I  recently picked up a collection of short stories by Albert Camus, the Nobel  Prize winning French-Algerian existentialist author. I was stepping back in  time – not simply into the 1940-50s, the setting of the stories, but to a  different era; a time of US - Soviet rivalry symbolized by the Berlin Wall.
The  time after World War Two was also one of great idealism and spawned countless  left-wing groups and intellectuals inclined to throw in their lot with the  communists in the hoped of creating a classless society. Many of these groups morphed  into terrorist organizations, including Germany's Baader-Meinhoff Gang, Italy's  Red Brigade and Japan's Red Army.[1]  The absurdity of an impending nuclear holocaust poised to destroy civilization  also engendered competing schools of thought, notably 'Existentialism' and its  closely linked cousin 'Absurdism.' 
Existentialism  is "characterized by what has been called  "the existential attitude" or a sense of disorientation and confusion  in the face of an apparently meaningless or absurd world. Many  existentialists have also regarded traditional systematic or academic  philosophies, in both style and content, as too abstract and remote from  concrete human experience."[2]
  Surely, many will agree reality is often more absurd than any fiction we read!
However, it's  the 'Absurdist' philosophy which really strikes a chord within me. While there  is always a desire for humans to seek meaning in life, Absurdism suggests such  a quest is futile. There are far too many unknown variables in the world and too  much information for an ordinary mortal to comprehend. Humans, therefore, live  in a world of absurdity.
It's  the idea of an absurd world which I like. Does it not aptly describe a world of  teenage gunmen gone wild, religiously motivated suicide bombers and the many  other crazy things happening around us daily? Yes, one easy way to 'systematize'  the world is through an absolutist religion, one which defines the world in 'black  and white' leaving no room for any doubt in between. 
Nevertheless,  for me, it adds excitement knowing there are so many uncertainties and  opportunities in the (mean!) world out there. As an old Greek friend called  Epicurus once said, the world's atoms regularly randomly swerve from their  appointed path to create a whole new set of causal realities. It just happens  ... no one knows why. 
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Imran is a business and management consultant.  Through his work at Deodar Advisors and the Deodar Diagnostic, Imran improves  profits of businesses operating in Singapore and the region. He can be reached  at imran@deodaradvisors.com. 
[1]  Japan's Red Army was responsible for at least two major violent incidents in  Southeast Asia during the 1970s. In January 1974, two members of Japan's Red  Army (JRA) along with two colleagues from the Popular Front for the Liberation  of Palestine attacked the Shell Oil refinery on Pulau Bukom precipitating the  Laju Hijacking incident. The incident was a major milestone in the career  of Ministry of Defence employee S.R. Nathan, later to become the Republic's  President. Separately, in August 1975 the JRA  stormed the building housing the US and Swedish Embassies located in Jalan  Ampang, Kuala Lumpur and took over 50 hostages. Following negotiations, the JRA  successfully won the release of five comrades imprisoned in Japan in return for  freeing the hostages. The gunmen, along with their five freed comrades, later  flew to Gaddafi's Libya. 
[2] 'Existentialism,'  Wikipedia. Accessed on May 26, 2014. 

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