Abstract
This little book, which grew out of lectures given by the author in Tunis, is divided into three parts. In the first part, the author seeks a meaning for the phrase ‘contemporary philosophy’ which can serve him as a guide in the task he has set himself. His efforts to assign a meaning to the term ‘philosophy’ as if he had just set foot on the planet with an unexplained competence in earthly languages is, if obviously forced, not wholly lacking in interest. However, this initial try at an utterly presuppositionless approach is later a cause of unease in the reader. For example, although Breton finds that contemporary philosophy divides into Marxism, Existentialism and Scientific philosophy, the last named is all but ignored in the sequel. The first part concludes with a ‘problematique de la philosophie contemporaine’. The second part is devoted to Marxism, the third to existentialism. Breton’s method is that of the phenomenologist and thus the seeking of the ‘essence’ of Marxism and existentialism takes on ponderous overtones: more or less arbitrary selection of points becomes somewhat dogmatically a revelation of essence. Breton’s reputation does not depend upon this book which, though informative is unavoidably superficial. Breton promises a critical volume on the same points raised here.