Thursday, February 14, 2019

Choice and Individual Freedom in The Stranger (The Outsider) :: Camus Stranger Essays

Choice and person Freedom in The Stranger         Camuss The Stranger is a grim employment that choice and individual emancipation are integral components of human nature, and the committedness and responsibility that accompany these elements are ultimately the deciding ciphers of the morality of ones existence.  Meursault is located in an in assorted world, a world that embraces absurdity and persecutes reason such(prenominal) is the nature of existentialist belief, that rationalization and logic are ultimately the heart of humanity, and that societal premonitions and an irrelevant status quo serve only to perpetuate a false sense of truth.         Meursaults virtue, as well as his undoing, lies in his alone(predicate) tendency to choose, and thereby exist, without computing objective standards or universal sentiment.  His  stoic, de facto existential philosophy is a catalyst for endless conflict between his rationalization- and logic-establish existence and that of others, which focuses on an objective subscription to the norm such is evident in heated discussions with the magistrate and prison minister, who are seen as paragons of invalid logic and the quixotic, quasi-passionate pursuit of hackneyed conformity.         No windmills are slain1 in this simulated existence absurdity of a different ilk dominates the popular mentality, one which would alienate a man found on his perceived indifference towards the mundane, and try, convict, and execute a man based on his lack of purported empathy towards the irrelevant. Attention to the trial sequence will get wind that the key elements of the conviction had little to do with the actual crime Meursault had committed, still rather  the unspeakable atrocities he had committed while in bereavement of his mothers death, which consisted of smoking a cigarette, drinking a cup of coffee, and failin g to wawl or appear sufficiently distraught.  Indeed, the deformed misconception of moral truth which the dialog box society seeks is based on a detached, objective observation of right or wrong, thereby misrepresenting the ideals of justice by failing to recognize that personal freedom and choice are ...the essence of individual existence and the deciding factor of ones morality.2         The execution of Meursault at the close of the novel symbolically brings

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