Here's the problem.
In Plato's mind, the true reality, whatever it maybe, has an intrinsic value that makes it worthwhile. Plato makes no mention of the impact of true reality i.e. it's safe to say that true reality, in and of itself, is, arguably, priceless no matter what that truth is, or what it entails. In other words, living a life that's true, experiencing true reality, is meaningful.
Camus, in his philosophical investigations, arrived at a truth, managed to grasp true reality, the true reality of our meaningless existence.
In short, Plato's take is that life in true reality is meaningful. A truth as per Camus is that life in true reality is meaningless. Paradox! :chin: — TheMadFool
In short, Plato's take is that life in true reality is meaningful. A truth as per Camus is that life in true reality is meaningless. Paradox! :chin: — TheMadFool
In short, Plato's take is that life in true reality is meaningful. A truth as per Camus is that life in true reality is meaningless. Paradox! :chin: — TheMadFool
If there is meaning in a life that is lived with congruency to the 'true reality' Plato is referring to, how would we know? — The Questioning Bookworm
Prejudices of Philosophers — The Questioning Bookworm
I think Camus's 'true reality' would be to acknowledge that there are paradoxes in nature as well as from our relationship between our desire/impulse for clarity and the universe, therefore, meaningless. — The Questioning Bookworm
How do we know if there is meaning or not? That is such a bold claim for any philosopher or any thinker, and it is merely a view on either side — The Questioning Bookworm
how does anyone know if there is meaning or not? — The Questioning Bookworm
A consideration not an answer (because I do not know the answer). Plato's concern with the reality of the natural world as he understood it, Camus's with a moral world as he understood it. In short, two subjects independent of each other. Yes? (And your OP the kind we'd all benefit from having more of - ty!) — tim wood
reflecting on some of the worst truths — Jack Cummins
I don't see a paradox here, as long as paradox means an impossibility to believe both at the same time and in the same respect — god must be atheist
Plato thinks the real world is a world of perfect, everlasting, ideals — god must be atheist
Camus does not deny the existence of ideals, as he makes no claim about reality (other than that it's impossible to learn). — god must be atheist
Plato makes no suggestion that anyone has ever gone to and came back from the real world to our shadow world; he offers no transportational methods how to explore the world of ideals. He beleives we can discover and explore that world, but it's a theoretical beleif, without any physical supporting evidence. — god must be atheist
If something has no supportive evidence to its credit that makes it available to belief that it exists, then that thing is a dogma/heuristic/superstion and has nothing to do with whether it exists or not. Therefore making claims abou that world's specfics is an insane hoax. — god must be atheist
In short, Plato's take is that life in true reality is meaningful. A truth as per Camus is that life in true reality is meaningless. Paradox — TheMadFool
There is no paradox — David Mo
Plato's myth of the cavern is a myth-poetic metaphor. It should not be interpreted literally. (tale or legend) Plato wants to explain his concept of reality with this myth. He believes that the world we see through the senses is not real but a bad copy of reality (like shadows). True reality is a world of forms or ideas that exists on a different plane. Man can only reach it if he gets rid of the world that we see through the senses and thinks only through reason. That is why true reality is not made of colours, sounds, passions, material pleasures or pain, but is that which can be expressed in like-mathematical terms. That is the one that makes sense, the other one does not. — David Mo
it is not so easy to get to the happy side of it all that you believe that Camus reached — Jack Cummins
The world of fiction, reading or writing it, can itself be a form of escape or analysis. But in a way, perhaps it can be liberating, free from the tyranny of logic. — Jack Cummins
Fool, don't just read the essays preceding the eponymous "Myth of Sisyphus", study them.I'm unaware of the reasoning that led up to Camus' statement, "One must imagine Sisyphus happy". Camus didn't claim that Sisyphus is happy but that we must imagine that he is. — TheMadFool
No paradox. Different philosophies, as pointed out, but the same philosophical exercise of making (a) truth meaningful by living (or striving to live by) that truth.As I said, I'm taking Plato's help only to show that, in philosophy, truth is valuable and living by it is meaningful. Camus claims, and as it turns out rightly so, that one such truth is life is meaningless but, as I already mentioned above, living by that truth, Camus', is meaningful in Platonic terms.This is the paradox. — TheMadFool
As I said, I'm taking Plato's help only to show that, in philosophy, truth is valuable and living by it is meaningful. — TheMadFool
I'm unaware of the reasoning that led up to Camus' statement, "One must imagine Sisyphus happy". — TheMadFool
It is not a paradox. I agree. But Camus' reproach to Plato and rationalism is that it substitutes life for abstract thinking. It is a vitalist point of view, although it is not an irrationalist absolute like other classical vitalists.No paradox. Different philosophies, as pointed out, but the same philosophical exercise of making (a) truth meaningful by living (or striving to live) that truth. — 180 Proof
"It was previously a question of finding out whether or not life had to have a meaning to be lived. It now becomes clear on the contrary that it will be lived all the better if it has no meaning." ~Albert Camus — 180 Proof
Fool, don't just read the essays preceding the eponymous "Myth of Sisyphus", study them. — 180 Proof
One defies fate (or "the gods") with the only thing one has, which cannot be taken (only given) away: integrity; thus, "we must imagine" - as Camus says, "To create is to live twice" - "Sisyphus" our avatar "happy" as he affirms what annihilates him by defying it without succumbing to "nostalgia" (i.e. fear or hope). — 180 Proof
By the way, do you have any opinions on what kinds of prejudices might've affected Camus? — TheMadFool
Combining their views, Camus' truth, his assessment of true reality, is that life is meaningless but this, if it is a truth, if it is true reality, according to Plato has a value despite what it says and is in that sense meaningful. To get to the point, the Camusian truth that life is meaningless is Platonically what a meaningful life is. :chin: — TheMadFool
My take on this is that no one can, more accurately, no one has answered the questions, "why do I exist?", "Why am I here?" That there are no answers to this question is the basis for Camus' claim that life is meaningless. — TheMadFool
Do you know of any prejudices that you'd like to share? — The Questioning Bookworm
For both, however, I can see how knowing of concentration camps, gulags, violence against political opposition, and witnessing some of these atrocities could strengthen their views that life is meaningless and how the world or state in which someone may live would be hostile directly to its human subjects (Man's Search for Meaning?) — The Questioning Bookworm
there is no way to know for certain if life being meaningless is 'true reality' or not. — The Questioning Bookworm
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