The Nietzsche Podcast

Untimely Reflections #43: Joe Folley (Unsolicited Advice) - Camus & Absurdism

Apr 14, 2026
Joe Folley, creator of Unsolicited Advice who makes philosophy accessible, joins to discuss Albert Camus and absurdism. They compare Camus and Nietzsche, explore revolt versus resignation, trace Stoic and Descartes influences, and follow Camus’s move from solitary struggle to communal rebellion. The conversation also covers political limits, philosophical consolation, and tensions between analytic and continental approaches.
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ANECDOTE

How One Scholarship Shifted Folley's Camus View

  • Folley recounts reading John Foley's biography Albert Camus From the Absurd to Revolt as pivotal for seeing Camus' coherent through-line.
  • He notes the book persuaded him to view early Camus as 'no' saying and later Camus as more affirmative.
INSIGHT

Stoic Echoes In Camus' Absurdism

  • Camus shows Stoic affinities: acceptance of fate and 'loving your fate' appears in Sisyphus's love for his toil.
  • Folley links Camus' reading of Epictetus during tuberculosis recovery to this consolatory, fate-embracing strand.
INSIGHT

Two-Level Attitude At The Heart Of The Absurd

  • Camus' absurd heroes operate on two levels: earnest first-order engagement plus a second-order distancing that recognizes their lack of ultimate importance.
  • Folley uses playing a board game as an everyday analogy for this dual stance.
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