Sunday, October 12, 2008

Notes on the Absurd Man (B) (The Myth of Sisyphus)

(Originally Written October 12, 2008 in the Journal)

Notes on Albert Camus' Myth of Sisyphus and other essays

The Absurd Man

The absurd man is assured of temporally limited freedom.

The absurd man lives his existence in his lifetime.

The absurd man does nothing for the eternal.

The absurd man lives by courage and reasoning.

He is assured of his temporally limited freedom. (Contrast with the Christian who is assured of his absolute freedom in Christ).

"The absurd does not liberate, it binds" (Camus)

"In the absurd world the value of a notion or a life is measured by its sterility" (Camus)

Don Juanism

Genius is intelligence that knows its frontiers.

Those who live on hope are called either a weakling, an idealist or a saint - each insulting.

Ethic is quantitative for the absurd man, the saint sees ethic qualitatively.

Regret is another form of hope.

Love, like that of a passionate wife or a mother necessarily closes its heart to the world. Those who turn away from all personal life through a great love are certainly enriched, but the object of that great love becomes impoverished.

Love can only be defined subjectively based on our experiences. "I do not have the right to cover all those experiences with the same name" (Camus).

Love is noble when it recognizes its short-lived and exceptional nature.

Again, the absurd man quantifies his experiences of love and doesn't base it on any qualitative experience (This is what Camus calls Don Juanism). [This is a truly detestable notion]

A fate is not a punishment - a natural consequence of a consciously chosen act is not a punishment. The absurd man chooses his direction and accepts the reality of his choice.

It is the absurd way to knowledge without illusion.

Drama

The thoughtless man continues to hasten from hope to hope.

There is a profound nobility in indifference. Indifference directs us to the most important concern: the immediate.

"Preferring oneself to eternity or losing oneself in God is the age-old tragedy in which each much play his part" (Camus). Obviously, the absurd man chooses oneself over losing oneself in any way - especially to something atemporal or eternal. (The absurd man lives in time, his adventure lasts from birth until death).

Conquest

The conqueror can thoroughly define what they believe. Beware of those who say 'I know this too well to express it' because they either do not know it or were too lazy to pursue it. (This is a condemnation of mysticism).

Given the choice between history or eternal Camus chooses history because it is certain and he likes certainties.

A proud heart cannot compromise. "There is God or time, that cross or this sword. This world has a higher meaning that transcends its worries, or nothing is true but those worries. One must live with time and die with it, or else elude it for a greater life. I know that one can compromise and live in this world while believing in the eternal. That is called accepting. But I loathe this term and want all or nothing" (Camus).

Flesh is struggle, but flesh is my only certainty.

Man is his own end; he is his only end.

Life is both the conquerors' destitution and wealth. It is in this tension that he thrives, exalting and crushing man, the individual.

True riches are riches because they are transitory.

Knowing the limits constitutes the freedom, the liberation.

"The truths that come within my scope can be touched with the hand" (Camus)

Pity is the only acceptable form of compassion for the absurd man.

"Being deprived of hope is not despairing" (Camus)

The absurd, godless world is full of thinking men without hope.

No comments:

Post a Comment