Moral Dilemmas In The Stranger By Albert Camus

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Moral Dilemmas In The Stranger When being faced with capital punishment, the most common pleading for why a person should not be put to death is insanity. It’s put forth that the person committing the crime, particularly in murder cases, was driven by senseless and irrational motives. Generally, the defense will attempt to prove that this person has some sort of personality disorder to remove any sense of responsibility for the murder, a display of a noticeable disconnect between the emotional and physical processes made by the person on trial. In the novella The Stranger by Albert Camus, this same exact disconnect between thoughts and actions can be seen in the main character, Monsieur Meursault. Meursault 's senseless killing of a man, …show more content…

But it is easy to tell that these are much more serious than simple abnormal human behavior. Meursault behavior can be described as if he is a sociopath. He acts without any sense of moral responsibility, where one immoral activity is acceptable to him, and another immoral activity is not. He sees life not as a string of right or wrong decisions as most healthy, normal people would see life as, however, he only sees it as “do or do not”, meaning that he sees everything in his life simply as a decision that could be made, not as one that should or should not be made based on that particular person’s moral compass. This is something that is extremely common in sociopaths. Meursault also acts without realizing the repercussions of any of his actions. It can be seen through his conversations with the people around him that whenever he is asked a question, Meursault shows a complete disregard for the feelings of anyone else, and is brutally honest with people because of his social ineptness. Rather than telling people what they would want to hear, as an act to give the best impression of himself on others, Meursault says whatever is on his mind which commonly results in strange reactions from the “normal” people he is in conversation with. This lack of concern for the emotional well-being of others and his effect on that shows another very important example of Meursault 's affliction of being a textbook

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