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"To begin to reflect is to begin to undermine," wrote Albert Camus, and it's hard to disagree. Reflecting on one's life means shocking oneself, stopping, taking stock of one's experiences, getting rid of the superfluous and unnecessary, destroying the old in the hope of building the new—in other words, being undermined. It's impossible not to notice the poignancy of this word because this act is associated with pain, loss, the need to choose difficult paths, and sometimes even take risks in order not to make new mistakes and deviate from the intended path. But is it worth bearing the pain? What happens if we just go with the flow? What will our lives be like then?
The French philosopher Albert Camus posed similar questions in his famous essay "The Myth of Sisyphus." Briefly, the ancient Greek myth goes like this: the gods condemned Sisyphus, because he was too arrogant and overbearing, to push a huge stone up a mountain, which would then roll back, forcing him to start all over again. It would seem what could be worse than such useless work? What was Sisyphus thinking as he climbed to the top of the mountain? And what do we care about?Minimum
system requirements :
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"To begin to reflect is to begin to undermine," wrote Albert Camus, and it's hard to disagree. Reflecting on one's life means shocking oneself, stopping, taking stock of one's experiences, getting rid of the superfluous and unnecessary, destroying the old in the hope of building the new—in other words, being undermined. It's impossible not to notice the poignancy of this word because this act is associated with pain, loss, the need to choose difficult paths, and sometimes even take risks in order not to make new mistakes and deviate from the intended path. But is it worth bearing the pain? What happens if we just go with the flow? What will our lives be like then?
The French philosopher Albert Camus posed similar questions in his famous essay "The Myth of Sisyphus." Briefly, the ancient Greek myth goes like this: the gods condemned Sisyphus, because he was too arrogant and overbearing, to push a huge stone up a mountain, which would then roll back, forcing him to start all over again. It would seem what could be worse than such useless work? What was Sisyphus thinking as he climbed to the top of the mountain? And what do we care about?Minimum
system requirements :
- Requires 64-bit processor and operating system.
- Operating System: Windows 8/8.1/10 (64-bit)
- Processor: Intel Core i3
- Memory: 6 GB RAM
- Graphics: GeForce GTX 740
- Storage: 5 GB available space
- Requires 64-bit processor and operating system.
- Operating System: Windows 8/8.1/10 (64-bit)
- Processor: Intel Core i5
- Memory: 8 GB RAM
- Graphics: GeForce GTX 1060
- Storage: 8 GB available space
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Episodes | Mega link | Document link | Megaup link | 1Fichier link | Uptobox link |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
The game | download | download | download | download | download |
password | gamezone.to |
