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Albert Camus and Absurdity. By David Mairowitz.
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Albert Camus and Absurdity By David Mairowitz
The Absurd is a misunderstood philosophical category, primarily due to its sense of linguistic finality both in French and English. To use the expression, “that’s absurd!” brings with it an automatic negative judgment and a feeling that all further discussion is thereby closed.
For Camus, “absurdity” is the given premise of all modern experience, an uneasy feeling, above all, a sense of contradiction, and is only the beginning of a perception of life, its meaning and consequences.
Camus simply presumes the absence of any kind of universal logic or direction generally associated with the idea of divinity.
Without divinity there can be no presumed code of conduct for human beings, nor any explanation of life’s meaning. We are simply thrown into this world and the outcome is death, pure and simple. There is only life before and nothing beyond.
And yet, this absence of explanation is not, in itself, the idea of the Absurd. “What is absurd is the confrontation between the sense of the irrational and the overwhelming desire for clarity which resounds in the depths of man.”
The Absurd is a quest for meaning in a universe devoid of purpose. It is a totally human foible and, once again, only defines beginning of the questioning of existence.
Coming to terms the Absurd is what concerns Camus, because this accounts for the terrible “weight and strangeness” of the world as experienced by every human being.
The feeling of absurdity is the “separation between man and his own life”, an actor walking out on stage and not recognizing the scenery or knowing the lines of the play he is supposed to speak, a sense of permanent displacement and un-belonging.