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There are many varieties of existentialism. Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Sartre & so on. But I think they all ascribed to some kind of value system, no? Nietzsche was always talking about a re-valuation of values, in light of the awareness that God is dead.
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I guess Antwan and I are of about the same age group. When I was younger, existentialism was really popular. I was much into Albert Camus and Jean-Paul Sartre. Although very difficult, I read the 1,500-page JPN translation of Sartre's "Being and Nothingness." It was 43 years ago.
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Camus pissed me off with that whole "you must imagine Sisyphus happy" bullshit. I was like "What!" That's the same thing the optimists tell you: Just think happy thoughts. Be positive. And so on. Or did I misinterpret Camus? OED? What say you?
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In my understanding, existentialism is like "Yes, everything is meaningless. But live on anyway as if you believed in whatever you are doing." It's similar to what Samuel Beckett says at the end of his novel "The Unnamable": "I can't go on, I'll go on."
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Well, OK. Live on as if it is meaningful... even if you have to fake it. I think that's what a lot of people are doing, anyway. I think a lot of people know deep down it's futile & meaningless. But they carry on as if it's not. Just make believe. Play act.
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