1908–1986 · Paris, France
"One is not born, but rather becomes, a woman." — The Second Sex (1949)
Simone de Beauvoir (1908–1986) was a French existentialist philosopher, novelist, and feminist theorist. A central figure in twentieth-century intellectual life, she developed a distinctive philosophy of freedom, ambiguity, and situated existence. Her landmark work The Second Sex (1949) laid the groundwork for second-wave feminism by arguing that "woman" is a social construction rather than a biological destiny. She was the lifelong partner of Jean-Paul Sartre and a key voice in existentialist ethics and literature.
Womanhood is constructed through social, economic, and cultural forces—not fixed by biology.
Women have been defined as the "Other" to man's norm; this alterity underpins oppression.
Freedom is always conditioned by our situation; we choose within concrete circumstances.
Human existence is ambiguous; ethics requires embracing this rather than seeking false certainty.
Philosophy must attend to embodied, everyday experience—how people actually live and feel.
Bad faith is denying one's freedom; liberation requires claiming agency and rejecting imposed roles.
Beauvoir did not initially identify as a feminist; she came to the label through the reception of The Second Sex and the rise of the women's liberation movement. Her analysis of woman as Other, the distinction between sex and gender, and the call for economic and social independence influenced Betty Friedan, Kate Millett, and countless others. She supported legal abortion, signed the "Manifesto of the 343" in 1971, and remained engaged with feminist politics until her death. Her emphasis on lived experience and the body anticipated later developments in feminist phenomenology.
Simone de Beauvoir is among the most influential philosophers of the twentieth century. The Second Sex remains a touchstone for feminist theory, and her existentialist ethics continue to inform debates about freedom, responsibility, and the meaning of a human life. Her novels, memoirs, and essays offer a model of the intellectual as public figure—committed, rigorous, and unafraid of controversy. She is remembered as a pioneer who showed that philosophy could address the most intimate dimensions of existence.
"Change your life today. Don't gamble on the future, act now, without delay." — Simone de Beauvoir