Up@dawn 2.0

Wednesday, March 4, 2020

Sisyphus animated



4 comments:

  1. Hmm. Artfully done, yes, but I'm not sure that I like the mountain being made up of all the pushed rocks. That they stay there to form a mountain suggests a greater permanence for our meaning-making struggle, a permanence that I've always understood Camus as negating. In the short, the effort is certainly great and it doesn't end, but it does seem to be amounting to something. A little too generous metaphysic, I think. A neat take artistically, though!

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    1. I'll add my "Hmm"... but I'm not sure about the mountain's impermanence, except in the same sense in which life itself is impermanent. While we're here and filling our hearts with the struggle, our rocks do accumulate. No?

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  2. But, the rocks didn't accumulate for Sisyphus. The same stone rolled down that he rolled up. The futility of the task is the punishment, right? Because we aren't afraid of hard work; we're afraid of accomplishing nothing.
    At least that's one take. I have questions about Camus's take, and I'll bring that up in my presentation.

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    1. Right, but he keeps pushing. His heart is full. Life is good.

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