The Myth of Sisyphus: And Other Essays |
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Page 22
... deserts . *** I already know that thought has at least entered those deserts . There it found its bread . There it ... desert . It will suffice to enu- merate them . They , too , are known to all today . There have always been men to ...
... deserts . *** I already know that thought has at least entered those deserts . There it found its bread . There it ... desert . It will suffice to enu- merate them . They , too , are known to all today . There have always been men to ...
Page 157
And Other Essays Albert Camus. 157 TH HERE ARE no more deserts . There are no more islands . Yet there is a need for ... desert with flags and fallen glories . So it is with certain Spanish towns , with Florence or with Prague . Salzburg ...
And Other Essays Albert Camus. 157 TH HERE ARE no more deserts . There are no more islands . Yet there is a need for ... desert with flags and fallen glories . So it is with certain Spanish towns , with Florence or with Prague . Salzburg ...
Page 158
... desert itself has assumed significance ; it has been glutted with poetry . For all the world's sorrows it is a hallowed spot . But at certain moments the heart wants nothing so much as spots devoid of poetry . Descartes , planning to ...
... desert itself has assumed significance ; it has been glutted with poetry . For all the world's sorrows it is a hallowed spot . But at certain moments the heart wants nothing so much as spots devoid of poetry . Descartes , planning to ...
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Common terms and phrases
absurd mind actor Albert Camus Algiers artist aspect assertion attitude aware Bab-el-Oued beauty becomes called Castle character Chenoua Chestov conqueror consciousness consequences contradiction contrary creation creator death desert despair divine Don Juan Dostoevsky earth Erinyes essay essential eternal everyday everything existence existential experience face fact fate feel Franz Kafka freedom give happiness heart hope human humiliated Husserl idea illusion indifference irrational judge Kafka Kierkegaard Kirilov leap least light likewise limits live logic lucidity madness man's meaning merely metaphysical Minotaur Molière Myth Myth of Sisyphus negates never Nietzsche night nobility nostalgia notion one's oneself Oran Oranese paradox passion perhaps phenomenologists philosophy Plotinus problem reality reason recognize revolt Rudolph Ruzicka secret seems silence Sisyphus solely soul speak spiritual stone suicide sure theme thing thought tion Tipasa transcends true truth understand universe whole
References to this book
Cognition and Emotion: From Order to Disorder Michael J. Power,Tim Dalgleish No preview available - 2008 |