The Stranger, By Albert Camus

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This year, I read Albert Camus’s The Stranger and I consider it the most inspiring book I have read. The plot is about a murder, but it serves as a vehicle for Camus’s philosophy. As I delved deeper into the philosophy of Camus, reading about his interpretations of absurdism, I began feeling more optimistic and motivated. I’d like to pass on the actuation I found through absurdism to others.
Absurdism was the philosophy of Camus and a branch of existentialism. Existentialism is the general philosophy dealing with the human condition, while absurdism explains the absurdity of human life. Camus described this absurdity in The Myth of Sisyphus as, “confrontation between the human need and the unreasonable silence of the world”. The inherent struggle between man to find meaning in life when the universe is fundamentally meaningless is the absurdity of life. If that was true, then was life worth living? How was one supposed to cope with a silent world when …show more content…

I almost decided not to go to college. It felt like I had been in school my whole life, and that there would be no end if I went to college. Camus compared the human struggle to Sisyphus's struggle in The Myth of Sisyphus. Sisyphus punishment was to roll a boulder up a mountain, but it always rolled down before he could reach the top. At the end of high school my boulder was almost on top of the mountain, but it would fall if I went to college. Camus’s most famous quote from The Myth of Sisyphus is where he states, “The struggle itself toward the heights is enough to fill a man's heart”. So I accepted it. I accepted that for four or maybe even eight years I was going to struggle. Acceptance allowed me to focus on why I was going instead of debating whether I would. It was a relief. I want everyone at Reed to learn that the meaning is in the struggle, not the end result, when they look to the future and look for motivation, like I

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