Absurdism: Difference between revisions

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Absurdism shares some concepts, and a common theoretical template, with existentialism and nihilism. Absurdism is opposed to spiritual context, in that there is the denial of the soul's existence and purpose, denial of higher consciousness in achieving Perfect Peace, either in life or death, all there is is suffering, which forces people to live in a world where only their immediate needs, desires and wants are important, not their fellow human beings.

This philosophy drives the Social Engineering of the Death Culture by the NAA, to infuse into the minds of the masses to have complete disregard for life, and therefore rampant killing and deviance, promoting destruction and chaos is normalized and accepted in societal behavior.

In philosophy, "the Absurd" refers to the conflict between the human tendency to seek inherent value and meaning in life and the human inability to find any. In this context absurd does not mean "logically impossible", but rather "humanly impossible". The universe and the human mind do not each separately cause the Absurd, but rather, the Absurd arises by the contradictory nature of the two existing simultaneously.

Accordingly, absurdism is a philosophical school of thought stating that the efforts of humanity to find inherent meaning will ultimately fail (and hence are absurd) because the sheer amount of information as well as the vast realm of the unknown make total certainty impossible. As a philosophy, absurdism furthermore explores the fundamental nature of the Absurd and how individuals, once becoming conscious of the Absurd, should respond to it. The absurdist philosopher Albert Camus stated that individuals should embrace the absurd condition of human existence while also defiantly continuing to explore and search for meaning. [1]