Harbal wrote: ↑Sun Sep 17, 2017 8:45 pm
Anyone who imagines they have objective purpose in the World/Universe/God's creation is suffering a delusion, yes, I believe so.
I think we agree. "Imagining" an objective purpose would be to delude oneself.
I imagine I may well be happier if I did feel a sense of purpose, albeit a self imposed one, but I don't see where courage comes into it.
Well, Camus thought that it took a certain amount of fortitude to admit to oneself that there was no ultimate meaning or ultimate purpose to life. (Mind you, I don't know why he then thought "courage" was a good thing. Because in such a world, there are no objective values either. He must have been speaking emotionally, I suppose. He can't have been speaking objectively.)
And if there is no Creator, then Camus is right. Inventing a "purpose" or "meaning," is inauthentic, dishonest, and self-deluding,
I don't see what's dishonest about it, or at least it doesn't have to be dishonest. One could do voluntary work for a charity because it gives one a personal sense of purpose, in the full knowledge that it is entirely a subjective matter for oneself, what would be dishonest about that?
It would depend on how the charitable person thought about it. If you were working for the charity because that was your preference, Camus would have no problem with that. But if you started telling yourself something like, "Helping the poor is an objectively morally good thing, and my life is meaningful because human beings have intrinsic value, and I'm serving them," then Camus would call cheat and claim it's "intellectual suicide" to take refuge in such delusions.
We are all, he said, like the mythical Sisyphus, just rolling rocks up hills.
If I were feeling confrontational I may well point out that inventing a Creator is rather dishonest, but I'm not, so I won't.
And yet, I would agree.
in that case, and will only form an illusionary barrier between the "condemned to be free" (Sartre) agent and the true reality he or she inhabits, limiting his or her ability to choose freely. It would be the opiate of the Atheist.
I'm afraid your intellectual superiority has got the better of me here, IC, I can't respond to this because I have no idea what it means. All I can say about it is that it is similar to the Marx quote about religion being the opium of the masses, or something like that.
Oh, sorry...not trying to be like that. Camus thought that we all had to be hard-nosed about reality, and not pretend that it had any meaning or purpose given in advance. He also thought we had to be quite honest about death ending all, if that's what we thought was true. The problem with not facing the facts, he thought, was that it would make us unrealistic about what was really going on in our lives, and thus make us blind to the real options we might have. It was, he thought, a kind of running away from our freedom, a hiding from our responsibility to make our own lives according to our own choices, rather than according to some given "meaning" or ultimate "purpose."
In a sense, then, he was saying that to imagine things like objective meaning and purpose was really a kind of drug, an opiate -- but in this case, for those who believe there's no God, but can't face the coldness and terror of life without objective meaning and purpose.
Given your willingness to face facts as Camus perceived them to be, he'd have probably slapped you on the back and said, "Good lad"; but he'd have had nothing but contempt for any Atheist who said that in spite of their accidental origins, the happenstances of life and the impending extinction at death, they still could have objective meaning and purpose. He would regard that as a stupefying delusion.