Tags
Absurdism, Albert Camus, Anti-progress nihilism, Capitalist realism, Climate Change, Clive Hamilton, Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Collapsology, Cosmopolitics, Dark Mountain Project, Dark Mountain’s “uncivilization”, Deborah Danowski, Deep Adaptation, Degrowth, Depressive realism, Dougald Hine, Eco-Apocalypse, Eduardo Viveiros de Castro, Ernest Becker, Ethical stewardship, Franco Berardi, Guy McPherson, Hans Jonas, Indigenous cyclical temporality, Intergenerational ethics, Jem Bendell, John Gray, Jonathan Lear, Martin Heidegger, Mental Health, Near-Term Human Extinction (NTHE), Paul Kingsnorth, Radical hope, Rebecca Solnit, Techno-optimism critique, Timothy Morton
Introduction
Picture a clock melting into a puddle of its own gears, each tick drowned out by flood sirens and fire alarms. This is our reality: a world where the future isn’t just uncertain—it’s expiring. We’ve traded constellation charts and sacrificial altars for climate models and computer forecasts, offering a front-row seat to our own funeral. The paradox? The more data we uncover about tomorrow, the less we trust it to exist. Once, humans etched hopes into cave walls and cathedrals. Now, we doomscroll through heat maps of burning continents, simulations of societal collapse, and videos of melting glaciers calving into the ocean. Knowledge, once a torch, has become a noose. We’re trapped in what philosopher Franco Berardi calls “the slow cancellation of the future,” where foresight doesn’t empower; it strangles. This isn’t mere pessimism. It’s a mutation of hopelessness unique to our age: living as if the apocalypse is a done deal. Time itself feels terminal, a patient on life support we’re asked to euthanize with every flight booked, every plastic straw used, every hamburger eaten. How do you make meaning when the horizon is a wall and living in the last days is not a possibility, but a certainty? How do we navigate existence when time itself feels terminal?
Part 1: The Evolutionary and Existential Roots of Future-Consciousness
Let’s begin at the dawn of humanity, when survival hinged on anticipating threats—predicting droughts, avoiding predators, navigating social strife. Cognitive scientists trace our obsession with the future to this evolutionary crucible. Those who could simulate hypothetical scenarios—a form of “mental time travel”—gained an edge, transforming Homo sapiens into Earth’s ultimate strategists. This ability to project ourselves forward isn’t just practical, but woven into the fabric of what makes us human.
Yet this gift is also a burden. Philosopher Martin Heidegger framed our relationship with time as fundamentally existential. In Being and Time, he argued that human existence is defined by Sein-zum-Tode (“being-toward-death”): our awareness of mortality forces us to grapple with life’s finitude. Far from morbid, Heidegger saw this anxiety as liberating—a confrontation with the “not yet” that compels us to shape meaning. When we fret about climate collapse or personal purpose, we’re not irrational; we’re exercising what he called “freedom toward possibility.”
Here lies the paradox: foresight evolved to ensure survival, yet it also traps us in a labyrinth of existential dread. Psychologist Ernest Becker, in his Pulitzer-winning The Denial of Death, posited that humans buffer this terror by constructing cultural “immortality projects”—religions, art, empires, even the quest for legacy—to outwit oblivion. Similarly, as climate philosopher Clive Hamilton observes, fixating on dystopian futures isn’t mere pessimism. It’s an attempt to “tame the chaos,” transforming paralyzing uncertainty into a narrative we can, however imperfectly, confront.
In essence: Our brains are time machines, oscillating between survivalist calculation and metaphysical vertigo. The same cognitive machinery that built civilizations also leaves us uniquely vulnerable to the weight of what might come. We are creatures of anticipation, forever balancing on the tightrope between ingenuity and anguish.
Part 2: Modern Philosophers on the Future, Responsibility, and the Weight of End-Time
We live in an age of compounding crises—climate tipping points, biodiversity collapse, pandemics that circle the globe in weeks. The future no longer feels like a horizon; it looms like a storm. How do we confront a world that seems to be writing its own epitaph? Modern philosophers, from the mid-20th century to today, have wrestled with this question, probing the tension between agency and despair.
Stewardship in the Age of Vanishing Tomorrows
Picture a lone hiker standing at the edge of a melting glacier, the ice groaning as it retreats—a sound like the Earth itself sighing. This is the Anthropocene’s haunting stage, where Heidegger’s “being-toward-death” morphs from personal mortality to planetary mortality. For Heidegger, anxiety about our individual end was a clarion call to live authentically, to craft meaning before the void. But today, the void has expanded. It’s no longer just my death we dread, but the death of coral reefs, of ice caps, of civilizations. The existential question shifts: How do we live authentically when the world itself feels terminal?
Heidegger’s philosophy, rooted in the 20th century’s industrial buzz, never grappled with the scale of collapse we now face. His focus on individual choice—choosing your “ownmost possibility” in the shadow of death—feels quaint, even myopic, when confronted with systems unraveling faster than any single life can span. Enter Hans Jonas, a philosopher who picked up Heidegger’s torch and carried it into the storm. In the 1970s, as the Cold War’s nuclear specter loomed, Jonas warned that humanity had become “a Prometheus unbound,” wielding godlike technological power without godlike wisdom. His response? An “imperative of responsibility”: Act so that the effects of your actions do not destroy the possibility of future life. Where Heidegger fixated on the individual’s confrontation with finitude, Jonas demanded we stretch our ethics across millennia. Imagine a relay race where the baton is the fate of humanity itself: Jonas insists we run our leg as if the next runner’s survival depends on our grip. His work bridges existential dread and collective action, arguing that the future isn’t an abstract concept but a right—one we’re ethically bound to protect.
Yet here’s the rub: How do we heed Jonas’s call in a world where the “future” feels like a flickering mirage? Imagine standing on a shore, watching the tide recede faster than you can chase it. The horizon blurs; what was once solid becomes a shimmering illusion. This is stewardship in the Anthropocene: the more we grasp for the future, the more it slips through our fingers. Jonas’s plea—act as if the future matters—collides with a world where headlines reduce tomorrow to a countdown clock. Carbon thresholds breached, extreme weather reducing communities to rubble, ecosystems unspooling like frayed rope. The absurdity is visceral. Why plant trees in a burning forest? Why write ethics for a world that might not read them?
But Heidegger’s ghost whispers a counterintuitive truth: the mirage itself is proof of water. Anxiety, he argued, isn’t just fear—it’s the tremor of freedom. Dread is the shadow cast by our agency, a reminder that we could act, even when we feel powerless. Our collective despair over climate collapse exists because we know we’ve authored it; the very fact that we grieve futures not yet lost is evidence of our complicity and our capacity to intervene. This is the knife’s edge Jonas asks us to walk. To feel the weight of responsibility while staring into the abyss of “too late.” To care for a future that may never arrive. It’s like loving someone terminally ill: Do you withdraw to spare yourself the pain, or lean in, knowing your presence might be the only grace they receive?
When we recoil at another oil spill, that revulsion isn’t passivity. It’s a moral compass spiking, a refusal to normalize the unacceptable. Even resignation, philosopher Jonathan Lear argues, can be a form of radical hope—a quiet commitment to endure, to keep the embers of possibility alive for a dawn we might not see. Our task is to dwell in the uncertainty, to let the mirage of a future guide us not as a delusion, but as a compass. The future flickers because it is alive, still unformed. And as long as it flickers, we have work to do. In the end, Jonas’s imperative isn’t about guarantees. It’s about living as if the question “What will become of us?” still matters; because the moment we stop asking it, the mirage dissolves and the tide never returns.
Part 3: The Age of Collapse – Implications for Future-Consciousness
The Paradox of Prediction
Modernity handed us crystal balls made from science and technology; but instead of clarity, we’re stuck in a hall of mirrors where every reflection screams collapse. Philosopher Franco “Bifo” Berardi calls this the “slow cancellation of the future”—a world where capitalism’s addiction to quarterly profits has turned tomorrow into a spreadsheet, a debt to be paid rather than a frontier to explore. Our tools for seeing the future are eroding our ability to imagine it. Berardi argues that financial capitalism’s obsession with endless growth and instant returns has shrunk the future to a “commodity,” something to mine, not mend. The result? “Depressive realism”: a grim consensus that dystopia is inevitable, data is destiny, and resistance is futile. It’s like watching a weather app predict a hurricane while you’re forbidden to board up the windows. The more we know, the less we do.
Enter Timothy Morton’s “hyperobjects”—monstrous, invisible forces like climate change that ooze across centuries and continents, too vast for any one person to grasp. Try picturing a single plastic straw choking an ocean, or CO2 from your commute melting a glacier in 2050. These hyperobjects don’t just overwhelm; they humiliate. They turn individual action into a cosmic joke: Why bother recycling when corporations are dumping toxic sludge? Berardi’s “cancelled future” and Morton’s “hyperobjects” are two sides of the same coin. One attacks our hope, the other our agency. Together, they trap us in a loop; we binge on apocalyptic forecasts because they confirm our helplessness, and our helplessness fuels the apathy that lets the crisis deepen. It’s a self-fulfilling prophecy labeled as “realism.” Buried in this paradox is a perverse kind of power. If depressive realism is a cage, it’s one we’ve built ourselves. Do we have the agency to dismantle it? What if we stopped letting the tools that measure the future decide its value? A cancelled future isn’t just a tragedy, it’s a theft. And the clock is ticking.
Albert Camus and the Art of Absurdist Alchemy
Picture Camus in a dim Parisian café, ash from his cigarette dusting the pages of The Myth of Sisyphus. He’s not writing about climate collapse or the end of mass extinction, he’s writing about us. To him, humanity’s plight is tragically comic: we’re ants building sandcastles on a shore being erased by the tide, scribbling sonnets into hurricanes. His infamous conclusion? “One must imagine Sisyphus happy.”
But what does that mean now? Sisyphus isn’t just pushing a boulder—he’s drafting climate legislation that’ll be gutted by lobbyists. He’s boycotting plastic while corporations continue dumping their poisonous products into the food chain. Camus’ genius was reframing futility as freedom: the rock will roll back, but the act of pushing it is where meaning is found. Absurdity isn’t a flaw in the system; it is the system. And rebellion, for Camus, isn’t about victory. It’s about dignity. The cliff’s edge isn’t just a metaphor, it’s the lived reality of activists chain-linking themselves to pipelines and scientists refining doomsday models. To hope feels delusional; to resign feels complicit. But Camus’ absurdism offers a third path: defiant pragmatism.
You don’t have to believe the boulder will stay atop the hill. You just have to find purpose in the struggle. We know the boulder might crush us, but we push anyway. Camus would nod: “There is no sun without shadow, and it is essential to know the night.” Your acts won’t “save the world.” But they suture the soul to something sturdier than hope or despair: the stubborn refusal to let collapse define you. The Question Camus Leaves Us: What if happiness isn’t the absence of dread, but the audacity to dance in its shadow? The cliff remains. The fog thickens, but somewhere in the abyss, a tattered flag defiantly stands.
John Gray’s Ice-Cold Shower:
Imagine waking up to a blaring alarm clock that screams, “Your species is a cosmic accident, and everything you love is temporary.” That’s John Gray in a nutshell, the philosopher who doesn’t just rain on humanity’s parade; he floods it. Gray isn’t here to coddle you with tales of redemption or progress. He’s the bartender who slides you a shot of nihilism and says, “Bottoms up.” For Gray, sustainability is a secular fairy tale, a bedtime story we tell ourselves to avoid staring into the void. Humans, he argues, are “stone-age predators” who stumbled into a god complex. We’re cavemen with nukes, primates playing with CRISPR like toddlers with matches. Climate collapse? Mass extinction? To Gray, these aren’t glitches—they’re the system working exactly as designed. Civilization, in his view, is a Rube Goldberg machine of hubris, destined to self-destruct because we’re hardwired to exploit, not evolve. His punchline? “Progress is a delusion; entropy always wins.” While Silicon Valley sells fantasies of Mars colonies and AI utopias, Gray chuckles at the irony; the same tools meant to “save” us (AI, geoengineering) are just newer, shinier ways to accelerate the crash.
But here’s the twist: Gray’s pessimism isn’t defeatist, it’s liberating. By dethroning humanity’s “specialness,” he forces us to confront a brutal truth: we’re not the protagonists of Earth’s story. We’re a flash-in-the-pan species, no more destined to rule than the dinosaurs. For Gray, accepting this is freedom. It means shedding the weight of salvation fantasies, no more savior complexes, no more guilt for failing to “fix” the unfixable. Critics call him a doomer, but Gray would shrug and say, “I’m a realist.” He’d point to history’s graveyard of empires and ideologies as proof. The Romans? Dust. The USSR? Gone. Capitalism? A self-cannibalizing corpse. Sustainability, he argues, is just the latest myth, a secular religion preaching that we can bargain with physics.
Part 4: The Tightrope
So who is right? The defiance of Camus or the nihilism of Gray? The answer lies in the question itself. These aren’t philosophies to adopt, but forces to navigate—like sailing a storm by adjusting the sails, not praying for calm. The absurdist’s laugh, the activist’s shovel, the pessimist’s sneer: they’re all survival tools. The real crisis isn’t choosing between hope and resignation. It’s the demand to hold both at once—to care deeply in a world that rewards detachment. As novelist Rebecca Solnit writes, “Hope is an axe you break down doors with, in an emergency.” Even if the emergency never ends.
The challenge is to balance foresight with ethical imagination. For instance, Indigenous philosophies offer models of intergenerational responsibility, as seen in the Seventh Generation Principle of the Iroquois. Similarly, the Buddhist concept of pratītyasamutpāda (interdependent co-arising) reframes collapse as a call to address systemic entanglement. For the Amazon’s Yanomami people, ecological collapse isn’t a terminus; it’s a call to renegotiate humanity’s pact with nonhuman life. Their work suggests that hopelessness stems not from the planet’s fragility, but from our failure to see beyond capitalism’s brittle timeline. Anthropologists Deborah Danowski and Eduardo Viveiros de Castro provide a radical counterpoint in their book, The Ends of the World (2017), where they contrast Western apocalyptic linearity with Indigenous cyclical temporality in which collapse is not an endpoint but a phase of renewal. The cultural movement Dark Mountain, co-founded by Paul Kingsnorth and Dougald Hine, rejects the myths of progress and techno-salvation, instead centering on “uncivilization”—a radical reimagining of humanity’s relationship with nature, progress, and storytelling. Jem Bendell’s Deep Adaptation philosophy confronts the inevitability of climate-driven societal collapse by urging radical shifts in how we live and think with what he calls the four R’s: abandon harmful systems (Relinquish), strengthen community resilience (Resilience), heal ecosystems (Restore), and foster equity and compassion (Reconcile). Rejecting techno-optimism and growth-obsessed capitalism, he advocates for emotional honesty and localized action to navigate crisis with dignity. His unflinching call to prepare for disruption has galvanized global movements reimagining survival through solidarity, not denial.
The human instinct to know the future is neither naively optimistic nor morbidly fixated; it is a testament to our capacity for reflection and responsibility. In an age of collapse, this instinct becomes a double-edged sword: it can fuel denial or galvanize action. Modern philosophers remind us that the future is not a fixed endpoint but a horizon of possibilities shaped by present choices. The challenge ahead is not to become fatalistic but to inhabit the present ethically—to weave new stories of resilience, interdependence, and humble co-creation. Drawing parallels with existentialist thought, Guy McPherson advocates for a similar “ethical living”—embracing honesty, compassion, and community despite impending doom. He urges individuals to find meaning in authenticity and connection rather than denial or despair. As the stakes of our foresight grow unimaginably high, the question shifts from “What will happen?” to “What will we become and how will we act in the face of what is happening?”

Forget about a mass awakening ever happening. The governments are increasing censorship, to prevent people from realizing the truth. The governments are coming up with more and more disinformation. To deceive the masses. Remember the governments maintain their control by deceiving the masses. The governments are 100% dishonest. Not a single thing they say is true.
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Deep dive would describe this essay, but I still am at a loss for what any of these philosophers would say about the biggest word left unmentioned: the c-word, corporations, the perfect ultrasocial vessels for guaranteeing the end of the human future (not “governments,” as RCS likes to inveigh against – they are freshman partners at best, circus sideshows).
Individual humans are as powerless as individual yeast against the corporate -owned supersystem.
This leaves no meaning within the words “ to weave new stories of resilience, interdependence, and humble co-creation” – what does any mega-corporation care about any individual’s “humble co-creation”? Bombs and supertankers, off-shore tax havens and dollar-an-hour maquiladoras – what room do they leave for the shibboleths of chasing individual transcendence through “resilience, interdependence, and humble co-creation”?
Asking for a friend.
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This will require a formal essay.
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You’re not wrong, currently and in the near future.
“what room do they leave for the shibboleths of chasing individual transcendence through “resilience, interdependence, and humble co-creation”?”
Once collapse really kicks in, corporations and governments will be pretty much powerless outside their immediate city HQs and capitals. They will maintain the pretense of being in charge still, but eventually the half of the world not living in cities will either realise their impotence and ignore them, or fail to hear them due to broken logistics. If your leaders don’t have a continuous supply of electricty and vehicle fuel, they will find it extremely difficult to enforce censorship and autocracy beyond walking distance.
So it may not be that Deep Adaptation or Small Farm Futures (Chris Smaje) or whatever become national movements, simply it will be local communities filling in the spaces left by a broken energy system. It will be haphazard, chaotic, rapidly fatal in most cases as population levels drop to whatever the new ecological carrying capacity is, frightening, and very local. But it will be something. For a while at least, assuming we don’t go extinct in the process due to toxification of our environment.
Look at it another way – if you are a government or city council how do you collect taxes without a regular supply of electricity? If you are a corporation, how can you trade on the stock market and buy & sell companies if the electricity keeps going off then one day doesn’t come back on at all?
We can make a general observation that most of the worlds’ news is focussed on cities, except where climate change affects those out in the sticks which gets brief mention before the news cycles on. I think we get an impression of other countries by what is reported about happenings in the cities – what happens in London is not reflective of what is happening in the rest of the UK as a general rule for example. There were never any Just Stop Oil or XR protests in my town for example, and no big wild fires, floods, tornados, no Tommy Robinson demos, etc. Although we did have our first tornado a few years ago – it blew over a table at our local community garden 🙂
And I think this reflects what will happen. As Tim Watkins over at the Consciousness of Sheep reflects, neo-liberalism has effectively already abandoned many former industrial towns. With decline of EROEI and resource depletion this abandonment will only increase in all nations.
It is in these spaces, where people are basically left to their own devices, that will see an inkling of whatever comes next, but it may well fly under the radar, unreported, unsupported by the cities around. To quote Paul Kingsnorth
“Now the post-apocalyptic skyline belonged to those who had always known that: to the monks, the hermits, the anchoresses and the forest tribes; to the workers on the margins, steadily improving lives human and non-human with no desire to shout about it. To the small nations and the edge-dwellers, the quiet and the unambitious. To the earthworms and the shy hedgehogs, the suckering plants and the ever-flocking birds, foraging in the ruins of the latest fallen empire. To those who had seceded, and who had generated rather than draining the finite pool of life.”
https://www.paulkingsnorth.net/apocalypse (although the post appears to have been deleted, it was written in 2021, before he returned to religion)
So it all depends on where you live. And no, I don’t think it will be Mad Max – the gangs of marauders will be as foot bound (or cycle/horse bound if they are lucky) as any other group once supply chains really break down. If you live in a city, it’s gonna be shit. If you live outside a city, in a small town, in rural locations, on the edge of rural locations, then it might not be quite as shit.
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That’s a wonderful run-down of a possible future, Mark. Perhaps it shall be as you say.
However, collapse futurology has been the scene of many a crack-up – so many in the field have gone complete nutter.
Kingsnorth, as you say, turned to bizarre religious fixations. Kunstler’s gone full Trumpian batshit. Un-denial is anti-vaxxy to the max, and OFW is full-on religious woo. Greer is a wingnut Trumpian. Date-specific predications have gone begging for so many, though, of course, to be fair, many of the heralds were completely right about collapse faster-than-expected. Martenson, Fitts, Orlov, all in that suspicious realm of brain liquefaction.
The problem is that for the entire history of everybody living, corporations have been the reliable No. 1 global power and still growing.
There’s a lot of dead people lying in the streets between today and tomorrow’s corporate hegemony and the post-apocalyptic reverie of Kingsnorth, so I don’t know to imagine that scenario without reaching for some Terror Management Theory.
Guns in the post-fossil fuel countryside- no can do. I’ll only to have to die once.
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Great comments. Really, Kunstler has gone full Trumpian? I haven’t checked in on his blog in years. I wonder if it’s because he’s an accelerationist.
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” The decade-long treasonous hectoring of Mr. Trump keeps on coming, you understand, for the simple reason that there have been absolutely zero consequences for any of the vicious rogues behind it…
Notorious operations such as RussiaGate, the Schiff-Vindman-Ciaramella-Eisen plot behind Impeachment No. 1, The Covid-19 intrigue, The BLM rampage, the Hunter Biden Laptop ruse (and Biden family’s bribery and treason), J-6 riot and the DNC Pipe-bomb caper, and four years of a wide-open border. That long train of crimes, seditions, and treasons came close to wrecking the country. We know exactly who was behind and involved in all of that. What remains is the heavy-lifting to build cases that can be brought to grand juries in good faith. Perhaps a comprehensive omnibus RICO case can incorporate all of these in what appears to amount to a single, complex orchestrated, long-running attempted coup.”
From JHK’s latest blog post.
Any explanation/diagnosis needed?
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Wow, he has gone full Trumpist indeed. I almost feel embarrassed for following him so closely in the ‘peak oil is imminent’ days (before fracking postponed the day of reckoning) of the early 2000s. His writings on relocalization and building community resilience are still pertinent, but I’ve definitely lost some respect for his judgement!
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Mike, I enjoyed this more philosophical essay of yours. For me, the first noble truth of Buddhism / Dharma that every(compound)THING is in constant flux and that latching onto to that leads to suffering helps me keep some perspective on the collapse phase of our civilization. All previous mega-civilizations have collapsed and I guess it’s our luck to be around for this one.
At this point I’m more concerned for the deep future (millions of years) such that an ecologically rich and biodiverse ecosphere can arise from this human caused bottleneck, and that humanity’s radiological and chemical / plastics contamination that you documented in the previous essays won’t preclude that recovery. It’s one thing for humanity to cause its own downfall, it’s another to take the rest of Nature down with us. However, if the Earth’s biosphere recovered from the Permian extinction after tens of millions of years I trust the current version can as well.
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don’t use Facebook. Government agencies routinely post scams and traps on it. And btw, NTHE is 100% guranateed to happen. There will be no bottleneck for humans. This species is guranateed to go extinct relatively soon. You are delusional to think otherwise.
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Thank you for writing this brilliant essay, Mike! Camus is one of my favorite philosophers, and I love how you frame collapse in his absurdist framework. Not only are we faced with the classical absurd contradiction between humanity’s desire for meaning and order, and the incomprehensible void beyond the absurd walls that limit our rational human universe. Additionally, humanity of today is faced with a “super-absurdist” confrontation between our desire for stability and industrial capitalism’s relentless march towards the gallows of collapse. In the spirit of Camus, we must lucidly recognize that our momentum is too big to stop the march in time, while stubbornly resisting anyways. Just like the condemned man, we do not know exactly when the trapdoors of collapse will open up beneath us. Awaiting our execution, we must draw our strength and absurd freedom from a refusal to hope combined with a deep desire for the pure flame of all life on earth.
We must avoid making any kind of leap. As Camus discusses, Chestov, Jaspers and Kierkegaard leap into the irrational. Likewise, many people today leap into denying science and evidence. Husserl and the phenomenologists leap into unbridled abstract reason, denying the existence of absurd walls limiting human understanding. Likewise, many people today (techno-optimists/wizards) leap into blind faith in science and technology, believing it is possible to “overcome” the laws of physics. Such unbridled techno-optimism allows them to imagine that we can continue with business-as-usual ad infinitum on a finite planet. Likewise, falling into fatalism and apathy is the inverse leap of that made by the wizards (collapse community beware)! This is akin to putting blind faith in science confirming our doom with unavoidable certainty, and is also a form of escape. Finally, literal suicide would of course also be an escape from the “super-absurdist” contradiction. While it would offset some carbon emissions and so on, it would not solve any systemic problems and ultimately it would make no difference.
Rather than leaping in any way, the biggest virtue is to lucidly recognize our utterly hopeless situation – and nevertheless keep on struggling against the global system that marches us towards collapse. Such a balancing act is the ultimate rebellion. We should expect big business, governments and financial and political institutions to meet such a struggle with the same irrationality that met Joseph K. in Kafka’s The Trial – and probably the results will be similar (indeed, hundreds of environmentalists are killed each year). Unless one is ready to go out “like a dog”, it may sometimes be necessary to loosen the sail for a while and take a “fatalist vacation” if the absurd tension becomes too much of a risk or mental burden. Here your metaphor with sailing the ocean comes in, and I like it.Even though a fatalist break may be necessary when the wind is too strong, I ultimately see more virtue in the absurdist position. We would not be in this “super-absurdist” predicament if we lived according to absurdist principles to begin with. A mixture of leaping into irrationality (science denial) or into belief in unbounded human reason saving us or condemning us (wizard fantasies or fatalist apathy) got us to where we are today. The alternative would be to live within a framework dictated by human reason and science, without harboring any illusions about their limitations. On the one hand, to let science, reason and technology guide society. On the other hand, to recognize that technology cannot help us defy the laws of physics, nor can science confirm our doom with 100 % certainty. Such a combination – a cautious and honest application of science and a humble recognition of the absurd walls that limit it – might have led humanity down another path.
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Your take on Camus and our modern “super-absurd” dilemma is spot-on. Imagine this: Camus’ classic absurd hero, pushing a boulder up a hill for no reason, now has to do it while the hill is crumbling beneath him. That’s us today. We’re stuck in a system (industrial capitalism) that’s racing toward collapse, even as we try to fight it. The absurdity isn’t just philosophical anymore—it’s baked into our daily lives.
You’re right that people try to “leap” out of this tension. Some jump into denial (“Climate change isn’t real!”), others into blind faith in tech (“AI will save us!”), and some just give up (“We’re doomed anyway”). These are all escapes. Camus’ answer? Don’t leap. Instead, stare the mess in the face and keep pushing. It’s like knowing the ship is sinking but bailing water anyway—not because you’ll stop it, but because refusing to quit is how you stay human.
Your point about science is key. We need science to guide us (like a flashlight in the dark), but we also have to admit it can’t fix everything. Physics doesn’t care about our spreadsheets or politicians. This isn’t defeat—it’s honesty. Think of it like driving a car: you use the brakes (science) to slow down, but you can’t ignore the cliff ahead (planetary limits).
The Kafka comparison hits hard. Activists today are like someone trapped in a nightmare bureaucracy, fighting systems that don’t make sense. But here’s the twist: rebellion isn’t just about winning. It’s about building solidarity—people working together, even when the odds are stacked against them. Taking a “fatalist break” (like a mental health day) isn’t weakness. It’s like pausing to catch your breath during a marathon.
What if we reimagined Camus’ hero not as a lone wolf, but as a community? Indigenous wisdom, like caring for the Earth so future generations thrive, shows us how. It’s not about “saving the world” anymore. It’s about tending the flame of life, stubbornly, together. The “super-absurd” becomes a call to dance with the chaos—not to win, but to say, “We’re still here, and that matters.”
In short: Keep the flashlight of science on, ditch the fairy tales (tech miracles or doom-porn), and find meaning in the grind. The boulder might crush us, but pushing it is how we write our story.
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Thank you for this essay, Mike. I am a psychotherapist, and several of my younger clients are struggling with existential dread. The content of your post soothed my own angst, and I am hopeful it will serve as an equally helpful compass to those I counsel. I was so moved by what I read that I recorded an audio version here. (I attributed the authorship and artwork to you. Please let me know if you have any objections, or if you would like me to make any changes to the attribution.)
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Michael Longenecker is the name. Thanks for the audio. Can’t wait to listen to it.
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Hi Michael, I was happy to read your comment on YouTube and to know that you feel honored by my reading of your work. I would consider collaborating in the future. Please feel free to email me directly (I had to enter my email address to post a comment).
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