Philosophy, humour and the absurd

Close-up, high-contrast black and white portrait of a man with intense, wide eyes and wrinkled forehead, looking to the side with one eye and forward with the other.

Humour is important to most of us and yet philosophers have, historically, refused to take humour seriously. More recently, however, several philosophical theories of humour have developed to try to explain why humour does not simply make us laugh, it also makes us think. The course seeks to redress the apparent tensions that exist between humour and Philosophy. We will explore the limited, historical material relating to the Philosophy of humour, including insights from Rene Descartes, Immanuel Kant, Henri Bergson and Ludwig Wittgenstein. We will assess historical and contemporary theories of what humour consists in. Later discussions will revolve around questions of how humour informs existential questions of how one ought to live.

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