Camus, Albert
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Camus, Albert
1913-1960 French Existential Writer
Man is the only creature who refuses to be what he is.
Camus, Albert
Dissatisfaction
A novel is never anything, but a philosophy put into images.
Camus, Albert
Books - Reading
You can t create experience. You must undergo it.
Camus, Albert
Experience
Integrity has no need of rules.
Camus, Albert
Character
We are not certain, we are never certain. If we were we could reach some conclusions, and we could, at last, make others take us seriously.
Camus, Albert
Certainty
What the world requires of the Christians is that they should continue to be Christians.
Camus, Albert
Christians and Christianity
Charm is a way of getting the answer yes without having asked any clear question.
Camus, Albert
Charm
There will be no lasting peace either in the heart of individuals or in social customs until death is outlawed.
Camus, Albert
Death and Dying
To those who despair of everything reason cannot provide a faith, but only passion, and in this case it must be the same passion that lay at the root of the despair, namely humiliation and hatred.
Camus, Albert
Despair
Men are convinced of your arguments, your sincerity, and the seriousness of your efforts only by your death.
Camus, Albert
Death and Dying
Men are never really willing to die except for the sake of freedom: therefore they do not believe in dying completely.
Camus, Albert
Death and Dying
Culture: the cry of men in face of their destiny.
Camus, Albert
Culture
Without culture, and the relative freedom it implies, society, even when perfect, is but a jungle. This is why any authentic creation is a gift to the future.
Camus, Albert
Culture
We used to wonder where war lived, what it was that made it so vile. And now we realize that we know where it lives, that it is inside ourselves.
Camus, Albert
Peace
Whereas the Greeks gave to will the boundaries of reason, we have come to put the will s impulse in the very center of reason, which has, as a result, become deadly.
Camus, Albert
Free Will
In our wildest aberrations we dream of an equilibrium we have left behind and which we naively expect to find at the end of our errors. Childish presumption which justifies the fact that child-nations, inheriting our follies, are now directing our history.
Camus, Albert
History and Historians
We all carry within us our places of exile, our crimes, and our ravages. But our task is not to unleash them on the world; it is to fight them in ourselves and in others.
Camus, Albert
Fallibility
Alas after a certain age, every man is responsible for his own face.
Camus, Albert
Faces
Without freedom, no art; art lives only on the restraints it imposes on itself, and dies of all others. But without freedom, no socialism either, except the socialism of the gallows.
Camus, Albert
Freedom
The only conception of freedom I can have is that of the prisoner or the individual in the midst of the State. The only one I know is freedom of thought and action.
Camus, Albert
Freedom
Freedom is nothing else but a chance to be better.
Camus, Albert
Freedom
Absolute virtue is impossible and the republic of forgiveness leads, with implacable logic, to the republic of the guillotine.
Camus, Albert
Forgiveness
By definition, a government has no conscience. Sometimes it has a policy, but nothing more.
Camus, Albert
Government
When you have once seen the glow of happiness on the face of a beloved person, you know that a man can have no vocation but to awaken that light on the faces surrounding him; and you are torn by the thought of the unhappiness and night you cast, by the mere fact of living, in the hearts you encounter.
Camus, Albert
Happiness
It is normal to give away a little of one s life in order not to lose it all.
Camus, Albert
Giving
Don t walk in front of me, I may not follow; Don t walk behind me, I may not lead; Walk beside me, and just be my friend.
Camus, Albert
Friends and Friendship
To be happy we must not be too concerned with others.
Camus, Albert
Happiness
But what is happiness except the simple harmony between a person and life they lead.
Camus, Albert
Happiness
More and more, when faced with the world of men, the only reaction is one of individualism. Man alone is an end unto himself. Everything one tries to do for the common good ends in failure.
Camus, Albert
Individuality
All great deeds and all great thoughts have a ridiculous beginning.
Camus, Albert
Greatness
A free press can, of course, be good or bad, but, most certainly without freedom, the press will never be anything but bad.
Camus, Albert
Media
To live is to hurt others, and through others, to hurt oneself. Cruel earth! How can we manage not to touch anything? To find what ultimate exile?
Camus, Albert
Injury
Children will still die unjustly even in a perfect society. Even by his greatest effort, man can only propose to diminish, arithmetically, the sufferings of the world.
Camus, Albert
Injustice
The innocent is the person who explains nothing.
Camus, Albert
Innocence
Martyrs, my friend, have to choose between being forgotten, mocked or used. As for being understood -- never.
Camus, Albert
Martyrdom
Just as all thought, and primarily that of non-signification, signifies something, so there is no art that has no signification.
Camus, Albert
Meaning of Life
There s no need to hang about waiting for the last judgment. It takes place every day.
Camus, Albert
Judgment and Judges
The world is never quiet, even its silence eternally resounds with the same notes, in vibrations which escape our ears. As for those that we perceive, they carry sounds to us, occasionally a chord, never a melody.
Camus, Albert
Noise
Instead of killing and dying in order to produce the being that we are not, we have to live and let live in order to create what we are.
Camus, Albert
Ideals and Idealism
Accept life, take it as it is? Stupid. The means of doing otherwise? Far from our having to take it, it is life that possesses us and on occasion shuts our mouths.
Camus, Albert
Life and Living
We get into the habit of living before acquiring the habit of thinking. In that race which daily hastens us towards death, the body maintains its irreparable lead.
Camus, Albert
Life and Living
Only a philosophy of eternity, in the world today, could justify non-violence.
Camus, Albert
Nonviolence
Real generosity toward the future lies in giving all to the present.
Camus, Albert
Life and Living
From Paul to Stalin, the popes who have chosen Caesar have prepared the way for Caesars who quickly learn to despise popes.
Camus, Albert
Power
Men must live and create. Live to the point of tears.
Camus, Albert
Life and Living
If, after all, men cannot always make history have meaning, they can always act so that their own lives have one.
Camus, Albert
Life and Living
Those who weep for the happy periods which they encounter in history acknowledge what they want; not the alleviation but the silencing of misery.
Camus, Albert
Nostalgia
The desire for possession is insatiable, to such a point that it can survive even love itself. To love, therefore, is to sterilize the person one loves.
Camus, Albert
Love
Whoever today speaks of human existence in terms of power, efficiency, and historical tasks is an actual or potential assassin.
Camus, Albert
Ideology
Man wants to live, but it is useless to hope that this desire will dictate all his actions.
Camus, Albert
Life, Lust For
Methods of thought which claim to give the lead to our world in the name of revolution have become, in reality, ideologies of consent and not of rebellion.
Camus, Albert
Ideology
To abandon oneself to principles is really to die -- and to die for an impossible love which is the contrary of love.
Camus, Albert
Principles
The principles which men give to themselves end by overwhelming their noblest intentions.
Camus, Albert
Principles
Politics and the fate of mankind are shaped by men without ideals and without greatness. Men who have greatness within them don t go in for politics.
Camus, Albert
Politicians and Politics
The myth of unlimited production brings war in its train as inevitably as clouds announce a storm.
Camus, Albert
Production
To correct a natural indifference I was placed half-way between misery and the sun. Misery kept me from believing that all was well under the sun, and the sun taught me that history wasn t everything.
Camus, Albert
Misers and Misery
If only nature is real and if, in nature, only desire and destruction are legitimate, then, in that all humanity does not suffice to assuage the thirst for blood, the path of destruction must lead to universal annihilation.
Camus, Albert
Nature
The modern mind is in complete disarray. Knowledge has stretched itself to the point where neither the world nor our intelligence can find any foot-hold. It is a fact that we are suffering from nihilism.
Camus, Albert
Modern and Modernism
It is a kind of spiritual snobbery that makes people think they can be happy without money.
Camus, Albert
Money
The society of merchants can be defined as a society in which things disappear in favor of signs. When a ruling class measures its fortunes, not by the acre of land or the ingot of gold, but by the number of figures corresponding ideally to a certain number of exchange operations, it thereby condemns itself to setting a certain kind of humbug at the center of its experience and its universe. A society founded on signs is, in its essence, an artificial society in which man s carnal truth is handled as something artificial.
Camus, Albert
Symbols
Those who lack the courage will always find a philosophy to justify it.
Camus, Albert
Philosophers and Philosophy
To assert in any case that a man must be absolutely cut off from society because he is absolutely evil amounts to saying that society is absolutely good, and no-one in his right mind will believe this today.
Camus, Albert
Prison
After all, every murderer when he kills runs the risk of the most dreadful of deaths, whereas those who kill him risk nothing except promotion.
Camus, Albert
Murder
If Christianity is pessimistic as to man, it is optimistic as to human destiny. Well, I can say that, pessimistic as to human destiny, I am optimistic as to man.
Camus, Albert
Optimism
Truly fertile Music, the only kind that will move us, that we shall truly appreciate, will be a Music conducive to Dream, which banishes all reason and analysis. One must not wish first to understand and then to feel. Art does not tolerate Reason.
Camus, Albert
Music
God put self-pity by the side of despair like the cure by the side of the disease.
Camus, Albert
Pity
Work is nothing but the slow trek to rediscover, through the detours of art, those two or three great images in whose presence [His Or Her] heart first opened.
Camus, Albert
Work
In the depth of winter I finally learned that within me there lay an invincible summer.
Camus, Albert
Potential
In default of inexhaustible happiness, eternal suffering would at least give us a destiny. But we do not even have that consolation, and our worst agonies come to an end one day.
Camus, Albert
Suffering
The Poor Man whom everyone speaks of, the Poor Man whom everyone pities, one of the repulsive Poor from whom charitable souls keep their distance, he has still said nothing. Or, rather, he has spoken through the voice of Victor Hugo, Zola, Richepin. At least, they said so. And these shameful impostures fed their authors. Cruel irony, the Poor Man tormented with hunger feeds those who plead his case.
Camus, Albert
Poverty and The Poor
It is a well-known fact that we always recognize our homeland when we are about to lose it.
Camus, Albert
Nationalities and Nationalism
The society based on production is only productive, not creative.
Camus, Albert
Production
We come into the world laden with the weight of an infinite necessity.
Camus, Albert
Necessity
There is but one truly serious philosophical problem and that is suicide. Judging whether life is or is not worth living amounts to answering the fundamental question of philosophy. All the rest -- whether or not the world has three dimensions, whether the mind has nine or twelve categories -- comes afterwards. These are games; one must first answer.
Camus, Albert
Suicide
Revolution, in order to be creative, cannot do without either a moral or metaphysical rule to balance the insanity of history.
Camus, Albert
Revolutions and Revolutionaries
Every revolutionary ends up by becoming either an oppressor or a heretic.
Camus, Albert
Revolutions and Revolutionaries
We call first truths those we discover after all the others.
Camus, Albert
Truth
Our civilization survives in the complacency of cowardly or malignant minds -- a sacrifice to the vanity of aging adolescents. In 1953, excess is always a comfort, and sometimes a career.
Camus, Albert
Twentieth Century
Every act of rebellion expresses a nostalgia for innocence and an appeal to the essence of being.
Camus, Albert
Rebellion
If there is sin against life, it consists in hoping for another life and in eluding the implacable grandeur of this life.
Camus, Albert
Sin
As usual I finish the day before the sea, sumptuous this evening beneath the moon, which writes Arab symbols with phosphorescent streaks on the slow swells. There is no end to the sky and the waters. How well they accompany sadness!
Camus, Albert
Sea
Human relationships always help us to carry on because they always presuppose further developments, a future --and also because we live as if our only task was precisely to have relationships with other people.
Camus, Albert
Relationships
To know oneself, one should assert oneself. Psychology is action, not thinking about oneself. We continue to shape our personality all our life. If we knew ourselves perfectly, we should die.
Camus, Albert
Self-knowledge
What is a rebel? A man who says no.
Camus, Albert
Rebellion
The rebel can never find peace. He knows what is good and, despite himself, does evil. The value which supports him is never given to him once and for all -- he must fight to uphold it, unceasingly.
Camus, Albert
Rebellion
More and more, revolution has found itself delivered into the hands of its bureaucrats and doctrinaires on the one hand, and to the enfeebled and bewildered masses on the other.
Camus, Albert
Revolutions and Revolutionaries
Nothing is more despicable than respect based on fear.
Camus, Albert
Respectability
The real passion of the twentieth century is servitude.
Camus, Albert
Twentieth Century
Retaliation is related to nature and instinct, not to law. Law, by definition, cannot obey the same rules as nature.
Camus, Albert
Punishment
The struggle itself towards the heights is enough to fill a man s heart. One must imagine Sisyphus happy.
Camus, Albert
Struggle
To insure the adoration of a theorem for any length of time, faith is not enough, a police force is needed as well.
Camus, Albert
Theory
One leader, one people, signifies one master and millions of slaves.
Camus, Albert
Totalitarianism
Realism should only be the means of expression of religious genius... or, at the other extreme, the artistic expressions of monkeys which are quite satisfied with mere imitation. In fact, art is never realistic though sometimes it is tempted to be. To be really realistic a description would have to be endless.
Camus, Albert
Reality
Ah, mon cher, for anyone who is alone, without God and without a master, the weight of days is dreadful.
Camus, Albert
Solitude
A sub-clerk in the post-office is the equal of a conqueror if consciousness is common to them.
Camus, Albert
Consciousness
In order to exist just once in the world, it is necessary never again to exist.
Camus, Albert
Existence
Beauty is unbearable, drives us to despair, offering us for a minute the glimpse of an eternity that we should like to stretch out over the whole of time.
Camus, Albert
Beauty
As a remedy to life in society I would suggest the big city. Nowadays, it is the only desert within our means.
Camus, Albert
Cities and City Life
That must be wonderful; I have no idea of what it means.
Camus, Albert
Ambiguity
For centuries the death penalty, often accompanied by barbarous refinements, has been trying to hold crime in check; yet crime persists. Why? Because the instincts that are warring in man are not, as the law claims, constant forces in a state of equilibrium.
Camus, Albert
Crime and Criminals
The need to be right is the sign of a vulgar mind.
Camus, Albert
Arrogance
Real nobility is based on scorn, courage, and profound indifference.
Camus, Albert
Aristocracy
You will never be happy if you continue to search for what happiness consists of. You will never live if you are looking for the meaning of life.
Camus, Albert
Discontent
The gods had condemned Sisyphus to ceaselessly rolling a rock to the top of a mountain, whence the stone would fall back of its own weight. They had thought with some reason that there is no more dreadful punishment than futile and hopeless labor.
Camus, Albert
Futility
The most eloquent eulogy of capitalism was made by its greatest enemy. Marx is only anti-capitalist in so far as capitalism is out of date.
Camus, Albert
Capitalism
At the heart of all beauty lies something inhuman, and these hills, the softness of the sky, the outline of these trees at this very minute lose the illusory meaning with which we had clothed them, henceforth more remote than a lost paradise... that denseness and that strangeness of the world is absurd.
Camus, Albert
Beauty
At any street corner the feeling of absurdity can strike any man in the face.
Camus, Albert
Absurdity
To write is to become disinterested. There is a certain renunciation in art.
Camus, Albert
Arts and Artists
It is impossible to give a clear account of the world, but art can teach us to reproduce it --just as the world reproduces itself in the course of its eternal gyrations. The primordial sea indefatigably repeats the same words and casts up the same astonished beings on the same sea-shore.
Camus, Albert
Arts and Artists
The world in which we were called to exist was an absurd world, and there was no other in which we could take refuge.
Camus, Albert
World
Virtue cannot separate itself from reality without becoming a principle of evil.
Camus, Albert
Virtue

