EPISODE · May 28, 2026 · 2H 24M
That Life Has No Meaning Is the Only Reason to Live | Emil Cioran
from sleepyphilosophyradio · host slphilosophy
Vote on what comes next: https://www.sleepyphilosophyradio.com/voteFall asleep to the complete philosophy of Emil Cioran. Some nights the thought you cannot chase away is the one you most need a voice to name.Emil Cioran wrote for sixty years about the pointlessness of existence, and lived for eighty four years. The gap between what he argued and how he lived is the honest center of his work. This long quiet episode follows him from a Carpathian village where a priest's son ran barefoot among graves, through the cafes of interwar Bucharest, through a dark political period he spent the rest of his life working against, through the small Paris attic he shared with Simone Boue for over fifty years, and into the final afternoons in the Luxembourg Gardens. A calm unhurried portrait of the most rigorous stylist of despair in twentieth century literature, and of the quiet stubborn survival that was his truest answer to his own philosophy.Please listen only in safe, restful contexts.(0:00:00) The Attic on the Rue de l'Odeon(0:14:07) The Village and the Boy Who Was Happy(0:27:37) Bucharest and the Young Generation(0:42:22) The Dark Years(0:58:05) Paris, and the Decision Not to Sleep(1:12:49) A Short History of Decay(1:27:50) The Trouble with Being Born(1:41:53) The God He Could Not Quite Lose(1:56:41) Style as Salvation(2:10:22) The Old Man in the Luxembourg Gardens
What this episode covers
Vote on what comes next: https://www.sleepyphilosophyradio.com/voteFall asleep to the complete philosophy of Emil Cioran. Some nights the thought you cannot chase away is the one you most need a voice to name.Emil Cioran wrote for sixty years about the pointlessness of existence, and lived for eighty four years. The gap between what he argued and how he lived is the honest center of his work. This long quiet episode follows him from a Carpathian village where a priest's son ran barefoot among graves, through the cafes of interwar Bucharest, through a dark political period he spent the rest of his life working against, through the small Paris attic he shared with Simone Boue for over fifty years, and into the final afternoons in the Luxembourg Gardens. A calm unhurried portrait of the most rigorous stylist of despair in twentieth century literature, and of the quiet stubborn survival that was his truest answer to his own philosophy.Please listen only in safe, restful contexts.(0:00:00) The Attic on the Rue de l'Odeon(0:14:07) The Village and the Boy Who Was Happy(0:27:37) Bucharest and the Young Generation(0:42:22) The Dark Years(0:58:05) Paris, and the Decision Not to Sleep(1:12:49) A Short History of Decay(1:27:50) The Trouble with Being Born(1:41:53) The God He Could Not Quite Lose(1:56:41) Style as Salvation(2:10:22) The Old Man in the Luxembourg Gardens
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That Life Has No Meaning Is the Only Reason to Live | Emil Cioran
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