Doesn't the sense of nausea originate with that sense of the unreality of everything? That we're 'thrown' into a meaningless cosmos, from which we alone are obliged to create meaning where really there is none. — Wayfarer
I can't say that I feel relieved or satisfied; just the opposite. I am crushed. Only my goal is reached. I have understood all that has happened to me since January. The Nausea has not left me and I don't believe it will leave me soon; but I no longer have to bear it, it is no longer an illness or a passing fit; it is I.
...I couldn't remember it was a root anymore. The words had vanished and with them the significance of things...It left me breathless. Never, until these last few days, had I understood the meaning of "existence". I said..."The ocean is green; that white speck up there is a seagull," but I didn't feel that it existed...usually existence hides itself...
...existence had suddenly unveiled itself....the chestnut tree pressed itself against my eyes... — Sartre
The word absurdity is coming to life under my pen; a little while ago, in the garden, I couldn't find it, but neither was I looking for it. I didn't need it: I thought without words, on things, with things. — Sartre
It seems as though Roquentin is having a kind of illumination, a positive revelation of the reality of the universe, whereas prior to his communion with the Nausea, he existed in a state of dull unreality.
Roquentin, who is searching of the meaning of existence, cannot find anything because any meaningful connection he experiences is of him. He is assaulted by Nausea in finding all the things he expects to be meaningful are not. In removing what he put with existence as it appears to him, he finds an empty world. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Sartre's notion of the absurd springs from what to his view was a revelation of existence, a revelation of "the absolute" - a deeper contact with reality - in some sense linked to the mystical quest for enlightenment - at times also formulated as "the absolute." — ZzzoneiroCosm
Ridding oneself of nausea by listening to jazz is not at all unreasonable, although I find blues and folk rock more agreeable — Banno
I take it as basically a form of nihilism. — Wayfarer
. So the reference to ‘the absolute’ is ironic, because in Sartre’s view, this is precisely what doesn’t exist, or holds no significance or reality; the quest for enlightenment must always end in disappointment, because there is none to be had. — Wayfarer
About a year before the writing of Nausea, Sartre took mescalin. Mlle de Beauvoir says: 'He had not exactly had hallucinations, but the objects he looked at changed their appearance in the most horrifying manner; umbrellas had become vultures, shoes turned into skeletons, and faces acquired monstrous characteristics, while behind him, just past the corners of his eye, swarmed crabs and polyps and grimacing Things...His visual faculties became distorted; houses had leering faces, all eyes, jaws...'...[contrasted with what Huxley saw, as described in The Doors of Perception]...'what Adam saw on the morning of his first creation - the miracle, moment by moment, of naked existence.' — Colin Wilson - Beyond the Outsider, p. 104
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