Is life meaningless? And other absurd questions - Nina Medvinskaya

3,014,275 views ・ 2020-09-21

TED-Ed


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Albert Camus grew up surrounded by violence.
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His homeland of Algeria was mired in conflict between native Algerians
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and colonizing French Europeans.
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He lost his father in the First World War,
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and was deemed unfit to fight in the second.
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Battling tuberculosis in France and confronting the war's devastation
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as a resistance journalist, Camus grew despondent.
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He couldn’t fathom any meaning behind all this endless bloodshed and suffering.
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He asked: if the world was meaningless,
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could our individual lives still hold value?
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Many of Camus’ contemporaries were exploring similar questions
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under the banner of a new philosophy called existentialism.
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Existentialists believed people were born as blank slates,
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each responsible for creating their life’s meaning amidst a chaotic world.
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But Camus rejected their school of thought.
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He argued all people were born with a shared human nature
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that bonded them toward common goals.
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One such goal was to seek out meaning despite the world’s arbitrary cruelty.
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Camus viewed humanity’s desire for meaning and the universe’s silent indifference
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as two incompatible puzzle pieces,
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and considered trying to fit them together to be fundamentally absurd.
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This tension became the heart of Camus’ Philosophy of the Absurd,
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which argued that life is inherently futile.
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Exploring how to live without meaning
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became the guiding question behind Camus’ early work,
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which he called his “cycle of the absurd.”
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The star of this cycle, and Camus’ first published novel,
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offers a rather bleak response.
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"The Stranger" follows Meursault, an emotionally detached young man
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who doesn’t attribute much meaning to anything.
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He doesn’t cry at his mother’s funeral,
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he supports his neighbor’s scheme to humiliate a woman,
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he even commits a violent crime — but Meaursault feels no remorse.
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For him the world is pointless and moral judgment has no place in it.
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This attitude creates hostility between Meursault
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and the orderly society he inhabits,
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slowly increasing his alienation until the novel’s explosive climax.
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Unlike his spurned protagonist, Camus was celebrated for his honest philosophy.
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"The Stranger" catapulted him to fame, and Camus continued producing works
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that explored the value of life amidst absurdity
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many of which circled back to the same philosophical question:
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if life is truly meaningless,
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is committing suicide the only rational response?
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Camus’ answer was an emphatic “no.”
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There may not be any explanation for our unjust world,
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but choosing to live regardless is the deepest expression
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of our genuine freedom.
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Camus explains this in one of his most famous essays
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which centers on the Greek myth of Sisyphus.
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Sisyphus was a king who cheated the gods,
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and was condemned to endlessly roll a boulder up a hill.
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The cruelty of his punishment lies in its singular futility,
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but Camus argues all of humanity is in the same position.
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And only when we accept the meaninglessness of our lives
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can we face the absurd with our heads held high.
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As Camus says, when the king chooses to begin his relentless task once more,
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“One must imagine Sisyphus happy.”
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Camus’ contemporaries weren’t so accepting of futility.
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Many existentialists advocated for violent revolution
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to upend systems they believed were depriving people of agency and purpose.
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Camus responded with his second set of work: the cycle of revolt.
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In "The Rebel," he explored rebellion as a creative act,
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rather than a destructive one.
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Camus believed that inverting power dynamics
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only led to an endless cycle of violence.
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Instead, the way to avoid needless bloodshed
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is to establish a public understanding of our shared human nature.
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Ironically, it was this cycle of relatively peaceful ideas
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that triggered his fallout with many fellow writers and philosophers.
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Despite the controversy,
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Camus began work on his most lengthy and personal novel yet:
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an autobiographical work entitled "The First Man."
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The novel was intended to be the first piece in a hopeful new direction:
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the cycle of love.
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But in 1960, Camus suddenly died in a car accident
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that can only be described as meaningless and absurd.
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While the world never saw his cycle of love,
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his cycles of revolt and absurdity continue to resonate with readers today.
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His concept of absurdity has become a part of world literature,
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20th century philosophy, and even pop culture.
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Today, Camus remains a trusted guide for moments of uncertainty;
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his ideas defiantly imbuing a senseless world with inspiration
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rather than defeat.
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