Thomas Grey taught existentialism at a community college in Brooklyn to students who did not care, and he taught it well, which was the first and greatest absurdity.
He was thirty-eight years old and had been teaching the same course—Introduction to Existential Philosophy—for eleven years, which meant he had explained Sartre's nausea, Camus's absurd man, and Kierkegaard's leap of faith to approximately four thousand students, of whom four hundred and ninety-nine had asked him what use it was to them in the working world. "The work world is a construct,"...
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