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At some point you realize that the dense, headache-inducing texts you wrestled with for years, the ones that made you feel both intellectually alive and personally attacked, are actually more digestible as a jpeg. Not because the ideas got simpler. But because seeing them compressed into a meme format somehow makes the whole thing feel survivable. Like, yes, that argument shook your entire framework for understanding reality, and also it fits neatly into a 1080 by 1080 image with a caption. Both things are true. It's weirdly comforting.
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It's Gregor Samsa, the cool bug in the meme must be Gregor Samsa
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And yet, somehow, the internet has taken all of that and made it hilarious.
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Scroll on for proof.
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Somewhere along the way, the meme industrial complex discovered that philosophy is secretly just a goldmine of material. Free will? Deeply funny. Existentialism? Absurd in the most literal sense. Moral thought experiments? Completely unhinged once you follow them to their logical ends. Even the most impenetrable academic philosophers, the ones whose books require a glossary and a therapist, have become meme-able. Which honestly says more about the state of academic philosophy than any peer-reviewed paper could.
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There's something genuinely cathartic about scrolling past an idea you once spent weeks with, an idea that bruised your ego and reorganized your worldview, and finding it sitting there in bite-sized form, making strangers laugh. It doesn't trivialize it. If anything, it confirms the idea mattered enough to stick around. Philosophy's biggest questions didn't disappear, they just found a more efficient distribution channel. Turns out the examined life is also highly shareable.
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