Camus focuses on Mörso's body, which is in contact with the world with rich and poetic expressions. Mörso's body serves as a point that specifically reveals its identity as a rebel who denies the customs and order of civilized society, expressing the sense of originality before the body and humans are separated. The world Mörso senses vividly embodies his existence and confirms the proposition that existence precedes nature. Mörso's daily life opens up five senses to the world and consists of vast materials of vision, hearing, smell, touch, and taste through physical experience. A different approach, based on the fact that the body is an inseparable entity from Mörso, finds specific points where Mörso senses the world and presents a new perspective on reading The Stranger. Through this, we find answers to the absurdity and contradiction of Camus' existence and the possibility of transcendence to overcome it.