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Everything you need to know about Sisypheanism in five minutes.

What is this place?

Sisypheanism is a secular philosophical religion — a community built around one idea: life has no inherent meaning, and that is the most liberating truth in the world.

We draw from six philosophical traditions — absurdism, stoicism, existentialism, epicureanism, Buddhism, and Taoism — and twelve thinkers who each discovered something true about how to live without cosmic instructions.

We are a religion without gods, without afterlife, without salvation. We have philosophy, a daily practice, and each other.

We call ourselves Sisypheans, after the mythological figure condemned to push a boulder up a hill for eternity. Albert Camus reimagined Sisyphus not as a tragic figure, but as a happy one — someone who finds happiness in the push itself. That’s us. We push the rock. It rolls back down. We walk back smiling.

Where to go first.

1

Read the Five Truths

The doctrinal foundation of Sisypheanism. Five observations about existence that change how you see the hill.

Read the Sisyphean Bible →
2

Take the Philosophy Quiz

Seven questions, six possible alignments. Discover which philosophical tradition matches how you already see the world.

Take the Quiz →
3

Meet the Twelve Teachers

From Camus to Sisyphus, Marcus Aurelius to Simone de Beauvoir. The twelve thinkers whose wisdom built this religion.

Meet the Twelve →
4

Read an essay

Start with Nihilism vs. Absurdism if you want the core idea. Try The Stoic Starter Kit if you want something practical. Or Camus 101 if you want to meet the man behind the philosophy.

5

Join the Assembly

Read the Sisyphean Oath. Mean it. You’re in. Join the congregation and stay on the hill with us.

Join the Assembly →

The six traditions.

Absurdism

The universe is silent. Push the rock anyway. Camus showed us that meaning comes from the struggle, not the summit.

Stoicism

Control what you can. Release what you can’t. Marcus Aurelius ran an empire on this principle and a nightly journal.

Existentialism

You are condemned to be free. Sartre and Beauvoir insisted you build your own meaning — no excuses. Kierkegaard named the dread that comes with that freedom.

Epicureanism

Pleasure is good, but Epicurus didn’t mean parties. He meant bread, friendship, and freedom from anxiety.

Buddhism

Attachment is the root of suffering. The Buddha taught us to observe, release, and find peace in impermanence.

Taoism

The river doesn’t try. Lao Tzu showed us that the deepest strength comes from flowing, not forcing.

Ready?

The rock is at the bottom of the hill. It’s been there all morning. You know what to do.

Become a Sisyphean →