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The Permanente journal · Jan 2014
Eluding meaninglessness: a note to self in regard to Camus, critical care, and the absurd.
- Thomas John Papadimos.
- Anesthesiologist at the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center in Columbus, OH. thomas.papadimos@osumc.edu.
- Perm J. 2014 Jan 1;18(1):87-9.
AbstractHere I present a medical narrative, as a catharsis, regarding Albert Camus’s The Myth of Sisyphus in an attempt to elude meaninglessness in my difficult everyday practice of critical care medicine. It is well documented that physicians who practice critical care medicine are subject to burnout. The sense of despair that occasionally overwhelms me prompted my rereading of Camus’s classic text and caused me to recount his arguments that life is meaningless unless one is willing to take a leap of faith to the divine or, alternately, to commit suicide. This set up the examination of his third alternative, acceptance of a life without prima facie evidence of purpose and meaning, a view that may truly have some bearing on my professional life in the intensive care unit.
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