Video id : J0aX8QMkFAI
ImmersiveAmbientModecolor: #bbc5ae (color 2)
Video Format : 22 (720p) openh264 ( https://github.com/cisco/openh264) mp4a.40.2 | 44100Hz
Audio Format: Opus - Normalized audio
PokeTubeEncryptID: 8df4e1a4219eacd0fedad8d1615c4d1ca6a3679a085529754b9279ed63b1112958a206be33f98f41f118358b05c1876e
Proxy : eu-proxy.poketube.fun - refresh the page to change the proxy location
Date : 1713456633164 - unknown on unknown
Mystery text : SjBhWDhRTWtGQUkgaSAgbG92ICB1IGV1LXByb3h5LnBva2V0dWJlLmZ1bg==
143 : true

Nihilism vs. Existentialism vs. Absurdism — Explained and Compared
Jump to Connections
1,284,113 Views • May 30, 2021 • Click to toggle off description
What is the difference between Nihilism vs. Existentialism vs. Absurdism? The common ground they share is that they are all responses to philosophy’s timeless clichéd question “what is the meaning of life?” Nihilism came into full bloom in the 19th century as the full implications of modernism came to fruition. Existentialism and Absurdism are two ways of responding to the crisis of Nihilism.
So what is Nihilism? It’s the belief that there is no objective meaning, no purpose outside the illusions humanity has created for itself. As science developed and the religious narratives were found to be ineffective and hollow, the religious account of reality was consigned to the trash heap of history but with it went the grounding of our morality and meaning. This is what Nietzsche’s madman is decrying in The Gay Science when he proclaims that God is Dead.
Among the ways of facing this crisis, Existentialism vs Absurdism are two promising alternatives. Existentialism says there is no objective/inherent value but there is a potential for a created value. For Jean-Paul Sartre Existentialism is the realisation that existence precedes essence which means that humans have a radical freedom to create our own meaning through how we live our lives, through the acts of our will.
The Absurd was first talked about by Kierkegaard but was fully developed by Albert Camus into the philosophy of Absurdism in his book The Myth of Sisyphus. The Absurd is the collision between the inherent human hunger for meaning and the impossibility of satisfying this drive in a meaningless world. Camus says we have three options in facing the Absurd: commit suicide, take a leap of faith and believe in some meaning (like Christianity, Buddhism, Marxism, existentialism) something Camus calls philosophical suicide. The third option is Absurdism. Absurdism is the rebellion against the Absurd. It is to refuse to give in and create a meaning. For Camus Absurdism means holding the space of the absurd, staring into its face and rebelling against it and out of this rebellion flows our freedom and passion.

_________________
⭐ Support the channel (thank you!)
▶ Patreon: patreon.com/thelivingphilosophy
▶ Ko-fi: ko-fi.com/thelivingphilosophy

_________________
📚 Further Reading:

Primary:
Camus, A., 2013. The Myth of Sisyphus. Penguin UK.
Camus, A., 2013. The Outsider. Penguin UK.
Sartre, J., 1960 Existentialism is a Humanism

Secondary:
Aronson, R,. 2017. “Albert Camus”, The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy , Edward N. Zalta (ed.), URL = (plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2017/entries/camus/….
Crowell, S,. 2020. “Existentialism”, The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Edward N. Zalta (ed.), URL = (plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2020/entries/existe….
Foley, J., 2014. Albert Camus: From the absurd to revolt. Routledge.
Hassall, D,. 2017. “Finding Meaning in the Lack Thereof: An Analysis of Nietzsche's and Sartre's Responses to the Problem of Existential Nihilism” Honors Theses. 493. URL = (encompass.eku.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1476…)
________________

🎶 Music Used:
1. Magnetic — CO.AG Music
2. Juniper — Kevin MacLeod
3. Mesmerise — Kevin MacLeod
4. End of the Era — Kevin MacLeod
5. Evening Fall Harp — Kevin MacLeod
6. Anguish— Kevin MacLeod
Subscribe to Kevin MacLeod youtube.com/user/kmmusic
Subscribe to CO.AG Music youtube.com/channel/UCcav...
_________________

⌛ Timestamps:

0:00 Introduction
0:48 Nihilism: Meaning and Origins
5:15 Existentialism: Definition and its Solution
8:25 Absurdism
9:24 Camus’s Three Responses to the Absurd
11:45 Why Sisyphus is Camus’s Ideal
13:31 Summary and Conclusion
_________________

#nihilism #existentialism #absurdism #thelivingphilosophy #camus #philosophy #sartre
Metadata And Engagement

Views : 1,284,113
Genre: Education
Date of upload: May 30, 2021 ^^


Rating : 4.939 (1,070/69,248 LTDR)
RYD date created : 2022-04-08T05:12:17.65123Z
See in json
Tags
Connections
Nyo connections found on the description ;_; report a issue lol

YouTube Comments - 1.9K Comments

Top Comments of this video!! :3

@TheLivingPhilosophy

2 years ago

Wanna support the channel? Now you can:
Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thelivingphilosophy Ko-fi: ko-fi.com/thelivingphilosophy ⌛  Timestamps: 0:00 Introduction 0:48 Nihilism: Meaning and Origins 5:15 Existentialism: Definition and its Solution 8:25 Absurdism 9:24 Camus’s Three Responses to the Absurd 11:45 Why Sisyphus is Camus’s Ideal 13:31 Summary and Conclusion

203 |

@LuluTheCorgi

1 year ago

"one must imagine Sisyphus happy" is still one of the most impactful sentences I've ever read after that essay

2.1K |

@sonny5087

1 year ago

You not only explained each philosophy but you did so in a way that makes them both easily comparable and digestible. Downright masterful.

4.1K |

@potat8089

1 year ago

My nihilism was worsening by the week and I was contemplating suicide.
I looked up nihilism on YouTube and found "Nihilism Vs. Existentialism Vs. Absurdism" and watched it. I immediately downloaded The Myth Of Sisyphus. After just a couple pages of philosophical theory and a couple days of processing all that information, I was already on the upswing! Now I still have bad days, but I know that suicide is not an option I'm willing to pursue, and my life has become rejuvenated with color and life. Thank you so much for introducing me to this!!
Numbers on a screen never show you how much you've impacted people, so I want to tell you directly that you've helped save a life.

960 |

@_letstartariot

1 year ago

I think I adore the concept of absurdism. I haven’t heard much about it until this video. Over the years I have thought about life and why I/we exist, but I’ve always had the question- does there have to be a meaning? We know how we exist. Science explains it well via objective evidence. We know the laws of our reality. So I feel like we do just exist, and objectively there is no meaning. Because defining what it means to live is subjective. If one is desperate to find meaning then they can. I don’t feel pessimistic about it either. I’ve just accepted it and live my best life. I reject having to care about what it means to live. Is that absurdist?

1.1K |

@JohnDoe-pc3uk

1 year ago

So basically:
Nihilism: There is no meaning granted to us by this world Existentialism: Man is capable of making his own meaning Absurdism: Man is capable of living a worthwhile life, even without greater meaning

5.3K |

@considrew

2 years ago

This was the best summary of absurdist philosophy I've heard. Thank you.

1.9K |

@wangchung4088

1 year ago (edited)

“Man is nothing else but what he makes of himself.” - Jean-Paul Sartre
“The struggle itself towards the heights is enough to fill a man's heart. One must imagine Sisyphus happy.” - Albert Camus
Leaving the part about Sisyphus out, it seems Camus and Sartre are expressing the same idea.

352 |

@mongoose6685

8 months ago

Kierkegaard's "life is not a problem to solve, but an experience to live" and Camus's interpretation of the myth of Sisyphus truly are little gems that philosophy gave to humanity - which I would wager most living people today know almost nothing about.

102 |

@sinisterminister3322

2 years ago

The key to understanding absurdism over against existentialism is that instead of claiming that there is no objective meaning to life and the universe, absurdism claims that life and the universe are objectively meaningless. There is a subtle, but important difference between these two positions.

516 |

@AngeloLunch

1 year ago (edited)

My favourite part of this video was how an ad interrupted and added to it:
“We meet the absurd as it is, without escape and with integrity, and we DOWNLOAD A FREE AUDIOBOOK WITH AUDIBLE. I wasn’t thinking about what I was eating and Noom helped me realise that we maintain the tension of the absurd in us without turning away.”

222 |

@knarf_on_a_bike

1 year ago

Camus literally changed my life. My first university class almost 50 years ago was Philosophy 101. Our first assignment was to read The Outsider (aka The Stranger). From The Outsider to The Plague to The Fall to Myth of Sisyphus to the Rebel, I couldn't get enough of Camus. Thanks for this wonderful video essay. Great summary of absurdism.

81 |

@mattiaskarlsson9302

1 year ago

Even with your explanation it took me a moment to understand what the difference between absurdism and existentialism is, so...just in case anyone else is a bit slow.
- Finding meaning in life is ultimately about justifying our existence - what gives us the right to exist, what makes it worth existing, etc. - Existentialism is about creating meaning to justify our existence. - Absurdism is about rejecting meaning and just making the best of life as it is. ...I think.

147 |

@Zero-tk1hb

1 year ago (edited)

Man your video opened my mind in so many ways. I always struggled to understand Absurdism and learning that Absurdism is to embrace the struggle itself and rebel against the void is amazing. I might be interpreting both Existencialism and Absurdism wrong but both of them seem to be a complete answer if puted togheter. Nihilism show's us the problem, Absurdism show's us that running away or giving our control to the nearest savior isn't the answer either. Embrace the absurd, enjoy your life and keep rolling that rock up hill against all odds. Then Existencialism comes in the middle ground, if life doesn't have a meaning then create your own meaning trough your own will and struggle. And then if the rock goes down again (The breaking of your previous reason/meaning to live) you get up again and roll that rock uphill again embrancing that life is a endless struggle. A combination of both would be my answer and Guts from Berserk would be my model in this case XD

224 |

@user-bz7kl9ur7k

2 months ago

im more of a itiswhatitisism guy

37 |

@gibbers13

1 year ago

Hey this was awesome man. I’m a Christian, didn’t realize how much of an absurdist I am as well. I love that explanation of leaning into the absurd to enjoy life in a rebellious sense.

116 |

@billscanlan5639

1 year ago

This is a legitimately fascinating intro into this realm of study. Thank you for making this video.

8 |

@santacruzman8483

2 years ago

Your presentation (as usual) flows well, is interesting and informative and not only professionally explains philosophical principals but has practical applications squeezing the most out of life. You set a high bar. Well done sir.

158 |

@Eternalised

2 years ago

Beautifully summarised. Deeply enjoyed it!

49 |

@benjamincraig7198

9 months ago

It's been about 15 years since my existentialism course and you nailed this so elegantly

3 |

Go To Top