Step 1: Recall Sartre’s core existential claims.
Jean-Paul Sartre argues that existence precedes essence. Human beings are not fixed by a predetermined nature and are always in the process of becoming. Freedom, negation, and transcendence are central to his philosophy.
Step 2: Evaluate the individual statements.
(i) Compatible: This reflects Sartre’s idea of negation and transcendence—human beings are not identical with any fixed essence.
(ii) Not compatible: This treats a being as having a fixed essence with no possibility of transcendence, which Sartre rejects.
(iii) Compatible: This captures Sartre’s view that entities (especially humans) can always become more than what they presently are.
(iv) Not compatible: This asserts essentialism and determinism, directly contradicting Sartre’s emphasis on freedom and becoming.
Step 3: Identify incompatible pairs.
(A) iii and iv → iv is incompatible → pair rejected
(B) i and iii → both compatible → but the question asks for NOT compatible; hence rejected as a valid existential pair
(C) ii and iv → both incompatible → rejected
Step 4: Conclusion.
The pairs that are NOT compatible with Sartre’s existential philosophy are (A), (B), and (C).
Final Answer: (A), (B), (C)