Albert Camus and Rachel Bespaloff: Happiness in a Challenging World

Open Philosophy 7 (1):335-63 (2024)
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Abstract

Albert Camus and Rachel Bespaloff had an undeniable influence on the existential thought of the twentieth century. The former, by claiming the world to be silent to our search for meaning, based the concept of happiness in the inherent value of life. The latter grounded her happiness in music and transcendence rather than in the acceptance of the absurd human condition, though the two thinkers seem to agree on the importance of subjective contemplation. In this article, I will offer a reading of Camus’s works that emphasizes his view of happiness in awareness of the absurd. I will then argue for the ethical and political challenges that such happiness causes. Finally, by putting into dialogue the philosophies of Camus and Bespaloff, I wish to show that the two thinkers advocate for the possibility of happiness despite the suffering of the world, and show that this concept, understood as contemplation, can be rooted in the absurd as well as in transcendence.

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Le mythe de Sisyphe.Albert Camus - 1948 - Zeitschrift für Philosophische Forschung 2 (4):619-622.
Notes sur la Répétition de Kierkegaard.R. Bespaloff & P. H. Tisseau - 1934 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 117 (5/6):335 - 363.

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