What is life? It is anything which can expire, in the process of expiring. Biologically it is simple to tell if something or someone is currently alive.

What is absurd? Something illogical or unreasonable. How can a living being be categorized in such a way? Can a human being’s mere presence be illogical? No. We are born in a linear vein. Nobody has ever ‘come into being’ from randomness, though circumstances may dramatize it through an illogical lens.

How can the meaning of a person’s life be then absurd? It is a confusing way of thinking about what is merely biology. There is once a living man and he goes about infancy, adolescence, adulthood, seniority, and death. Nothing about that is unreasonable, unless one’s expectations have been wildly assuming.

What is meaning? It is a definition to something. A human life is merely an individual example of the human lifespan. He is rendered incapable of changing or altering the process which take place from the moment of birth to his death. Then what is she going to do about her life’s meaning? Many believe you make your own meaning, whatever that may entail. One can become a doctor, engineer, clerk, janitor, and somehow there is meaning to come out of it. Somehow, these philosophers believe, there falls from the sky a magical answer to this onerous question. What is the meaning of my life?

It certainly isn’t absurdity, unless one comes into life for the sole purpose of finding the ‘meaning’ of everything around them. That is absurd. There will always be a limitation to knowledge, because that would assume omniscience an attainable skill. Of course, absurdity assumes that ever being a possibility.

However, that is never the case. We were never capable of knowing everything. Unreasonability aside, the opposite of absurdity, reason itself is merely a thinly veiled idea into how things function within reality and our expectations.

In conclusion, life cannot be absurd. Absurdity, implying the capacity of omniscience within the human thought, makes light of the fact that it can just as easily point out the ‘illogical phenomenon’ of human life, the subject being a mere human being.