Despite being one of the most popular philosophical movements of the last century, Existentialism is famously hard to define as a theory. In popular imagination, Existentialism has become associated more with a series of philosophical moods and attitudes, such as ‘despair’, ‘bad faith’, ‘anticipatory resoluteness’, and, most commonly, ‘angst’.
That last concept passes through a number of hands and languages, from Kierkegaard’s angest to Heidegger’s angst and Sartre’s l’angoisse. It’s often translated ‘anxiety’, ‘dread’, or ‘anguish’, but ‘angst’ avoids any unhelpful medical connotations.
All these thinkers, despite their significant philosophical and religious differences, see angst as linked not just to the uncertainty of the future, but to the uncertainty of human behaviour. Existential angst is not simply anxiety about what could happen, but anxiety over what we might do ourselves.…
