Existentialist Darwism and Neo-isolationist Rejection in Camus' "The Stranger"
Title: Existentialist Darwism and Neo-isolationist Rejection in Camus' "The Stranger"
Category: /Social Sciences/Philosophy
Details: Words: 440 | Pages: 2 (approximately 235 words/page)
Existentialist Darwism and Neo-isolationist Rejection in Camus' "The Stranger"
Category: /Social Sciences/Philosophy
Details: Words: 440 | Pages: 2 (approximately 235 words/page)
An enlightening, introspective analysis of Existentialism as a philosophy and as an integral component of Camus' literary genre. WOW!
 
 Camus's The Stranger is a grim profession that choice and individual freedom are
 integral components of human nature, and the commitment and responsibility that accompany
 these elements are ultimately the deciding factors of the morality of one's existence.  Meursault
 is placed in an indifferent world, a world that embraces absurdity and persecutes reason; such is
 the 
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as Meursault confronts his nothingness and the impossibility of justifying
 the [immoral] choices he has made; he realizes the pure contingency of his life, and that he has
 voided, in essence, his own existence by failing to accept the risk and responsibility that the
 personal freedom of an existentialist reality entails.
 1  From Don  Quixote (1605, trans. 1612), a satirical Spanish novel by Miguel de Cervantes
 Saavedra.
 2  Soren Kierkegaard, Nineteenth-century Danish philosopher, on 'Moral Individualism and
 Truth.'
