

My natural bent certainly does not lead me to suppose that the worst is always inevitable.

But others, particularly when they write to me about my last book, Old Age, deplore my pessimism. In what colors do I see this Godless world in which I live? Many readers tell me that what they like in my books is my delight in happiness, my love of live - my optimism. And to crown all, the believer derives a sense of great superiority from this very cowardice itself.īut out of this courageous confrontation with difficulty arises an unexpected fountain of hope - that more lucid and muscular counterpart to blind optimism. With an eye to the ultimate delusion of religion - that of personal immortality, to which the pious cling as a hedge against the terror of the void that death presents - Beauvoir adds:įaith allows an evasion of those difficulties which the atheist confronts honestly. If a doubt arises, it is often thrust aside for emotional reasons - a nostalgic loyalty to the past, affection for those around one, dread of the loneliness and banishment that threaten those who do not conform… Habits of mind, a system of reference and of values have been acquired, and one becomes their prisoner. Beauvoir writes:įaith is often an appurtenance that is given in childhood as part of the middle-class equipment, and that is unquestionably retained together with the rest of it. She held a strong conviction that the dogmas of religion preclude the critical thinking and analytical reasoning necessary for philosophical inquiry and for the evolution of human thought itself - an interference particularly pronounced when it came to the question of whether one is to take an optimistic or pessimistic attitude toward life and human nature. A devout lifelong atheist, she reflected at the end of her life that while many of her philosophical ideas evolved over the decades, her atheism remained unflinching. Simone de Beauvoir, 1952 (Photograph: Gisèle Freund)īeauvoir, who lived through two World Wars, devoted much of her work to the notion that happiness is not only possible but our moral obligation - a notion rooted not in a rosy wishfulness but in an incisive intellect that used every tool of skepticism to probe untruth and dispel ignorance. That selfsame year, across the Atlantic, the philosopher Simone de Beauvoir (January 9, 1908–April 14, 1986) - another thinker of formidable foresight and abiding insight into the human experience - explored this osmotic relationship between optimism, pessimism, and hope in the fourth and final volume of her autobiography, All Said and Done ( public library). “Optimism is an alienated form of faith, pessimism an alienated form of despair,” the great humanistic philosopher and psychologist Erich Fromm wrote in 1972 as he made his elegant case for rational faith in the human spirit, adding: “To have faith means to dare, to think the unthinkable, yet to act within the limits of the realistically possible.”
