Abstract This article revisits Simone de Beauvoir’s ideas on the nature of philosophy. It challenges the view that she is advocating a new literary way of “doing” philosophy and suggests that the clear conceptual boundary she recognizes between literature and philosophy is based not on culture, gender, or philosophical tradition but on fundamental principles of her broader philosophy—notably her understanding of language and the kind of language-use represented by each mode.
Nigel Holt (Tue,) studied this question.
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