Absurdism

audiobook (Unabridged) A Note on the Philosophical School · Western Philosophical Schools

By Pons Malleus

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To exist is to be burdened with questions that resist answers. From the earliest myths to the latest scientific models, humanity has struggled to make sense of its place in an indifferent universe. At the heart of this struggle lies a deep, persistent tension between our desire for meaning and the silent vastness that greets our inquiries. This tension is not merely existential—it is absurd. It is from this point of fracture that Absurdism, a profound and unsettling philosophical current, emerges.

Absurdism is not a formal system but a way of seeing, born in the crucible of 20th-century disillusionment. Its roots can be traced through the existential undercurrents of Søren Kierkegaard, the stoic resignations of ancient philosophers, and the modernist literature of Kafka and Dostoevsky. But it is in the work of Albert Camus—writer, thinker, and reluctant philosopher—that Absurdism comes into its own. In his essay The Myth of Sisyphus, Camus articulates the core dilemma: the human yearning for clarity and unity confronts a world that offers neither. The result is absurd—not because life is inherently meaningless, but because meaning itself seems inaccessible.

This audiobook seeks to explore Absurdism not as a morbid curiosity, but as a vital and enduring lens through which to view the human condition. In doing so, it considers the Absurd not as a nihilistic dead-end, but as a confrontation that demands a response. What does one do in the face of the Absurd? Camus insists we must rebel—not by clinging to false hope or despairing into silence, but by affirming life, by living with defiance and without appeal.

Absurdism