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  1. #1

    Default Re: Philosophy World Today; Nihilism.

    There isn't a point. Life is meaningless. It'd be a lot simpler if we all just came to terms with that.

  2. #2
    Part-Time Polemic Senior Member ICantSpellDawg's Avatar
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    Default Re: Philosophy World Today; Nihilism.

    Quote Originally Posted by Craterus
    There isn't a point. Life is meaningless. It'd be a lot simpler if we all just came to terms with that.
    Even if that were true, why would we need to come to terms with it? Life would also be simpler if we were dead.

    That is why I've become a Catholic. I like what the Pope has to say. I started out as a Nihilist.

    I figured that I am naturally conservative and no matter how hard I try, I can't shake the basic tenents. I'm in the position that, if there is no point it doesn't matter if I believe in a point and if there is a point, hey - no harm no foul.

    Go to church and wing it with Jesus.
    Last edited by ICantSpellDawg; 05-30-2008 at 01:17.
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    A very, very Senior Member Adrian II's Avatar
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    Default Re: Philosophy World Today; Nihilism.

    Nihilism has a point. I mean it. It's Bazarov's point, a serious consideration that cannot be easily dismissed.
    "The tiny bit of space I occupy is so minute in comparison with the rest of the universe, where I am not and which is not concerned with me; and the period of time in which it is my lot to live is so infinitesimal compared with eternity in which I have not been and shall not be... And yet here, in this atom which is myself, in this mathematical point, blood circulates, a brain operates and aspires to something too... What a monstrous business! What futility!"

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    Part-Time Polemic Senior Member ICantSpellDawg's Avatar
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    Default Re: Philosophy World Today; Nihilism.

    Quote Originally Posted by Adrian II
    Nihilism has a point. I mean it. It's Bazarov's point, a serious consideration that cannot be easily dismissed.
    "The tiny bit of space I occupy is so minute in comparison with the rest of the universe, where I am not and which is not concerned with me; and the period of time in which it is my lot to live is so infinitesimal compared with eternity in which I have not been and shall not be... And yet here, in this atom which is myself, in this mathematical point, blood circulates, a brain operates and aspires to something too... What a monstrous business! What futility!"

    Turgenev, Fathers And Sons
    That isn't a "point".
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    A very, very Senior Member Adrian II's Avatar
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    Default Re: Philosophy World Today; Nihilism.

    Quote Originally Posted by TuffStuffMcGruff
    That isn't a "point".
    'Winging it with Jesus'- you call that a point? It just confirms what Turgenev has Bazarov say.
    The bloody trouble is we are only alive when we’re half dead trying to get a paragraph right. - Paul Scott

  6. #6

    Default Re: Philosophy World Today; Nihilism.

    Quote Originally Posted by Adrian II
    Nihilism has a point. I mean it. It's Bazarov's point, a serious consideration that cannot be easily dismissed.
    "The tiny bit of space I occupy is so minute in comparison with the rest of the universe, where I am not and which is not concerned with me; and the period of time in which it is my lot to live is so infinitesimal compared with eternity in which I have not been and shall not be... And yet here, in this atom which is myself, in this mathematical point, blood circulates, a brain operates and aspires to something too... What a monstrous business! What futility!"

    Turgenev, Fathers And Sons
    On the other hand:

    The amount of space we occupy is so huge in comparison with quarks and atomic structures, where I am not and which is not concerned with me; and the period of time in which it is my lot to live is so gigantic when compared to a nanosecond...and yet despite how huge I am, my brain operates and aspires to something...let's go eat some ice cream!

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    This comment is witty! Senior Member LittleGrizzly's Avatar
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    Default Re: Philosophy World Today; Nihilism.

    Even if that were true, why would we need to come to terms with it? Life would also be simpler if we were dead.


    To me it says your life starts out pointless, so make you own purpose.
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    Part-Time Polemic Senior Member ICantSpellDawg's Avatar
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    Default Re: Philosophy World Today; Nihilism.

    Quote Originally Posted by LittleGrizzly
    Even if that were true, why would we need to come to terms with it? Life would also be simpler if we were dead.


    To me it says your life starts out pointless, so make you own purpose.
    Make or Find? That seems to be the difference. I believe that a purpose is ours to find - suggesting that it already exists and is waiting for us to take up the call.
    Last edited by ICantSpellDawg; 05-30-2008 at 02:05.
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    This comment is witty! Senior Member LittleGrizzly's Avatar
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    Default Re: Philosophy World Today; Nihilism.

    but going back to the OP would a created purpose be any less meaningful to the person pursuing it, maybe it is less meaningful but as that higher purpose probably never exsisted in the first place for that person there would be litte effect...
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    Nobody expects the Senior Member Lemur's Avatar
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    Default Re: Philosophy World Today; Nihilism.

    Donny: Are these the Nazis, Walter?
    Walter Sobchak: No, Donny, these men are nihilists. There's nothing to be afraid of.

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    A very, very Senior Member Adrian II's Avatar
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    Default Re: Philosophy World Today; Nihilism.

    Quote Originally Posted by Sasaki Kojiro
    [..] let's go eat some ice cream!
    Boy, that's a fine mission statement there.

    Seriously, in the face of his practically-nothingness, all man's thoughts and actions appear monstrous assumptions. Like Descartes' 'cogito' is the point of departure for reflection, Bazarov's statement is the point of departure for ethics. Whatever values you (choose to) subscribe to, you do so on your own initiative. There is no external authority that imposes them. Of course you can recognise an authority as being above you, but in that case it is no authority in the proper sense; just as you chose it, you can choose to refuse it.

    What renders Lemur's funny dialogue essentially moot is that people who 'wing it' with an authoritarian notion of values are far more dangerous to mankind that those who question all ethics. Ever heard of nihilist crimes, nihilist dictatorships or worse, nihilist musicals? QED.

    Sure, there are skewed interpretations of nihilism used to label non-nihilist people and actions. Such as the term 'nihilist violence', meaning violence for violence's sake. But that's a rudimentary value system, not nihilism.
    The bloody trouble is we are only alive when we’re half dead trying to get a paragraph right. - Paul Scott

  12. #12

    Default Re: Philosophy World Today; Nihilism.

    Quote Originally Posted by Adrian II
    Boy, that's a fine mission statement there.

    Seriously, in the face of his practically-nothingness, all man's thoughts and actions appear monstrous assumptions. Like Descartes' 'cogito' is the point of departure for reflection, Bazarov's statement is the point of departure for ethics. Whatever values you (choose to) subscribe to, you do so on your own initiative. There is no external authority that imposes them. Of course you can recognise an authority as being above you, but in that case it is no authority in the proper sense; just as you chose it, you can choose to refuse it.

    What renders Lemur's funny dialogue essentially moot is that people who 'wing it' with an authoritarian notion of values are far more dangerous to mankind that those who question all ethics. Ever heard of nihilist crimes, nihilist dictatorships or worse, nihilist musicals? QED.

    Sure, there are skewed interpretations of nihilism used to label non-nihilist people and actions. Such as the term 'nihilist violence', meaning violence for violence's sake. But that's a rudimentary value system, not nihilism.
    I guess a lot of our values are instilled from an early age by our society and peers. We learn behavior by observing it. Some people follow the "I am blue collar/white collar so these are my values" form of winging it, and nihilism's point is that we shouldn't take these values as objective truths? I agree with that but I'm not a fan of the idea that since the universe is so large our actions are insignificant, we're only relatively small. As far as I'm concerned the rest of the universe is just pretty pictures.
    Last edited by Sasaki Kojiro; 05-30-2008 at 18:43.

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    Part-Time Polemic Senior Member ICantSpellDawg's Avatar
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    Default Re: Philosophy World Today; Nihilism.

    Quote Originally Posted by Adrian II
    Boy, that's a fine mission statement there.

    Seriously, in the face of his practically-nothingness, all man's thoughts and actions appear monstrous assumptions. Like Descartes' 'cogito' is the point of departure for reflection, Bazarov's statement is the point of departure for ethics. Whatever values you (choose to) subscribe to, you do so on your own initiative. There is no external authority that imposes them. Of course you can recognise an authority as being above you, but in that case it is no authority in the proper sense; just as you chose it, you can choose to refuse it.

    What renders Lemur's funny dialogue essentially moot is that people who 'wing it' with an authoritarian notion of values are far more dangerous to mankind that those who question all ethics. Ever heard of nihilist crimes, nihilist dictatorships or worse, nihilist musicals? QED.

    Sure, there are skewed interpretations of nihilism used to label non-nihilist people and actions. Such as the term 'nihilist violence', meaning violence for violence's sake. But that's a rudimentary value system, not nihilism.
    I've never met a true nihilist. You mean to tell me that if you question the ethic that prohibits slavery that the world will be better off? How about the one that prohibits murder or war for aggrandisement?

    Yea, mankind is a lot better of with those people in power.
    What a load.
    Last edited by ICantSpellDawg; 05-30-2008 at 19:01.
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  14. #14

    Default Re: Philosophy World Today; Nihilism.

    It's impractical to be a true nihilist. If nothing matters, why look both ways before you cross the road?

    However, there are several ethical irrealist positions that would argue that, without ethics, society wouldn't turn into a moral anarchy.

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    Hǫrðar Member Viking's Avatar
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    Default Re: Philosophy World Today; Nihilism.

    Quote Originally Posted by TuffStuffMcGruff
    I've never met a true nihilist. You mean to tell me that if you question the ethic that prohibits slavery that the world will be better off? How about the one that prohibits murder or war for aggrandisement?

    Yea, mankind is a lot better of with those people in power.
    What a load.

    To question is not the same as rejecting. Perhaps the ethics that rejects slavery was simply found to be sound?

    Quote Originally Posted by Craterus
    It's impractical to be a true nihilist. If nothing matters, why look both ways before you cross the road?
    If nothing matters, then what does it matter that nothing matters? It's a loop, so it's irrelevant. A nihilist is merely someone who states that there are/is

    a) no objecitve morals
    b) no objective truth
    c) no objective meaning of life

    so if he wants to live in a world where everything goes along smoothly, he'll need some morals. If he does not, then he'll not need and he will be the one suffering.
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    A very, very Senior Member Adrian II's Avatar
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    Default Re: Philosophy World Today; Nihilism.

    Quote Originally Posted by TuffStuffMcGruff
    I've never met a true nihilist. You mean to tell me that if you question the ethic that prohibits slavery that the world will be better off?
    I mean to tell you that a nihilist doesn't believe the world should be better off in the first place. Or worse off, for that matter. It's irrelevant in his view.

    Take it from there and you will be able to 'deconstruct' all your other assumptions in the same way. You will reach a point where you realise that observing any particular value is entirely an act of will - your will. No one asked you to, no one forced you into it, no preconceived order in the world around you suggested it. It's an act ex nihilo, coming out of nothing. And you are responsible for its consequences during the short span of time in which your act matters. In the end, it doesn't matter at all. It is an act ad nihilum, an act going nowhere, bound to end in nothingness because man's presence is so inconsequential in the colossal frame of time and space. The universe doesn't care, it will crush you anyway. If you want to temporarily and inconsequentially defy it, it's entirely your business. Think Sisyphus. Camus made sense of that myth in a beautiful booklet, called The Myth of Sisyphus, which is an ode to human willpower and courage in the face of nothingness.

    Since it has this sobering effect on man's assumptions, nihilism has been the diet of choice of western philosophy since Nietzsche.
    If you continue to lose weight you will eventually die.
    Not good.
    But it pays to observe weight-loss until you reach a healthy weight, without redundant pretenses about ourselves and the universe.
    Excellent.

    Are we there yet, so we can laugh off Bazarov? I don't think so.

    P.S. Have you ever thought about what your last words on earth would be, supposing you had the chance to utter them with your dying breath? I have. They would probably be: "What nonsense." It would be the last and only act of defiance left to me.
    Last edited by Adrian II; 05-31-2008 at 12:19.
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    Default Re: Philosophy World Today; Nihilism.

    In that case, mine would be, "What's the point?"
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    Default Re: Philosophy World Today; Nihilism.

    Quote Originally Posted by TuffStuffMcGruff
    I've never met a true nihilist. You mean to tell me that if you question the ethic that prohibits slavery that the world will be better off? How about the one that prohibits murder or war for aggrandisement?
    What did the bible ever do to stop slavery? The idea that an absolute code of ethics is going to stop people from enslaving eachother or committing any sort of atrocity is a bit silly, to be honest.

    ...

    I'm an atheist, so I believe that life is a cosmic accident. There's no Maker who cares about what we do, and "Natural Law" is a fallacy. Sometimes you're just better off by going ahead without wondering "why".

  19. #19
    Jillian & Allison's Daddy Senior Member Don Corleone's Avatar
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    Default Re: Philosophy World Today; Nihilism.

    So I'm intrigued by the discussion thus far.

    Adrian is proposing that at the end of the day, Nihilism means that all subjective value and meaning attached to life is imparted on it by direct choice to impart such value.

    Viking has equated Nihilism with Moral Relativism and stated that Nihilism simply means a rejection of absolute standards.

    And Fenrig states that the life unconsidered and uncomtemplated is 'better off'.

    Personally, I think Nihilism is yet another incarnation of the Emperor's Clothes. Three people whom I respect and normally find quite interesting all offer posts devoid of meaning on a philosophy they claim to espouse, at least in part.

    Correct me if I'm wrong, but Moral Relativism, which is no longer so chic, as it's not avant garde enough any longer, is the absence of absolute moral standards or values? Nihilism is technically the absence of any meaning whatsoever? At some point, doesn't it become an oxymoron in thought? In order to classify oneself a Nihilist, doesn't one need to apply more thought to the question then Nihilism itself allows?

    Yes, calling yourself a Nihilist is very trendy these days. But at the end of the day, isn't it just one more self-created 'Get Out of Jail Free' card? Forget about metaphysical ethical standards for a second (and I am capable of doing just that). Isn't there a Humanist ethic to which we all must espouse? Surely, a devout Christian, when provided with irrefutable evidence denying God's existence wouldn't be absolved for cavorting on a self-obsessive crime spree? Nor do avowed atheists actually practice the 'freedom' they claim to seek.

    Call it what you will, there is goodness in all of us, and I do not think all the eye-shutting, ear clapsing and chanting "Lalalalala I cannnot hear you there are no good and evil lalalala" can ever alter our perception of that. Who here would really rape a 4 year old for pleasure, or steal the last $1000 off a starving elderly widow and claim the act has no meaning? Who among us would not be aghast with horror when faced with not the idea of such acts, but the reality of them? To our daughters or our grandmothers? Still no meaning?

    And as with all proofs, a simple counterpoint proven true is all that is necessary. I'm not offering my argument as proof positive in the Divine. But I do offer it as a rejection of Nihilism, the rejection of all meaning.
    Last edited by Don Corleone; 06-02-2008 at 20:02.
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