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Glossary›Philosophical Suicide

Glossary

Philosophical Suicide

A term coined by Albert Camus for evading the absurd condition of human existence by appealing to transcendent meaning, faith, or systems that deny reason.

What is Philosophical Suicide?

Philosophical suicide is the act of performing a leap of faith—suspending rationality to believe things that go beyond the limits of reason. Albert Camus used this term to describe the movement by which a thought negates itself and tends to transcend itself in its very negation. Rather than confronting the fundamental tension between humanity’s search for meaning and the universe’s silence, philosophical suicide seeks to elude meaninglessness by creating illusory transcendental values.

The term is central to Camus’s philosophy of the absurd: the absurd lies in the juxtaposition between the fundamental human need to attribute meaning to life and the “unreasonable silence” of the universe in response. For Camus, philosophical suicide represents a refusal to live with this tension—an intellectual escape route that abandons the confrontation with existence as it actually is.

Origins & Lineage

The Myth of Sisyphus (French: Le mythe de Sisyphe) is a 1942 philosophical work by Albert Camus. Camus began work on a planned triptych on the Absurd: a novel (The Stranger), a philosophical essay (The Myth of Sisyphus), and a play (Caligula), which were completed and sent from Algeria to a Paris publisher in September 1941; The Stranger was published in June 1942 and The Myth of Sisyphus in October.

Influenced by philosophers such as Søren Kierkegaard, Arthur Schopenhauer, and Friedrich Nietzsche, Camus introduces his philosophy of the absurd. Albert Camus (1913–1960) was a journalist, editor, playwright, novelist, and political essayist who ignored or opposed systematic philosophy, had little faith in rationalism, and brooded over such questions as the meaning of life in the face of death.

Camus characterized several philosophies by Martin Heidegger, Karl Jaspers, Lev Shestov, Søren Kierkegaard, and Edmund Husserl, claiming all commit “philosophical suicide” by reaching conclusions that contradict the original absurd position—either by abandoning reason and turning to God (Kierkegaard and Shestov) or by elevating reason and arriving at Platonic forms and an abstract god (Husserl).

How It’s Practiced

Philosophical suicide manifests in multiple forms. Jaspers claims to find transcendence by means of a totally illogical leap just at the point where reason breaks down; Chestov asserts that the absurd is God, suggesting we need God to help us deal with the impossible and incomprehensible; Kierkegaard is famous for making the “leap of faith” into God, where he identifies the irrational with faith and with God.

Husserl is a more complicated case, as his phenomenology deals only with direct experience and seems to embrace the absurd, but he then tries to associate some sort of transcendental essences with the simple phenomena he discusses. Kierkegaard does not seek to keep the absurd in full view, but wants to be “cured” of it by faith, whereas Camus instead wants to find a way of living in that state of the absurd.

In practical terms, philosophical suicide occurs whenever someone responds to existential anxiety or meaninglessness by adopting beliefs that claim access to ultimate meaning—whether through organized religion, spiritual revelation, or rational systems that promise final answers.

Philosophical Suicide Today

While the term emerged from mid-20th-century existentialism, the concept remains relevant in contemporary spiritual and philosophical discourse. Seekers encounter philosophical suicide when exploring:

  • New Age spirituality that promises access to cosmic meaning through channeling, energy work, or ascended masters
  • Fundamentalist interpretations of religious traditions that claim absolute certainty
  • Rationalist philosophies that construct totalizing systems explaining all phenomena
  • Self-help movements that guarantee purpose through prescribed frameworks

The tension Camus identified persists: humans continue to seek meaning in what he considered an inherently meaningless universe. Contemporary philosophy departments, retreat centers, and spiritual communities grapple with whether meaning must be discovered (implying it exists independently) or created (acknowledging the absurd).

Common Misconceptions

Philosophical suicide is not synonymous with religious faith itself. Camus’s critique targeted specific philosophical moves—the use of faith to escape confronting the absurd, not faith as lived practice. Many religious practitioners embrace paradox and uncertainty rather than claiming absolute certainty.

Philosophical suicide is not the same as physical suicide. Camus identifies two possible methods of escape from the absurd: physical suicide and philosophical suicide. Both represent evasions, but through opposite means—one eliminates the seeker, the other invents false comfort.

Philosophical suicide does not mean rejecting all meaning. Camus counsels an intensely conscious and active non-resolution; rejecting any hope of resolving the strain is also to reject despair. “The struggle itself toward the heights is enough to fill a man’s heart. One must imagine Sisyphus happy”.

The term is not inherently pejorative, though Camus used it critically. Camus wrote: “this does not imply a judgment”. Many philosophers and practitioners consciously choose faith traditions while acknowledging they involve leaps beyond pure reason.

How to Begin

To understand philosophical suicide:

  1. Read the source text: The Myth of Sisyphus by Albert Camus (1942), particularly the essay “An Absurd Reasoning: Philosophical Suicide.” The English translation by Justin O’Brien (1955) is widely available.

  2. Study the thinkers Camus critiques: Explore Kierkegaard’s Fear and Trembling, which examines faith and Abraham’s sacrifice, to understand what Camus meant by “leap of faith.”

  3. Examine contemporary responses: Philosophy courses on existentialism and absurdism regularly address whether Camus’s critique holds. Search for academic discussions of “Camus and religious faith” or “absurdism vs. existentialism.”

  4. Notice the pattern in your own thinking: When confronting uncertainty or meaninglessness, observe whether you reach for transcendent explanations that promise resolution versus sitting with the tension itself.

  5. Engage with the philosophical debate: Neither Camus’s position nor that of Kierkegaard represents consensus. The question of whether meaning exists to be found or must be created remains unresolved in Western philosophy.

Related terms

absurdismexistentialismnihilismleap of faiththe absurdexistential crisis
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