SE02 EP05 - Mr. Brown Camus, Can you? episode artwork

EPISODE · May 17, 2026 · 10 MIN

SE02 EP05 - Mr. Brown Camus, Can you?

from Sourdough Modernity · host StringFellow Hawke

So since I’ve been thinking about meaning. And how life is a constant fight. Albert Camus was a French writer and philosopher in the mid-1900s. He was part of French resistance during World War II spent a lot of time thinking about how people find meaning in a world that can feel chaotic, unfair, or even indifferent. He didn’t believe life comes with built-in meaning. his idea is actually freeing: if meaning isn’t given to us, then we get to create it. Not in some big abstract way, but through how we live, daily choices, and how we treat other people. He calls this tension the “absurd”: we want life to make sense, and the world doesn’t always cooperate.Question #1* When have you felt that gap—wanting something to matter, but it didn’t seem to? -2 minThe Absurd & Choice- [ ] In The Myth of Sisyphus, Camus imagines a man pushing a rock up a hill forever. No progress, no final win. But he says: we must imagine Sisyphus happy.Why? Because meaning isn’t in the outcome—it’s in the act of pushing, in choosing to continue anyway.Questions:* What’s something in your life that feels repetitive or pointless?* What would it mean to choose it anyway, instead of just enduring it? Obviously folding clothes for Shawn!* Does choosing something yourself change how it feels? 1 min Building Meaning Through OthersCamus doesn’t say “make meaning alone.” He points toward solidarity—showing up for other people, reducing suffering where you can. Meaning grows out of shared effort, not just personal success.Not “what do I get?” but “what do I improve?”Questions:* When have you felt your life mattered because of someone else?* What’s a small thing someone did that made your day better?* What’s something small you’ve done for someone that stuck with you?* Do those moments feel more meaningful than big achievements?From Personal Meaning to Civic Lifea lot of people feel like their actions don’t matter at a larger scale—especially in politics. Like one person doesn’t change anything.Camus would probably agree on the surface: you’re not guaranteed impact. There’s no promise your effort “works.”But his response isn’t withdrawal—it’s participation anyway. Meaning comes from acting in line with your values, especially when outcomes aren’t guaranteed.Questions:* Have you ever felt like your voice or vote didn’t matter?* What makes something feel “worth doing” even if it might not change the outcome? (For me speaking up about ICE - voting bernie * Is there a difference between “success” and “integrity” in action?being the underdog ?* What does it mean to act for others, not just for a result?Reframing ActionIf meaning comes from improving lives—right now, in front of you—then civic action isn’t just about winning or losing. It’s about contributing to the kind of world you want to exist.Not because you’re guaranteed to succeed.Because that’s who you choose to be.Questions:* What’s one way you could make life slightly better for people around you this week?* What’s one issue you care about where you could take a small action?* Would you still do it if no one noticed or it didn’t “work”? Why or why not?ClosingCamus ends up in a simple place: we create meaning through what we do, especially for others, even in a world that doesn’t promise results.So the question isn’t “Does it matter?”It’s: What kind of person do you want to be while you’re here?Final question* One sentence- what gives your life meaning right now?https://www.instagram.com/showcase001?igsh=NmNwdHF1b24wY3Q3

So since I’ve been thinking about meaning. And how life is a constant fight. Albert Camus was a French writer and philosopher in the mid-1900s. He was part of French resistance during World War II spent a lot of time thinking about how people find meaning in a world that can feel chaotic, unfair, or even indifferent. He didn’t believe life comes with built-in meaning. his idea is actually freeing: if meaning isn’t given to us, then we get to create it. Not in some big abstract way, but through how we live, daily choices, and how we treat other people. He calls this tension the “absurd”: we want life to make sense, and the world doesn’t always cooperate.Question #1* When have you felt that gap—wanting something to matter, but it didn’t seem to? -2 minThe Absurd & Choice- [ ] In The Myth of Sisyphus, Camus imagines a man pushing a rock up a hill forever. No progress, no final win. But he says: we must imagine Sisyphus happy.Why? Because meaning isn’t in the outcome—it’s in the act of pushing, in choosing to continue anyway.Questions:* What’s something in your life that feels repetitive or pointless?* What would it mean to choose it anyway, instead of just enduring it? Obviously folding clothes for Shawn!* Does choosing something yourself change how it feels? 1 min Building Meaning Through OthersCamus doesn’t say “make meaning alone.” He points toward solidarity—showing up for other people, reducing suffering where you can. Meaning grows out of shared effort, not just personal success.Not “what do I get?” but “what do I improve?”Questions:* When have you felt your life mattered because of someone else?* What’s a small thing someone did that made your day better?* What’s something small you’ve done for someone that stuck with you?* Do those moments feel more meaningful than big achievements?From Personal Meaning to Civic Lifea lot of people feel like their actions don’t matter at a larger scale—especially in politics. Like one person doesn’t change anything.Camus would probably agree on the surface: you’re not guaranteed impact. There’s no promise your effort “works.”But his response isn’t withdrawal—it’s participation anyway. Meaning comes from acting in line with your values, especially when outcomes aren’t guaranteed.Questions:* Have you ever felt like your voice or vote didn’t matter?* What makes something feel “worth doing” even if it might not change the outcome? (For me speaking up about ICE - voting bernie * Is there a difference between “success” and “integrity” in action?being the underdog ?* What does it mean to act for others, not just for a result?Reframing ActionIf meaning comes from improving lives—right now, in front of you—then civic action isn’t just about winning or losing. It’s about contributing to the kind of world you want to exist.Not because you’re guaranteed to succeed.Because that’s who you choose to be.Questions:* What’s one way you could make life slightly better for people around you this week?* What’s one issue you care about where you could take a small action?* Would you still do it if no one noticed or it didn’t “work”? Why or why not?ClosingCamus ends up in a simple place: we create meaning through what we do, especially for others, even in a world that doesn’t promise results.So the question isn’t “Does it matter?”It’s: What kind of person do you want to be while you’re here?Final question* One sentence- what gives your life meaning right now?https://www.instagram.com/showcase001?igsh=NmNwdHF1b24wY3Q3

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O Pai do meu PAi Gabriel Bastião Embrace tradition, reject modernity. A tale that tells brazilian people history, and the loss of their freedoms as people left their rural properties to try the city life Genealogies of Modernity Ryan McDermott Season 2 of Genealogies of Modernity is a limited series from the Genealogies of Modernity Project and Ministry of Ideas. Each episode takes up a well-worn story about what it means to be modern and how we got here, and then challenges that narrative with recent humanities scholarship. Genealogies of Modernity illuminates lesser-known pathways to the present and unearths overlooked resources from the past for flourishing in the future.Genealogies of Modernity is a project of Beatrice Institute and Collegium Institute for Catholic Thought and Culture, with major support from the National Endowment for the Humanities. For responses to the series, teaching aids, as well as artwork and videos, visit genealogiesofmodernity.org. Ryan McDermott, Producer and Genealogies of Modernity Project Director . Maria Devlin McNair, Senior Producer and Script EditorJack Pombriant, Sound DesignerZachary Davis, Executive Producer (Ministry of Ideas)Special thanks: Dan Cheely, James DeMasi, Peter Fri Old Fashioned On Purpose Jill Winger Have you felt it? Something is rippling through humanity at this moment. It's a stirring... a longing... a remembering. A sense that we are more capable than we’ve been led to believe. We want to feel alive, not sedated.. but we've lost our way. We've traded a life intertwined with nature for asphalt and artificial lights. We've swapped natural movement for a sedentary existence. We've given up food from the earth in favor of food from the factory. We've sacrificed our traditional skillsets for apps and gadgets. But while our overdose on modernity may have made us sick, there is an antidote. Join best-selling author and mentor, Jill Winger, each week as she digs into a different facet of the old-fashioned on purpose lifestyle. The Sourdough Podcast Michael Hilburn Inspiring conversations from leaders and innovators throughout the sourdough community. Hear the stories behind the bakers, authors, growers, millers, artists, and other creative minds that you've always wondered about.

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This episode was published on May 17, 2026.

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So since I’ve been thinking about meaning. And how life is a constant fight. Albert Camus was a French writer and philosopher in the mid-1900s. He was part of French resistance during World War II spent a lot of time thinking about how people find...

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