Meaning of Life Peter Wessel Zapffe On PDF
Meaning of Life Peter Wessel Zapffe On PDF
Meaning of Life Peter Wessel Zapffe On PDF
1 Zapffe 1941 and 1996. The 1996 edition from Samlede verker (Collected Works ) utilizes the pag-
ination of the first edition (1941), except for the three added prefaces and the brief English sum-
mary (pp. 619–622). The 1933 essay “The Last Messiah [Den sidste Messias]” has also been im-
portant in establishing Zapffe as a philosopher, although this essay is a literary work that is less
argumentative than On the Tragic (see Zapffe 2004 and 1997, pp. 43–51).
2 For more details, see Hessen/Bostad 1999; Haave 1999; Fremstedal 2001, 2005 and 2012a.
3 Zapffe/Aas 1942. Reprinted many times, notably in 1999 as volume 2 of Zapffe’s Samlede verker
(Collected Works ). This work is based on Norwegian dialects and idiosyncrasies to such an extent
that it is virtually impossible to translate.
4 For an English translation, see Zapffe 2004. See also the English summary in Zapffe 1996,
pp. 619–622. It should also be noted that Zapffe’s Nachlass has not been published, except for
the excerpts found in Haave 1999.
5 Zapffe 1941, pp. 58–60.
6 Zapffe 1941, pp. 63–77.
value by providing drink and nourishment. It has a social value in dinners and so-
cial gatherings, and an autotelic value by being tasty or intoxicating. Finally, wine
has a metaphysical value for Christians who participate in the Eucharist, since it
contributes to meaning and justification that transcend other interests.
Zapffe is mainly interested in life as a whole rather than in its different periods
or parts. On the Tragic analyses the meaning of life as a metaphysical interest,
and to a lesser extent meaning in life as an autotelic interest. Autotelic meaning
in life where life – or its parts – is lived for its own sake is thus distinguished from
metaphysical meaning.7 Metaphysical meaning differs from autotelic meaning by
being heterotelic, by asking for something different (heteronomous) or external
from life (existence) that provides meaning from the outside so to speak.8 This
involves asking why (hvortil ) live?; what is the point of it all?9 Zapffe thinks that
meaning in life is insufficient, since meaning of life is also necessary.10
There seem to be two reasons for this central claim. First, Zapffe seems to think
that meaning in life is primarily local, whereas the meaning of life is necessarily
global. Although some activities in life have autotelic meaning, this does not nec-
essarily mean that life as a whole has autotelic meaning. Second, Zapffe maintains
that it is not enough to say that life is lived for its own sake, that it has autotelic
value, since an external justification or meaning is also needed. Zapffe argues that
some activities have autotelic value only for a limited period of time, because it
eventually becomes clear that these activities depend on external factors or on the
environment for their meaning.11 He concludes that life is meaningless, since our
lives cannot be externally justified. The earthly environment is judged to be an in-
adequate object for human interests, since it is impossible to realize metaphysical
interests (meaning and justice) in this world.
Nevertheless, Zapffe insists that one should seek, or even demand, meaning
and justice. This provides the background for his pessimism and antinatalism (the
view that birth and human life in general is of negative value). In what follows, I
will try first to reconstruct Zapffe’s central argument and then try to raise objec-
tions against it, partially by making use of Kant’s critical philosophy.
Zapffe (1941, p. 66) argues that different human activities normally stand in
need of a meaning in order to be justified or worthwhile. Different human activities
are typically linked together in chains such that one activity relies on a second
activity for its meaning and so forth. For example, I get up to go to work, and I
work in order to support my family. However, this means that local meaning tends
to rely on global meaning, since global meaning, the meaning of life as a whole,
lies at the end of the chain.12 Global meaning gives continuity and coherence to
life as a whole, preventing it from disintegrating into mere fragments.13
Zapffe then argues that our understanding of life as a whole presupposes con-
sciousness of death. Consciousness of death shows the finite and mortal charac-
ter of human existence, giving us an idea of life as a limited whole.14 Zapffe thinks
that consciousness of death normally gives rise to the question of the meaning of
life,15 presumably since it leads us to ask “why live?” or “what is the point of life?”.
Zapffe (1941, p. 68) says that death puts a brutal and arbitrary end to our activities
and engagements, stopping our projects and plans by burying our possibilities,
hopes, and dreams. Thus, for Zapffe, death shows the meaninglessness of life and
that there really is no point after all.16 This leads him (1941, p. 68) to denounce
death as something that should not be.
Although Zapffe is less than explicit, he suggests that activities are meaning-
ful insofar as they realize some end or purpose.17 Accordingly, the question of the
meaning of life can be rephrased as a question about the final end of life, some-
thing which is a traditional idea in Western thought.18 However, if life is meaning-
less (as Zapffe thinks it is), this can be given two different interpretations. It can
either mean that life has some a final end which we necessarily fail to realize or it
can mean that life simply lacks such an end.
Like many modern philosophers, Zapffe typically avoids speaking of the final
end of life.19 This may suggest that he thinks human life lacks a final end, that
the classical notions of eudaimonia and summum bonum are left behind with the
result that life as a whole is pointless or meaningless. However, it is clear that
12 Zapffe 1941, pp. 65–66; Bostad 1999, p. 108; Zapffe/Tønnesen/Næss 1983, p. 44.
13 Zapffe 1941, p. 63.
14 Zapffe 1941, pp. 64–65.
15 Zapffe 1941, p. 65. Zapffe also suggests that occasions such as New Year’s Eve lead to reflections
on life as a whole where we ask about the meaning of life and whether our lives are part of some
larger scheme or plan. See Zapffe 1941, pp. 63–64.
16 Hessen 1999, p. 100.
17 Zapffe 1941, p. 65; Markussen 1999, p. 119.
18 Cf. Wimmer 1990, pp. 2–27, 57–77.
19 Julia Annas (1993, p. 33) comments: “Modern thinkers have found the notion of a single fi-
nal end [of life as a whole] uncompelling (at least without added assumptions about rationality)
because they have not taken thought about one’s life as a whole to be the starting point for ethi-
cal reflection. For the ancients, however, it is unproblematic that the agent thinks of her life as a
whole and that […] ethical thinking begins with this.”
Zapffe (1941, pp. 66–69) himself singles out one end in particular as an adequate
expression of our most essential interests, namely the idea of a moral world or-
der that represents our metaphysical interests. Zapffe takes this idea to involve
(knowledge of) the meaning of life as well as perfect justice, thereby representing
our metaphysical interests in toto. He describes the moral world order as an “order
where everything has order, a plan, and meaning, [an order] where suffering – if it
is necessary – is applied according to an economic principle so that the outcome
is in accordance with needs. In short, an order where everything happens in a just
manner according to each human’s judgment.”20
A moral world order is a purposive or providential order where everything has
meaning and justice is done without any exception what so ever. Justice seems to
consist in a causal relation between the individual’s subjective disposition, will
or motivation on the one hand and happiness or pleasure on the other.21 More
specifically, justice consists in (moral) virtue causing happiness (and unhappi-
ness being caused only by vice). Accordingly, justice enables anyone with a good
will to realize his interests and intentions in a non-arbitrary way. Although Zapffe
does not say so, this suggests a deontological notion of ethics. More specifically,
Zapffe’s moral world order comes very close to Kant’s idea of a moral world, the
highest good (summum bonum), Kierkegaard’s concept of eternal happiness (Evig
Salighed ) or even Nietzsche’s moral world order (sittliche Weltordnung ).22 How-
ever, Zapffe thinks that we need the knowledge that the moral world order actu-
ally exists already now, something we will see that Kant denies is necessary or
even desirable.
on the moral world order, an order defined partially in terms of meaning, par-
tially in terms of justice. This suggests that the meaning of life consists in realizing
meaning and justice.
This leads, however, to the question of whether we are capable of realizing
meaning and justice or whether the moral world order is fundamentally outside
of our reach. It seems clear that Zapffe would argue that the moral world order can-
not possibly be realized as a result of individual effort. For Zapffe, the individual
is (at best) capable of having a good will, something that is likely to expose him
to tragedy or catastrophe on Zapffe’s view.23 Without going into Zapffe’s detailed
analysis of tragedy, this basically means that justice is lacking in the sense that
(moral) virtue leads to unhappiness rather than happiness in the world (some-
thing with which Kant and Kierkegaard would partially agree).24 However, Zapffe’s
analysis then leads to the following problem: We need a moral world order in order
to live meaningful lives, but this order is impossible to realize (as a result of indi-
vidual effort), because of injustice and meaninglessness in the world. Thus, the
moral world order is both necessary and impossible simultaneously. Put in Kan-
tian terms, we have an antinomy of practical reason in which the highest good,
the idea of a moral world, is both necessary and impossible at the same time.25
However, the antinomy is not only apparent to Zapffe as it is to Kant, but it
is very much real and inescapable. Kant argues that in order to know the moral
world is impossible, we would have to transcend the limits of human knowledge,
notably by knowing how our (noumenal) will affects the natural world (phenom-
ena).26 Against this, Zapffe would argue that in order to prove there is no moral
world order we only need one clear case of injustice or meaninglessness. And
Zapffe thinks there are plenty of cases in human history, including his own. Thus
his refutation of the belief in a moral world order takes the form of a Popperian
falsification:27 One clear case of injustice or meaninglessness suffices to show that
the moral world order does not exist.28
To this one might object that injustice in the history of mankind does not pre-
vent the moral world order from being possible in the future. Zapffe would reply
that if this were the case, it would not help those who have suffered injustice and
meaninglessness in the past. The past cannot be justified by progress in the fu-
ture, since one case of injustice and meaninglessness is one too many. A moral
world order that excludes human beings born at an earlier point in time is not a
real moral world order at all but rather an unjust order. Thus Zapffe insists that
one case of injustice or meaninglessness suffices to falsify belief in a moral world
order.
Zapffe criticizes belief in God in the same way, arguing that one case of in-
justice or meaninglessness is sufficient to falsify the idea of God as omnipotent,
omniscient, and benevolent. He therefore thinks that the problem of evil, partic-
ularly the existence of natural evil and innocent suffering, shows the impossibil-
ity of God (in the traditional Judeo-Christian sense of the term). Unlike Kant and
Kierkegaard, Zapffe does not think that religious belief can resolve the antinomy
arising from the simultaneous necessity and impossibility of the moral order, since
this would involve the disingenuous denial of basic empirical facts about mean-
inglessness and injustice in the history of mankind.29 At this point, Zapffe sug-
gests that religious belief in a moral world order is an act of wishful thinking in
which one sacrifices one’s intellect in order to satisfy the longing for meaning and
justice. Zapffe (1997, pp. 45–49) interprets this as an attempt to escape the diffi-
culties of life by succumbing to psychological defense mechanisms that involve
self-deception.
Zapffe concludes then that the earthly environment is an inadequate object for
our interests, since it is impossible to realize metaphysical interests in this world.
Nevertheless, Zapffe insists that we should seek, or even demand, meaning and
justice.30 This provides the background for what Zapffe himself describes as pes-
simism. He suggests that if God exists at all, then it seems clear that he is more
of an almighty tyrant than a benevolent ruler. Instead of worshipping God, we
should therefore rebel against him, Zapffe (1941, pp. 478–489) suggests.
31 Cf. Hessen/Bostad 1999; Haave 1999. Although some commentators and readers are sympa-
thetic to Zapffe, there have been very few attempts to defend Zapffe against his critics. Cf. Hes-
sen/Bostad 1999.
32 Bostad 1999, p. 107; Fremstedal 2005, p. 82.
33 Zapffe uses the Norwegian word Tilværelsen, a term that corresponds to the German Dasein.
Zapffe uses capitalization because he follows the 1907 Riksmål spelling he learned at school. This
means that Zapffe’s Norwegian is fairly close to Danish from the same period.
34 Zapffe’s analysis at this point is reminiscent of Camus’s concept of the absurd in The Myth
of Sisyphus (1942). However, Zapffe developed this point independently of Camus in “The Last
Messiah” (1933) and On the Tragic (1941).
about it, but it is far from clear how it could possibly provide a fundamental meaning of life as a
whole even in a possible world that is different from ours. It should be mentioned that Zapffe’s
philosophical works may differ from his works on mountaineering, nature, and environmentalism
at this point. Whereas the philosophical works (notably On the Tragic and “The Last Messiah”) see
the conflict between individual and surroundings as inescapable, the works on mountaineering
and nature suggest otherwise. The philosophical works depict the human condition as meaning-
less, whereas the works on mountaineering suggest a notion of meaningful meaninglessness. See
Markussen 1999.
43 Kant 1968, pp. 146–147 and 1968–72, pp. 1083–1084. See Fremstedal 2012b for a more detailed
analysis.
44 Kant 1968, pp. 146–147.
45 Kant 1968, pp. 146–147.
we could ignore the insight into the relation between virtue and happiness, some-
thing he thinks is virtually impossible for humans beings.46
Kant concludes that it is beneficial that such insight is not available to us. It
is desirable that the moral world remains distant and uncertain, and that virtue is
not straightforwardly rewarded with happiness (or vice punished with unhappi-
ness).47 The upshot is that we can only be moral in an imperfect world, a world in
which virtue does not always lead to happiness and the outcomes of actions are
uncertain. Kant concludes: “If there were no disproportion at all between morality
and well-being here in this world, there would be no opportunity for us to be truly
virtuous.”48
This thought experiment is supposed to show that the relation between virtue
and happiness must be opaque in this world. Therefore, morality requires igno-
rance and the possibility of unhappiness. This suggests that ignorance and the
possibility of unhappiness form necessary presuppositions for morality. However,
it does not say how much unhappiness must be possible. It only says that moral
agency presupposes friction or some type of struggle: Moral freedom cannot over-
lap completely with nature and happiness. Because of the very nature of moral
agency, there must be a gap between freedom and nature, and virtue and hap-
piness, which cannot be completely bridged in this life. Thus Kant makes consti-
tutive assumptions about the moral structure of the world on practical (moral)
grounds.49 Susan Neiman comments:
The best of all possible worlds is not a world we could live in, for the very notion of human
freedom depends on limitations. To act freely is always to act without enough knowledge
or power – that is, without omniscience or omnipotence. Not knowing whether our good
intentions will be rewarded is essential to our having them […]. Solving the problem of evil
is not only impossible but immoral. For knowing the connections between moral and natural
evils [unhappiness, suffering] would undermine the possibility of morality. (Neiman 2004,
p. 68)
Kant’s thought experiment raises some questions that cannot be dealt with here.50
Although there are some difficulties with his argument, it nevertheless indicates
that Zapffe’s demand for a moral world is problematic, since Zapffe seems com-
mitted to denying the friction or struggle necessary for human agency and hence
to reducing morality to prudence. His notion of a moral world order seems to
presuppose that the individual can have a good will or disposition without strug-
gling with natural evil, moral evil or inclinations. Kant, on the other hand, argues
that moral virtue presupposes resistance, since virtue is a feature of a non-holy
rational being who struggles against his inclinations and even moral evil. Kant
conceives of virtue as “the form in which a rational being with a non-holy will ex-
presses her supreme commitment to morality: as a continually cultivated capacity
to master her inclinations so as to fulfill all her duties, a capacity whose cultivation
and exercise is motivated by respect for the moral law.” (Denis 2006, p. 513)
Zapffe’s moral world order threatens to undermine the need for action, since
it is not clear how we could have incentives for acting if we did not have difficul-
ties or discontentment that we struggled to overcome. Kant argues that “ill [Übel ]
is necessary if the human being is to have a wish and an aspiration [Verlangen –
demand] towards a better state [Zustand ], and at the same time to learn to strive
to become worthy of it.”51 This means that discontentment is necessary if man is
to strive for something better and to become worthy of it by being moral. Kant says
that contentment without desire, a pure pleasure, would result in the most useless
human being in the world, a being that lacks the incentive (Triebfeder) to act. We
cannot frame a correct concept of happiness except by thinking of it as progress
towards contentment, since happiness and pleasure presuppose pain and discon-
tentment.52 For us, happiness is labor (Arbeit ), difficulty (Schwierigkeit ), and effort
(Mühe ) with the prospect of tranquility (Ruhe ).53
This suggests an endless striving towards a regulative idea, an idea that can-
not be fully reached in this life. This striving does not involve simply accepting or
justifying the present situation as it is, since that would mean succumbing to the
evil and injustice in the world. The point is rather to accept our circumstances
and to endure them because this is seen as leading to reconciliation in the fu-
ture through rational reform and historical progress towards the highest good. In
this way, Kant appears to view the present situation as unacceptable (in its ac-
tuality) and acceptable (in its potentiality) at the same time. Zapffe, on the other
hand, simply judges the human condition to be morally unacceptable (Zapffe 1997,
p. 51). Zapffe’s philosophy involves a radical alienation from our imperfect world,
whereas Kant’s critical philosophy seeks to reconcile us with it while stressing the
need for reform and progress.
Kant’s thought experiment is not only relevant for Kantian ethics but seems
to hold for any type of ethics that acknowledges a distinction between moral-
ity and mere prudence. (This includes, for example, the existential ethics of
Kierkegaard.54) Recent scholarship on virtue ethics has, for instance, argued con-
vincingly that moral virtue is valuable in itself, not merely as a means for reaching
(individual or general) happiness.55 If we accept this central ethical point, then
it seems to follow that Zapffe’s notion of justice is questionable since it reduces
morality to prudence, something that seems problematic for reasons external and
internal to Zapffe’s theory.
Zapffe himself believes that some things or projects have intrinsic or non-
instrumental value, including not only autotelic interests but also the quest for the
meaning of life and sympathy towards fellow human beings as well as attempts to
extend one’s consciousness and refine one’s sensibility.56 Zapffe considers moral-
ity to be indispensable and tends to rely on a deontological notion of ethics.57 In-
deed, Zapffe’s pessimism revolves around the human tendency to make moral de-
mands on the world.58 Zapffe even goes as far as to argue that, since our essential
interests are impossible to realize, we are thereby morally obligated to exterminate
humanity altogether,59 or at the very least to decrease the population drastically
(Zapffe 1941, p. 402). Thus Zapffe’s metaphysical interests lead to antinatalism.
6 Conclusion
I have argued that Zapffe’s metaphysical interests, both the interest in meaning
and the interest in justice, are problematic. I have first and foremost argued that
Zapffe’s metaphysical interests lead to problems given his own premises and, to
a lesser extent, indicated how the metaphysical interests are at odds with other
theories (notably Kant’s critical philosophy) and how they lead to an overly pes-
simistic worldview. The conclusion that appears to follow from the preceding anal-
54 Regarding Kierkegaard’s influence on Zapffe, see Fremstedal 2012a. I have elsewhere argued
that Kierkegaard follows Kant in seeing ethics as something that presupposes discontentment
and uncertainty. Both thinkers argue that moral agency and moral motivation require this world
to be imperfect in the sense of having restricted knowledge and in the sense that moral virtue
does not automatically lead to happiness. Thus, both Kant and Kierkegaard make constitutive
assumptions about the moral structure of the world on practical grounds (Fremstedal 2012b).
55 See Annas 1993, pp. 125, 127–128, 225–227, 260–290; Horn 1998, pp. 202–213, 220–224. See also
Hare 2001, pp. 78–84.
56 Zapffe 1941, pp. 391–393; cf. Fremstedal 2001, p. 30.
57 Cf. Åslund 1999, p. 146; Markussen 1999, p. 119.
58 Fremstedal 2001, p. 26 and 2005, pp. 81, 83, 94–95.
59 Zapffe 1997, p. 51; cf. Zapffe/Tønnesen/Næss 1983, p. 60.
ysis is that Zapffe should either give up his metaphysical interests or give up his
empiricism, his anti-religious views, and his moral commitments. More specifi-
cally, Zapffe’s views on the meaning of life contravene his own empiricism, since
they appear to transcend the limits of possible experience. Zapffe wants knowl-
edge of the meaning of life instead of religious belief, but such knowledge seems
impossible given his own premises. His focus on the meaning of life also tends to
overshadow the importance of meaning in life.60
As we saw, Zapffe’s demand for metaphysical justice also leads to problems,
since it seems to reduce morality to prudence and to deny the friction and strug-
gle necessary for human agency. Plausibly, the upshot is that Zapffe must ei-
ther give up his notion of (metaphysical) justice or change his views on ethics
and human agency. Thus, it seems that Zapffe’s notions of justice and meaning
are both problematic, since they appear to be at odds with other elements in
Zapffe’s theory and lead to an overly pessimistic interpretation of the human con-
dition. If Zapffe’s metaphysical interests are untenable, this also means that the
hard core of Zapffe’s pessimistic existentialism is likewise untenable. Although he
may have been aware of some of these difficulties, he nevertheless insisted that
metaphysical needs are the most important needs for human beings.61
The criticism set forth in this paper aims to undermine the central tenets
of Zapffe’s existential philosophy as it is found in On the Tragic and “The Last
Messiah”. It does not, however, aim to undermine Zapffe’s contributions to other
fields. Zapffe’s work is rightly known for its literary qualities. Zapffe is particu-
larly good at describing phenomena such as meaninglessness, injustice, alien-
ation, and the death of God. His descriptions not only have strong literary quali-
ties but also resemble phenomenological descriptions found in other existential-
ist philosophers and theologians. His philosophy represents an original contri-
bution to continental existentialism and Norwegian philosophy. This is perhaps
especially noteworthy since Norway does not have a philosophical tradition of its
own but has rather been dominated by continental and analytic philosophy.
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