| Author Quoted | Albert Camus | 
		
			| Title Quoted | peste | 
		
			| Date (Year/Month/Day) | 1966/06/19 | 
		
			| Imprint | [Paris] : Gallimard. [1947] | 
		
			| Quotation | The great and deliberate flaw in Camus - a flaw on which he insists - is the "ethic of quantity." Certainly this is decisive for our time - perhaps the only way of not being quixotic (the repetition of the absurd in complete lucidity - Don Juan - is non-quixotic). This I cannot accept. I'd rather fight windmills. But am I fighting them? Or does it come back to the same thing - and to the fact that "knowing oneself to be mortal" is in fact a disguised return to quality! That is the ambiguity in Camus and La Peste [The Plague] proves it. (Sisyphus is by no means final!) | 
		
			| Quotation Source | Learning to love: exploring solitude and freedom. The Journals of Thomas Merton, Volume 6, 1966-1967.; Edited by Christine M. Bochen. / [San Francisco] : HarperCollins. 1997, p. 86 | 
		
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			| Link to Merton's Copy | 
  					 
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