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Albert Camus, shaped by his impoverished Algerian upbringing and participation in the French Resistance during World War II, possessed an intimate understanding of both oppression and liberation. This experience profoundly informed his philosophical inquiries, particularly concerning the tension between existential freedom and the necessary constraints of discipline. Witnessing the moral compromises and brutal realities of war forced Camus to confront whether absolute freedom, untethered from responsibility and ethical frameworks, ultimately descends into nihilism. His reflections explore how self-imposed and societal disciplines can provide a crucial scaffolding for meaning and action, preventing the absurd from collapsing into utter despair.
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