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Originally Posted by
Egoist
When Camus said that the absurd is born between the meeting of the world and of life,,, mao mana sa,,, does he imply pessimism?
i do not think its pessimism. exactly its a revolt against the absurdity of existence (freedom and limitation; the essential existential question: if i am to die, what is the purpose of my existence? this has been echoed from sartre to fromm to Ricoeur. Fromm himself writes that man's existence is an essential contradiction: "man always dies dies before he is fully born" Sartre writes: "man is a useless passion" )
ang existentialism ni camus pareha ra in some point with sartre. such is why with the latter, he explains why existentialism is NOT a "despair of pessimism" in his short essay existentialism is humanism. (you might want to check this out if you havent, although it is very short and easy reading it is stll very important in the study of existentialism)
like camus, it is not pessimism, exactly why we have to revolt against the absurdity, metaphorically pointed out with the rock which sisyphus continually bears everyday, in that existence is not predetermined we have to put meaning in our existence an absurd existence, a paradox, an inherent contradiction, but exactly why "existence precedes essence" because we are the one who put meaning to it through our actions.
in short it is not pessimism because it is not fatalism, because we are not fated to do what the universe wants us to do, we are because that is what we choose to be through our actions.
i think.