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      • The Absurdist viewpoint suggests that individuals must confront the absurdity of life without succumbing to despair; rather, they should embrace it and seek personal meaning. Absurdism differs from nihilism in that it acknowledges the absurd but encourages finding joy or personal significance despite life's inherent meaninglessness.
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  2. Sep 16, 2015 · The human condition, for Kafka, is well beyond tragic or depressed. It is “absurd.”. He believed that the whole human race was the product of one of “God’s bad days.”. There is no “meaning” to make sense of our lives.

  3. This tension between Meursault's sense of life's meaninglessness and other characters' persistent efforts to impose structures of meaning demonstrates the main tenet of Camus' own philosophy of Absurdism.

  4. May 25, 2019 · Absurdism arises out of the tension between our desire for order, meaning and happiness and, on the other hand, the indifferent natural universe’s refusal to provide that. In the essay, Camus posed the fundamental philosophical question: is life worth living? Is suicide a legitimate response if life has no meaning?

  5. Absurdism is a philosophical perspective that suggests the inherent meaninglessness of life, emphasizing the conflict between humans' search for significance and the universe's indifference. This idea aligns closely with existentialist thought, particularly in the works of certain writers who explore themes of alienation, despair, and the ...

  6. Aug 23, 2023 · Colloquially, “absurd” means ridiculous, nonsensical, and illogical. While there is plenty of ridiculousness in plays, novels, and films engaging with the absurd, absurdism also probes fundamental philosophical questions about how to live our lives. Faced with no clear answers or purpose, absurdists do not freeze up; they push onward.

  7. Oct 27, 2011 · Camus sees this question of suicide as a natural response to an underlying reality, namely, that life is absurd. It is absurd to continually seek meaning in life when there is none; and it is absurd to hope for some form of continued existence after death, which results in our extinction.

  8. ‘Camus and the absurd’ explains that the absurd is a feeling that comes out of experience. For Camus it was a near-death experience: the brutal onset of tuberculosis at the age of 17. The absurd convinced Camus that there is no meaning to life because it could be cut short at any moment.

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