Absurdism

Absurdism is an atheistic stance on the meaning of life, behind the disambiguation of "atheist existentialism" and nihilism. In the broadest sense, absurdists take the stance that the search for the meaning of life is futile, either because it is unknowable to humans or that it doesn't exist. The philosophy was popularised by French novelist and philosopher Albert Camus in the 1950s.[1]

Thinking hardly
or hardly thinking?

Philosophy
Major trains of thought
The good, the bad
and the brain fart
Come to think of it
v - t - e
I guess I kinda worked it out. If there's no great glorious end to all this, if nothing we do matters, then all that matters is what we do.
—Angel

There are three ways to solve the problem of meaninglessness (assuming that it is a problem). The first is suicide, which is considered to not solve the problem by Camus and Søren Kierkegaard because the act of ending one's existence is also absurd. The second is religion, considered by Camus to be "philosophical suicide" due to the acceptance of bullshit. The third is acceptance of the absurd: to accept that one's existence is likely meaningless, but to continue living in the face of it the ultimate act of rebellion. This has been historically likened to the British saying "carry on".

Absurdism is an underdeveloped philosophy, and thus relativistic in nature. The core idea is vague, and the corollary of this is that the absurd means different things to different people. One major divide is the question of whether absurdism states with certainty that there is no meaning, or whether it is just suggested that there is no reason to think there is meaning. Another is whether one can formulate their own meaning whilst accepting it to be personal and absurd, and another whether belief in a god is contradictory to the philosophy.

See also

References

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