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    Camus and the question of suicide: Addressing some misconceptions
    South African Journal of Philosophy 45 (1): 67-77. 2026.
    In this article, I defend Albert Camus’s account of the implications of the notion that existence is absurd for suicide against two key kinds of criticisms. The first kind of criticism, notably offered by Herbert Hochberg, is the notion that Camus’s alleged argument against suicide in The Myth of Sisyphus violates “Hume’s law” by deriving an “ought” from an “is”. The second criticism posed by Thomas Pölzler is that The Myth is inconsistent in that it simultaneously argues for ethical nihilism an…Read more