The puts that absurd is a quality or condition of existing in a meaningless and irrational world, the incompatibility of man and the world, yet they are inseparable (Gilbert G Hardy, 1979, Happiness beyond the Absurd, p372). We live in an absurd and irrational world and suicide is the first impulse to end the absurd, towards the revolt it would seem, yet Camus feels different. He feels that suicide “Is confessing that life is too much for you...that you have realised that the uselessness of suffering and absence of any profound reasoning for the continuance of life” (Camus, 1955, Myth of Sisyphus, p179). He sees suicide as eluding the problem of the absurd, escaping from it the extreme measure of escape. To revolt against the absurd we have to keep living it, to contemplate it, a constant confrontation between man and his obscurity (Camus, 1955, Myth of Sisyphus, p183). The revolt gives life its value, what we want from the world meaning, values and eternal
References: Camus, Albert Myth of Sisyphus 1955, Translated by Justin O’Brian Egan, David. SparkNote on The Myth of Sisyphus, 7 May, 2009 <http://www.sparknotes.com/philosophy/sisyphus>. Hardy, Gilbert G Happiness Beyond the Absurd: The Existentialist Quest of Camus Article from Philosophy Today, Win 1979, P 367 – 379