But then, suicide itself creates meaning - why? — Banno
I found this a week ago on Google Books while searching for the term
sacrificium intellectus:
“From this point of departure he proceeds to his critique of the different ways of ‘philosophical suicide’, which he characterizes as so many ways of speculative evasion. All existential thinkers quoted by Camus have realized the futility of reason, all them are seen to have recourse to some transcendent entity as
raison d’être: Husserl to his ‘extratemporal essences’ of innumerable phenomena, Chestov and Kierkegaard to a deity whose loftiness consists precisely of His incomprehensibility, indeed in His inconsistency, arbitrariness, inhumanity. Chestov is quoted as saying: ‘We address our-selves to God only to obtain the impossible; as to the possible, humans suffice.’ Such deity, to Camus, shows all the features of the absurd; He demands, in the old way, the
sacrificium intellectus. In point of fact, it could be said that Tertullian’s
credo quia absurdum has arrived, in the modern situation, at a
vivo quia absurdum. ... Camus rejects the ‘philosophical suicide’; he refuses to accept any transcendent ... but seeks to remain within the pale of this world and to maintain himself on his scarce certitudes. He like-wise discards ... physical suicide, because this also, in its ultimate consequence, resolves, dissolves the absurd, implying acceptance. ‘The point is, to die irreconciled and not of one’s own accord.’” – Erich Kahler,
The Tower and the Abyss (1957) (available free on Google Books).
From this, I would say that first, Banno is correct in that Camus might not have considered himself an existentialist (and Erich Kahler may agree as well), and second that (in Khaler's reading) suicide does not create meaning in Camus' mind, rather, it "resolves, dissolves the absurd, implying acceptance." Is resolution, dissolution, and acceptance the same as creating meaning?
On the other side of this however, are we talking about creating meaning for the deceased or for the living? It seems kind of absurd (irony intended) to say that meaning has been created for the deceased by the act of suicide. But perhaps meaning can be created for the living (e.g., martyrs) by suicide?