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  1. This near-catch phrase belongs to Albert Kam (“The Myth of Sisyphus”). So he dubbed an attempt to solve the problem of the meaning of existence, for example, of oneself, through various variants of a religious fantasy or so

    More precisely, Camus put the question this way: does suicide require a clear awareness that life is absurd and meaningless? Many philosophers before him believed that of course yes, and tried to find a way out in that they ultimately denied the original position about the absurdity of the world (i.e., of course, there is a meaning, and the absurd is illusory)

    This, according to Camus, is philosophical suicide-the refusal to go to the end in reflection and analysis of the accepted position of absurdity.

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