If Sisyphus was a Stoic or Buddhist, he might just focus on the job at hand --- rolling the rock --- and not worry about the secondary issue of keeping it at the top of the hill. The practice of Mindfulness may not bring ecstatic "peak experience" happiness, but it could allow enduring contentment : Shantih = peace.Do you think the existence of 1 + 2 above in today's society makes it impossible to fill your heart with the struggle itself? — living-sisyphus
That's interesting! Did Camus admit to this paradox? As far as I read it, he was suggesting that - having acknowledged the absurdity of his situation (analogous to, lets say, being stuck in a boring/meaningless office job) - Sisyphus reaches a state of contented acceptance. I suspect this state would be somewhat different from him trying to imagine (i.e. fool himself) that he is happy, when he knows he's not.
Is that state of contented acceptance something that people have actually experienced? ...and is it possible to experience this when you have doubts about having chosen the right thing to do (at any point in time) and the right way to do it? — living-sisyphus
Is it that you're suggesting contentment does not require the absence of choice? — living-sisyphus
It is not a matter of right or wrong choices, it is a matter of making the best choices as they seem at the time and then learning from their consequences; life moves ever onwards.However, there is always doubt that you've chosen the right thing. And there's always someone saying that you're doing the wrong thing. — living-sisyphus
Yes. "Acceptance" is a basic doctrine of Buddhism and of Stoicism. In meditation, if doubts arise, you simply observe them non-judgmentally and allow them to fade away. A key to Acceptance & Contentment is the counter-intuitive notion of Non-self. If Sisyphus could reach Nirvana, his struggle to reach the top of the hill would be over.Is that state of contented acceptance something that people have actually experienced? ...and is it possible to experience this when you have doubts about having chosen the right thing to do (at any point in time) and the right way to do it? — living-sisyphus
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.