self; thus, authenticity is in the instruction of the Oracle of Delphi: “Know thyself.”[3] Concerning authenticity in art, the philosophers Jean Paul Sartre and Theodor Adorno held opposing views and opinions about jazz, a genre of American music; Sartre said that jazz is authentic and Adorno said that jazz is inauthentic. Many musical subcultures require artistic authenticity, lest the community consider an artist to be a poseur for lacking authenticity (creative, musical, or personal);[4] artistic authenticity is integral to many genres of music, including but not limited to genres of rock (such as punk rock and heavy metal), club music (such as house and techno), and hip-hop.[5]

Artistic authenticity: The saxophonist Johnny Hodges at work, playing jazz. The philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre said that jazz music represents artistic freedom and personal authenticity.[1][better source needed]

In the 18th century, Romantic philosophers recommended intuition, emotion, and a connection to Nature as the necessary counterbalances to the intellectualism of the Age of Enlightenment.[6][clarification needed] In the 20th century, Anglo–American preoccupations with authenticity centered on the writings of existentialist philosophers whose native tongue is not English; therefore, the faithful, true, and accurate translation of the term existentialism was much debated, to which end the philosopher Walter Kaufmann assembled a canon of existentialist philosophers. Kaufmann's canon includes the Dane Søren Kierkegaard (1813–1855), the German Martin Heidegger (1889–1976), and the Frenchman Jean-Paul Sartre (1905–1980). For these existentialists, the conscious Self comes to terms with existence (being and living) in an absurd, materialist world featuring external forces, e.g. Geworfenheit (Thrown-ness), and intellectual influences different from and other than the Self.

Personal authenticity is exhibited in how a person acts and changes in response to the external world's influences upon the Self. Among artists, authenticity in art describes a work of art faithful to the artist's values.[7] In the field of psychology, authenticity identifies a person living life in accordance with their true Self and personal values rather than according to the external demands of society, such as social conventions, kinship, and duty.[8]

To identify, describe, and define authenticity, existential philosophers like Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, and Martin Heidegger investigated the existential and ontological significance of the social constructs that compose the norms of society. For a journalist, not blindly accepting social norms contributes to producing intellectually authentic reportage, achieved by the reporter choosing to be true to their professional ethics and personal values. Yet, in the praxis of journalism, the reporter’s authenticity (professional and personal) is continually contradicted by the business requirements of corporate publishing.[9]

Existential perspectives edit

Søren Kierkegaard edit

According to Kierkegaard, personal authenticity depends upon a person finding an authentic faith and, in so doing, being true to themselves.[clarification needed] Moral compromises inherent to the ideologies of bourgeois society and Christianity challenge the personal integrity of a person who seeks to live an authentic life as determined by the self.[10] A mass-culture society[definition needed] diminishes the significance of personal individuality, by way of social “levelling” through news media that provide people with beliefs and opinions constructed by someone other than themselves. A person can attain authentic faith by facing reality and choosing to live according to the facts of the material world,[dubious ] or can deny authentic faith by passively accepting religious faith.[10] Kierkegaard’s philosophy shows that personal authenticity is a personal choice based upon the experience of the real world;[10] in Practice in Christianity (1850), Kierkegaard wrote:

Therefore, it is a risk to preach, for as I go up into that holy place — whether the church is packed or as good as empty, whether I, myself, am aware of it or not, I have one listener more than can be seen, an invisible listener, God in heaven, whom I certainly cannot see, but who truly can see me.... Truly, it is a risk to preach! Most people, no doubt, have the idea that stepping out on the stage as an actor to venture into the danger of having all eyes focused on one requires courage. Yet, in one sense, this danger, like everything on the stage, is an illusion because the actor, of course, is personally outside it all; his task is precisely to deceive, to dissemble, to represent someone else, and to reproduce, accurately, someone else’s words. On the other hand, the proclaimer of Christian truth steps forward into a place where, even if the eyes of all are not focused on him, the eye of an omniscient one is. His task is: to be himself, and in a setting, God’s house, which, all eyes and ears, requires only one thing of him — that he should be himself, be true. That he should be accurate, that is, that he, himself, should be what he proclaims [to be], or at least strive to be that, or at least be honest enough to confess, about himself, that he is not that.... How risky it is to be the I who preaches, the one speaking, an I who, by preaching and as he preaches, commits himself unconditionally, displays his life so that, if possible, one could look directly into his soul — to be this I, that is risky!

— Søren Kierkegaard, Practice in Christianity (1850) pp. 234–235

Friedrich Nietzsche edit

Personal authenticity can be achieved—without religion, which requires accepting pre-determined virtues (eternal valuations) as unquestionably true. In living authentically, a person elevates himself/herself above the mass culture to transcend the limits of conventional morality, thereby personally determining what is and what is not good and bad, without the pre-determined virtues of conformity “on account of which we hold our grandfathers in esteem”. An authentic life is achieved by avoiding the “herding animal morality”.[11] To “stand alone [is to be] strong and original enough to initiate opposite estimates of value, to transvaluate and invert ‘eternal valuations’”.[11] Common to the existential perspectives of Kierkegaard and Nietzsche are “the responsibilities they place on the individual to take an active part in the shaping of one’s beliefs, and then to be willing to act on that belief”.[10]

Jean-Paul Sartre edit

It is difficult to describe authenticity intelligibly. One possibility is to describe instead the negative space surrounding the condition of being inauthentic by giving examples.[12] To that end, the novels of Jean-Paul Sartre make authenticity conceptually intelligible through the stories of anti-heroic characters, people who base their actions upon external, psychological pressures — such as the social pressure to appear to be a certain kind of person; the pressure to adopt a given way of life; and the pressure to prostitute personal integrity (moral values and aesthetic standards) in exchange for the comfort (physical, mental, and moral) of social conformity. The novelist Sartre explains existential philosophy through characters who do not understand their reasoning for acting as they do—people who ignore crucial facts about their own lives to avoid learning about being an inauthentic person with an identity defined from outside the self.

Absolute freedom is the vertiginous experience necessary for being authentic, yet such freedom can be so unpleasant as to impel people to choose an inauthentic life. As an aspect of authenticity, absolute freedom determines a person’s relation with the real world, a relation not based upon or determined by a system of values or an ideology. In this manner, authenticity is connected with creativity, and the will to act must be born of the actor. In that vein, Heidegger speaks of absolute freedom as modes of living determined by personal choice. Sartre identified, described, and explained what is an inauthentic existence, not to define what is an authentic mode of living.[13]

Erich Fromm edit

Erich Fromm proposed a very different definition of authenticity in the mid-twentieth century.[14] He considered behavior of any kind, even that wholly in accord with societal mores, to be authentic if it results from personal understanding and approval of its drives and origins, rather than merely from conformity with the received wisdom of the society. Thus, a Frommean authentic may behave consistently in accord with cultural norms, if those norms appear on consideration to be appropriate, rather than simply in the interest of conforming with current norms. Fromm thus considers authenticity to be a positive outcome of enlightened and informed motivation, rather than a negative outcome of rejection of the expectations of others. He described the latter condition – the drive primarily to escape external restraints typified by the "absolute freedom" of Sartre – as "the illusion of individuality",[15] as opposed to the genuine individuality that results from authentic living.

Musical subculture edit

 
The punk rock subculture dismisses and excludes poseurs deemed not to understand, abide, or live the value system of the subculture.

Some genres of rock music, especially the subcultures of punk and heavy metal, require a great deal of artistic authenticity from its musicians and fans and criticize and exclude musicians, composers, and bands they assess as being poseurs — insufficiently authentic or inauthentic as artists.[4] A poseur is an artist or a musical band who copies the dress, the style of speech, and the manners of the subculture, yet is excluded for not understanding the artistic philosophy, not understanding the sociology, and not understanding the value system of the subculture; talking the talk, without walking the walk.[16]

The authenticity of an artist has three bases: (I) long-term dedication to the music scene; (II) historical knowledge of the subculture; and (III) personal integrity (inner voice) for correct artistic choices.[17] At one extreme of the heavy-metal genre, exists the subgenre of black metal whose adherents value above all else, artistic authenticity, emotional sincerity, and extremity of expression. Black metal artists emphatically profess that black metal performances are not for entertainment or spectacle, but rather that the extreme expression of such performances, are ritual expression, achieved through transcendence of the body and the self.[18] In light of such systems of moral value in the arts, a working-class band, by accepting a formal recording contract, might appear to be sell outs within the heavy metal and punk rock communities.[5] The academic Deena Weinstein said that “The code of authenticity, which is central to the heavy metal subculture, is demonstrated in many ways”, such as by clothing, an emotional singing voice, and thematic substance to the songs.[16]

Criticism edit

The philosopher Jacob Golomb argues that existential authenticity is a way of life incompatible with a system of moral values that comprehends all persons.[19][further explanation needed]

See also edit

  • Akrasia – Lack of self-control
  • Authentic leadership – Cultivating Attitude / Aptitude / Ability / Accountability
  • Authentic self – Psychological concepts often used in connection with narcissism
  • Being-in-itself – self-contained and fully realized being of objects
  • Alessandro Ferrara – Italian philosopher (born 1953)
  • Honesty – Moral quality of truthfulness
  • Individuation – The manner in which a thing is identified as distinguished from other things
  • Integrity – Moral virtue and practice
  • Invented tradition – Recently invented cultural practices perceived as old
  • Persona (psychology) – Social face an individual presents to the world
  • Ressentiment – Concept in existentialism
  • Self-deception – Psychology of false perceptions and their impact on human behavior

References edit

  1. ^ Book, Ryan (22 October 2014). "Jean-Paul Sartre, Existentialism, and Music That Lives It: The Doors, Pink Floyd and . . . Drake?". The Music Times.
  2. ^ Varga, Somogy; Guignon, Charles (2020), "Authenticity", in Zalta, Edward N. (ed.), The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Spring 2020 ed.), Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University, retrieved 2022-07-15
  3. ^
    • Childers, J.; Hentzi, G., eds. (1995). The Columbia Dictionary of Modern Literary and Cultural Criticism. p. 103.
    • Abulof, Uriel (2017-12-01). "Be Yourself! How Am I Not myself?". Society. 54 (6): 530–532. doi:10.1007/s12115-017-0183-0. ISSN 0147-2011. S2CID 148897359.
  4. ^ a b Leung, Godfre (10 April 2006). . Independent Culture. Archived from the original on 2008-12-01. Retrieved 2012-07-30.
  5. ^ a b Barker, Hugh; Taylor, Yuval (2007). Faking it: The Quest for Authenticity in Popular Music. New York: W.W. Norton and Co.
  6. ^ James., Engell (1980). Creative Imagination. Cambridge: HUP. ISBN 9780674333253. OCLC 935280039.
  7. ^ Graeyk, Theodore (2009). "Authenticity and Art". In Davies, Stephen; Higgins, Kathleen Marie; Hopkins, Robert; Stecker, Robert; Cooper, David E. (eds.). A Companion to Aesthetics.
  8. ^
    • Wood, A.M.; Linley, P.A.; Maltby, J.; Baliousis, M.; Joseph, S. (2008). (PDF). Journal of Counseling Psychology. 55 (3): 385–399. doi:10.1037/0022-0167.55.3.385. S2CID 31706489. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-17..
    • . Psychology Glossary of Terms. Athabasca University. Archived from the original on 2018-10-29.
    • . Eastern Illinois University. Archived from the original on 3 June 2012.
  9. ^ Merril, J.C. (1995). Existential Journalism (Revised ed.). Iowa State University Press.
  10. ^ a b c d Holt, Kristoffer (2012). "Authentic Journalism? A Critical Discussion about Existential Authenticity in Journalism Ethics". Journal of Mass Media Ethics. 27: 2–14. doi:10.1080/08900523.2012.636244. S2CID 144742280.
  11. ^ a b Nietzsche, F.W. (1997). Beyond good and evil: Prelude to a philosophy of the future. Translated by Zimmern, H. Mineola, N.Y.: Dover.
  12. ^ Golomb, Jacob (1995). In Search of Authenticity. London and New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-11946-7.
  13. ^ Baird, Forrest E.; Walter Kaufmann (2008). From Plato to Derrida. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Pearson Prentice Hall. ISBN 978-0-13-158591-1.
  14. ^ Fromm, Erich (1941). Escape from Freedom. Farrar & Rinehart.
  15. ^ Fromm, Erich (1942). "Freedom and Democracy". Fear of Freedom. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
  16. ^ a b Weinstein, Deena (2009). Heavy Metal: The Music and its Subculture. Da Capo Press. p. 46.
  17. ^ Larsson, Susanna (2013). "I Bang My Head. Therefore I Am: Constructing Individual and Social Authenticity in the Heavy Metal Subculture". Young. 21 (1): 95–110. doi:10.1177/1103308812467673. S2CID 146554112.
  18. ^ Olson, Benjamin Hedge (May 2008). (PDF) (Masters of Arts Thesis thesis). Bowling Green State University.
  19. ^ Golomb, Jacob (1995). In Search of Authenticity: From Kierkegaard to Camus. London: Routledge.

Further reading edit

authenticity, philosophy, authenticity, concept, personality, fields, psychology, existential, psychotherapy, existentialist, philosophy, aesthetics, existentialism, authenticity, degree, which, person, actions, congruent, with, their, values, desires, despite. Authenticity is a concept of personality in the fields of psychology existential psychotherapy existentialist philosophy and aesthetics In existentialism authenticity is the degree to which a person s actions are congruent with their values and desires despite external pressures to social conformity The conscious self comes to terms with the condition of Geworfenheit of having been thrown into an absurd world without values and meaning not of their own making thereby encountering external forces and influences different from and other than the Self 2 A person s lack of authenticity is considered bad faith in dealing with other people and with one s self thus authenticity is in the instruction of the Oracle of Delphi Know thyself 3 Concerning authenticity in art the philosophers Jean Paul Sartre and Theodor Adorno held opposing views and opinions about jazz a genre of American music Sartre said that jazz is authentic and Adorno said that jazz is inauthentic Many musical subcultures require artistic authenticity lest the community consider an artist to be a poseur for lacking authenticity creative musical or personal 4 artistic authenticity is integral to many genres of music including but not limited to genres of rock such as punk rock and heavy metal club music such as house and techno and hip hop 5 Artistic authenticity The saxophonist Johnny Hodges at work playing jazz The philosopher Jean Paul Sartre said that jazz music represents artistic freedom and personal authenticity 1 better source needed In the 18th century Romantic philosophers recommended intuition emotion and a connection to Nature as the necessary counterbalances to the intellectualism of the Age of Enlightenment 6 clarification needed In the 20th century Anglo American preoccupations with authenticity centered on the writings of existentialist philosophers whose native tongue is not English therefore the faithful true and accurate translation of the term existentialism was much debated to which end the philosopher Walter Kaufmann assembled a canon of existentialist philosophers Kaufmann s canon includes the Dane Soren Kierkegaard 1813 1855 the German Martin Heidegger 1889 1976 and the Frenchman Jean Paul Sartre 1905 1980 For these existentialists the conscious Self comes to terms with existence being and living in an absurd materialist world featuring external forces e g Geworfenheit Thrown ness and intellectual influences different from and other than the Self Personal authenticity is exhibited in how a person acts and changes in response to the external world s influences upon the Self Among artists authenticity in art describes a work of art faithful to the artist s values 7 In the field of psychology authenticity identifies a person living life in accordance with their true Self and personal values rather than according to the external demands of society such as social conventions kinship and duty 8 To identify describe and define authenticity existential philosophers like Kierkegaard Nietzsche and Martin Heidegger investigated the existential and ontological significance of the social constructs that compose the norms of society For a journalist not blindly accepting social norms contributes to producing intellectually authentic reportage achieved by the reporter choosing to be true to their professional ethics and personal values Yet in the praxis of journalism the reporter s authenticity professional and personal is continually contradicted by the business requirements of corporate publishing 9 Contents 1 Existential perspectives 1 1 Soren Kierkegaard 1 2 Friedrich Nietzsche 1 3 Jean Paul Sartre 1 4 Erich Fromm 2 Musical subculture 3 Criticism 4 See also 5 References 6 Further readingExistential perspectives editSoren Kierkegaard edit According to Kierkegaard personal authenticity depends upon a person finding an authentic faith and in so doing being true to themselves clarification needed Moral compromises inherent to the ideologies of bourgeois society and Christianity challenge the personal integrity of a person who seeks to live an authentic life as determined by the self 10 A mass culture society definition needed diminishes the significance of personal individuality by way of social levelling through news media that provide people with beliefs and opinions constructed by someone other than themselves A person can attain authentic faith by facing reality and choosing to live according to the facts of the material world dubious discuss or can deny authentic faith by passively accepting religious faith 10 Kierkegaard s philosophy shows that personal authenticity is a personal choice based upon the experience of the real world 10 in Practice in Christianity 1850 Kierkegaard wrote Therefore it is a risk to preach for as I go up into that holy place whether the church is packed or as good as empty whether I myself am aware of it or not I have one listener more than can be seen an invisible listener God in heaven whom I certainly cannot see but who truly can see me Truly it is a risk to preach Most people no doubt have the idea that stepping out on the stage as an actor to venture into the danger of having all eyes focused on one requires courage Yet in one sense this danger like everything on the stage is an illusion because the actor of course is personally outside it all his task is precisely to deceive to dissemble to represent someone else and to reproduce accurately someone else s words On the other hand the proclaimer of Christian truth steps forward into a place where even if the eyes of all are not focused on him the eye of an omniscient one is His task is to be himself and in a setting God s house which all eyes and ears requires only one thing of him that he should be himself be true That he should be accurate that is that he himself should be what he proclaims to be or at least strive to be that or at least be honest enough to confess about himself that he is not that How risky it is to be the I who preaches the one speaking an I who by preaching and as he preaches commits himself unconditionally displays his life so that if possible one could look directly into his soul to be this I that is risky Soren Kierkegaard Practice in Christianity 1850 pp 234 235 Friedrich Nietzsche edit Personal authenticity can be achieved without religion which requires accepting pre determined virtues eternal valuations as unquestionably true In living authentically a person elevates himself herself above the mass culture to transcend the limits of conventional morality thereby personally determining what is and what is not good and bad without the pre determined virtues of conformity on account of which we hold our grandfathers in esteem An authentic life is achieved by avoiding the herding animal morality 11 To stand alone is to be strong and original enough to initiate opposite estimates of value to transvaluate and invert eternal valuations 11 Common to the existential perspectives of Kierkegaard and Nietzsche are the responsibilities they place on the individual to take an active part in the shaping of one s beliefs and then to be willing to act on that belief 10 Jean Paul Sartre edit It is difficult to describe authenticity intelligibly One possibility is to describe instead the negative space surrounding the condition of being inauthentic by giving examples 12 To that end the novels of Jean Paul Sartre make authenticity conceptually intelligible through the stories of anti heroic characters people who base their actions upon external psychological pressures such as the social pressure to appear to be a certain kind of person the pressure to adopt a given way of life and the pressure to prostitute personal integrity moral values and aesthetic standards in exchange for the comfort physical mental and moral of social conformity The novelist Sartre explains existential philosophy through characters who do not understand their reasoning for acting as they do people who ignore crucial facts about their own lives to avoid learning about being an inauthentic person with an identity defined from outside the self Absolute freedom is the vertiginous experience necessary for being authentic yet such freedom can be so unpleasant as to impel people to choose an inauthentic life As an aspect of authenticity absolute freedom determines a person s relation with the real world a relation not based upon or determined by a system of values or an ideology In this manner authenticity is connected with creativity and the will to act must be born of the actor In that vein Heidegger speaks of absolute freedom as modes of living determined by personal choice Sartre identified described and explained what is an inauthentic existence not to define what is an authentic mode of living 13 Erich Fromm edit Erich Fromm proposed a very different definition of authenticity in the mid twentieth century 14 He considered behavior of any kind even that wholly in accord with societal mores to be authentic if it results from personal understanding and approval of its drives and origins rather than merely from conformity with the received wisdom of the society Thus a Frommean authentic may behave consistently in accord with cultural norms if those norms appear on consideration to be appropriate rather than simply in the interest of conforming with current norms Fromm thus considers authenticity to be a positive outcome of enlightened and informed motivation rather than a negative outcome of rejection of the expectations of others He described the latter condition the drive primarily to escape external restraints typified by the absolute freedom of Sartre as the illusion of individuality 15 as opposed to the genuine individuality that results from authentic living Musical subculture editSee also Rockism and Punk ideologies nbsp The punk rock subculture dismisses and excludes poseurs deemed not to understand abide or live the value system of the subculture Some genres of rock music especially the subcultures of punk and heavy metal require a great deal of artistic authenticity from its musicians and fans and criticize and exclude musicians composers and bands they assess as being poseurs insufficiently authentic or inauthentic as artists 4 A poseur is an artist or a musical band who copies the dress the style of speech and the manners of the subculture yet is excluded for not understanding the artistic philosophy not understanding the sociology and not understanding the value system of the subculture talking the talk without walking the walk 16 The authenticity of an artist has three bases I long term dedication to the music scene II historical knowledge of the subculture and III personal integrity inner voice for correct artistic choices 17 At one extreme of the heavy metal genre exists the subgenre of black metal whose adherents value above all else artistic authenticity emotional sincerity and extremity of expression Black metal artists emphatically profess that black metal performances are not for entertainment or spectacle but rather that the extreme expression of such performances are ritual expression achieved through transcendence of the body and the self 18 In light of such systems of moral value in the arts a working class band by accepting a formal recording contract might appear to be sell outs within the heavy metal and punk rock communities 5 The academic Deena Weinstein said that The code of authenticity which is central to the heavy metal subculture is demonstrated in many ways such as by clothing an emotional singing voice and thematic substance to the songs 16 Criticism editThe philosopher Jacob Golomb argues that existential authenticity is a way of life incompatible with a system of moral values that comprehends all persons 19 further explanation needed See also editAkrasia Lack of self control Authentic leadership Cultivating Attitude Aptitude Ability Accountability Authentic self Psychological concepts often used in connection with narcissismPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Being in itself self contained and fully realized being of objectsPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Alessandro Ferrara Italian philosopher born 1953 Honesty Moral quality of truthfulness Individuation The manner in which a thing is identified as distinguished from other things Integrity Moral virtue and practice Invented tradition Recently invented cultural practices perceived as old Persona psychology Social face an individual presents to the world Ressentiment Concept in existentialism Self deception Psychology of false perceptions and their impact on human behaviorReferences edit Book Ryan 22 October 2014 Jean Paul Sartre Existentialism and Music That Lives It The Doors Pink Floyd and Drake The Music Times Varga Somogy Guignon Charles 2020 Authenticity in Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Spring 2020 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University retrieved 2022 07 15 Childers J Hentzi G eds 1995 The Columbia Dictionary of Modern Literary and Cultural Criticism p 103 Abulof Uriel 2017 12 01 Be Yourself How Am I Not myself Society 54 6 530 532 doi 10 1007 s12115 017 0183 0 ISSN 0147 2011 S2CID 148897359 a b Leung Godfre 10 April 2006 Homeward Bound Towards a Post Gendered Pop Music Television Personalities My Dark Places Independent Culture Archived from the original on 2008 12 01 Retrieved 2012 07 30 a b Barker Hugh Taylor Yuval 2007 Faking it The Quest for Authenticity in Popular Music New York W W Norton and Co James Engell 1980 Creative Imagination Cambridge HUP ISBN 9780674333253 OCLC 935280039 Graeyk Theodore 2009 Authenticity and Art In Davies Stephen Higgins Kathleen Marie Hopkins Robert Stecker Robert Cooper David E eds A Companion to Aesthetics Wood A M Linley P A Maltby J Baliousis M Joseph S 2008 The Authentic Personality A Theoretical and Empirical Conceptualization and the Development of the Authenticity Scale PDF Journal of Counseling Psychology 55 3 385 399 doi 10 1037 0022 0167 55 3 385 S2CID 31706489 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 17 Authentic life Psychology Glossary of Terms Athabasca University Archived from the original on 2018 10 29 Existential Psychology Eastern Illinois University Archived from the original on 3 June 2012 Merril J C 1995 Existential Journalism Revised ed Iowa State University Press a b c d Holt Kristoffer 2012 Authentic Journalism A Critical Discussion about Existential Authenticity in Journalism Ethics Journal of Mass Media Ethics 27 2 14 doi 10 1080 08900523 2012 636244 S2CID 144742280 a b Nietzsche F W 1997 Beyond good and evil Prelude to a philosophy of the future Translated by Zimmern H Mineola N Y Dover Golomb Jacob 1995 In Search of Authenticity London and New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 11946 7 Baird Forrest E Walter Kaufmann 2008 From Plato to Derrida Upper Saddle River New Jersey Pearson Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 13 158591 1 Fromm Erich 1941 Escape from Freedom Farrar amp Rinehart Fromm Erich 1942 Freedom and Democracy Fear of Freedom London Routledge amp Kegan Paul a b Weinstein Deena 2009 Heavy Metal The Music and its Subculture Da Capo Press p 46 Larsson Susanna 2013 I Bang My Head Therefore I Am Constructing Individual and Social Authenticity in the Heavy Metal Subculture Young 21 1 95 110 doi 10 1177 1103308812467673 S2CID 146554112 Olson Benjamin Hedge May 2008 I Am the Black Wizards Multiplicity Mysticism and Identity in Black Metal Music and Culture p 47 PDF Masters of Arts Thesis thesis Bowling Green State University Golomb Jacob 1995 In Search of Authenticity From Kierkegaard to Camus London Routledge Further reading editFerrara Alessandro 1998 Reflective Authenticity Routledge ISBN 0 415 13062 X Fromm Erich 1942 Escape from Freedom Routledge amp Kegan Paul Keller Marcello Sorce 2010 How we got into authenticity and originality thinking and why we should find a way out of it In Claviez Thomas Imesch Kornelia Sweers Britta eds Critique of Authenticity Wilmington Del Vernon Press pp 135 158 Park James Leonard 2007 Becoming More Authentic The Positive Side of Existentialism 5th ed Existential Books ISBN 978 0 89231 105 7 Saupe Achim 2016 12 04 Authenticity Docupedia Zeitgeschichte doi 10 14765 zzf dok 2 645 v1 Taylor Charles 1992 The Ethics of Authenticity Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 26863 6 Trilling Lionel 1974 Sincerity and Authenticity Harvard University Press ISBN 0 19 281166 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Authenticity philosophy amp oldid 1189335360, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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