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Nihilism

Nihilism (/ˈn(h)ɪlɪzəm, ˈn-/; from Latin nihil 'nothing') is a philosophy, or family of views within philosophy, that rejects generally accepted or fundamental aspects of human existence,[1][2] such as objective truth, knowledge, morality, values, or meaning.[3][4] The term was popularized by Ivan Turgenev, and more specifically by his character Bazarov in the novel Fathers and Sons.

There have been different nihilist positions, including that human values are baseless, that life is meaningless, that knowledge is impossible, or that some set of entities do not exist or are meaningless or pointless.[5][6]

Scholars of nihilism may regard it as merely a label that has been applied to various separate philosophies,[7] or as a distinct historical concept arising out of nominalism, skepticism, and philosophical pessimism, as well as possibly out of Christianity itself.[8] Contemporary understanding of the idea stems largely from the Nietzschean 'crisis of nihilism', from which derive the two central concepts: the destruction of higher values and the opposition to the affirmation of life.[9][5] Earlier forms of nihilism, however, may be more selective in negating specific hegemonies of social, moral, political and aesthetic thought.[10]

The term is sometimes used in association with anomie to explain the general mood of despair at a perceived pointlessness of existence or arbitrariness of human principles and social institutions. Nihilism has also been described as conspicuous in or constitutive of certain historical periods. For example,[11] Jean Baudrillard[12][13] and others have characterized postmodernity as a nihilistic epoch[14] or mode of thought.[15] Likewise, some theologians and religious figures have stated that postmodernity[16] and many aspects of modernity[17] represent nihilism by a negation of religious principles. Nihilism has, however, been widely ascribed to both religious and irreligious viewpoints.[8]

In popular use, the term commonly refers to forms of existential nihilism, according to which life is without intrinsic value, meaning, or purpose.[18] Other prominent positions within nihilism include the rejection of all normative and ethical views (§ Moral nihilism), the rejection of all social and political institutions (§ Political nihilism), the stance that no knowledge can or does exist (§ Epistemological nihilism), and a number of metaphysical positions, which assert that non-abstract objects do not exist (§ Metaphysical nihilism), that composite objects do not exist (§ Mereological nihilism), or even that life itself does not exist.

Etymology, terminology and definition

The etymological origin of nihilism is the Latin root word nihil, meaning 'nothing', which is similarly found in the related terms annihilate, meaning 'to bring to nothing',[5] and nihility, meaning 'nothingness'.[19] The term nihilism emerged in several places in Europe during the 18th century,[7] notably in the German form Nihilismus,[20] though was also in use during the Middle Ages to denote certain forms of heresy.[21] The concept itself first took shape within Russian and German philosophy, which respectively represented the two major currents of discourse on nihilism prior to the 20th century.[20] The term likely entered English from either the German Nihilismus, Late Latin nihilismus, or French nihilisme.[22]

Early examples of the term's use are found in German publications. In 1733, German writer Friedrich Leberecht Goetz used it as a literary term in combination with noism (German: Neinismus).[23] In the period surrounding the French Revolution, the term was also a pejorative for certain value-destructive trends of modernity, namely the negation of Christianity and European tradition in general.[7] Nihilism first entered philosophical study within a discourse surrounding Kantian and post-Kantian philosophies, notably appearing in the writings of Swiss esotericist Jacob Hermann Obereit in 1787 and German philosopher Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi in 1799.[24] As early as 1824, the term began to take on a social connotation with German journalist Joseph von Görres attributing it to a negation of existing social and political institutions.[25] The Russian form of the word, nigilizm (Russian: нигилизм), entered publication in 1829 when Nikolai Nadezhdin used it synonymously with skepticism. In Russian journalism the word continued to have significant social connotations.[26]

From the time of Jacobi, the term almost fell completely out of use throughout Europe until it was revived by Russian author Ivan Turgenev, who brought the word into popular use with his 1862 novel Fathers and Sons, leading many scholars to believe he coined the term.[27] The nihilist characters of the novel define themselves as those who "deny everything", who do "not take any principle on faith, whatever reverence that principle may be enshrined in", and who regard "at the present time, negation is the most useful of all".[28] Despite Turgenev's own anti-nihilistic leanings, many of his readers likewise took up the name of nihilist, thus ascribing the Russian nihilist movement its name.[29] Nihilism was further discussed by German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, who used the term to describe the Western world's disintegration of traditional morality.[30] For Nietzsche, nihilism applied to both the modern trends of value-destruction expressed in the 'death of God', as well as what he saw as the life-denying morality of Christianity.[31][32] Under Nietzsche's profound influence, the term was then further treated within French philosophy and continental philosophy more broadly, while the influence of nihilism in Russia arguably continued well into the Soviet era.[33]

Religious scholars such as Altizer have stated that nihilism must necessarily be understood in relation to religion, and that the study of core elements of its character requires fundamentally theological consideration.[34]

History

Buddhism

The concept of nihilism was discussed by the Buddha (563 B.C. to 483 B.C.), as recorded in the Theravada and Mahayana Tripiṭaka.[35] The Tripiṭaka, originally written in Pali, refers to nihilism as natthikavāda and the nihilist view as micchādiṭṭhi.[36] Various sutras within it describe a multiplicity of views held by different sects of ascetics while the Buddha was alive, some of which were viewed by him to be morally nihilistic. In the "Doctrine of Nihilism" in the Apannaka Sutta, the Buddha describes moral nihilists as holding the following views:[37]

  • The act of giving produces no beneficial results;
  • Good and bad actions produce no results;
  • After death, beings are not reborn into the present world or into another world;
  • There is no one in the world who, through direct knowledge, can confirm that beings are reborn into this world or into another world.

The Buddha further states that those who hold these views will fail to see the virtue in good mental, verbal, and bodily conduct and the corresponding dangers in misconduct, and will therefore tend towards the latter.[37]

Nirvana and nihilism

The culmination of the path that the Buddha taught was nirvana, "a place of nothingnessnonpossession and…non-attachment…[which is] the total end of death and decay."[38] Ajahn Amaro, an ordained Buddhist monk of more than 40 years, observes that in English nothingness can sound like nihilism. However, the word could be emphasized in a different way, so that it becomes no-thingness, indicating that nirvana is not a thing you can find, but rather a state where you experience the reality of non-grasping.[38]

In the Alagaddupama Sutta, the Buddha describes how some individuals feared his teaching because they believe that their self would be destroyed if they followed it. He describes this as an anxiety caused by the false belief in an unchanging, everlasting self. All things are subject to change and taking any impermanent phenomena to be a self causes suffering. Nonetheless, his critics called him a nihilist who teaches the annihilation and extermination of an existing being. The Buddha's response was that he only teaches the cessation of suffering. When an individual has given up craving and the conceit of 'I am' their mind is liberated, they no longer come into any state of 'being' and are no longer born again.[39]

The Aggi-Vacchagotta Sutta records a conversation between the Buddha and an individual named Vaccha that further elaborates on this. In the sutta, Vaccha asks the Buddha to confirm one of the following, with respect to the existence of the Buddha after death:[40]

  • After death a Buddha reappears somewhere else;
  • After death a Buddha does not reappear;
  • After death a Buddha both does and does not reappear;
  • After death a Buddha neither does nor does not reappear.

To all four questions, the Buddha answers that the terms "reappears somewhere else," "does not reappear," "both does and does not reappear," and "neither does nor does not reappear," do not apply. When Vaccha expresses puzzlement, the Buddha asks Vaccha a counter question to the effect of: if a fire were to go out and someone were to ask you whether the fire went north, south, east or west, how would you reply? Vaccha replies that the question does not apply and that an extinguished fire can only be classified as 'out'.[40]

Ṭhānissaro Bhikkhu elaborates on the classification problem around the words 'reappear,' etc. with respect to the Buddha and Nirvana by stating that a "Person who has attained the goal [nirvana] is thus indescribable because [they have] abandoned all things by which [they] could be described."[41] The Suttas themselves describe the liberated mind as 'untraceable' or as 'consciousness without feature', making no distinction between the mind of a liberated being that is alive and the mind of one that is no longer alive.[39][42]

Despite the Buddha's explanations to the contrary, Buddhist practitioners may, at times, still approach Buddhism in a nihilistic manner. Ajahn Amaro illustrates this by retelling the story of a Buddhist monk, Ajahn Sumedho, who in his early years took a nihilistic approach to Nirvana. A distinct feature of Nirvana in Buddhism is that an individual attaining it is no longer subject to rebirth. Ajahn Sumedho, during a conversation with his teacher Ajahn Chah, comments that he is "Determined above all things to fully realize Nirvana in this lifetime…deeply weary of the human condition and…[is] determined not to be born again." To this, Ajahn Chah replies: "What about the rest of us, Sumedho? Don't you care about those who'll be left behind?" Ajahn Amaro comments that Ajahn Chah could detect that his student had a nihilistic aversion to life rather than true detachment.[43]

Jacobi

The term nihilism was first introduced to philosophy by Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi (1743–1819), who used the term to characterize rationalism,[44] and in particular the Spinoza's determinism and the Aufklärung, in order to carry out a reductio ad absurdum according to which all rationalism (philosophy as criticism) reduces to nihilism—and thus it should be avoided and replaced with a return to some type of faith and revelation. Bret W. Davis writes, for example:[45]

The first philosophical development of the idea of nihilism is generally ascribed to Friedrich Jacobi, who in a famous letter criticized Fichte's idealism as falling into nihilism. According to Jacobi, Fichte's absolutization of the ego (the 'absolute I' that posits the 'not-I') is an inflation of subjectivity that denies the absolute transcendence of God.

A related but oppositional concept is fideism, which sees reason as hostile and inferior to faith.

Kierkegaard

 
Unfinished sketch c. 1840 of Søren Kierkegaard by his cousin Niels Christian Kierkegaard

Søren Kierkegaard (1813–1855) posited an early form of nihilism, which he referred to as leveling.[46] He saw leveling as the process of suppressing individuality to a point where an individual's uniqueness becomes non-existent and nothing meaningful in one's existence can be affirmed:

Levelling at its maximum is like the stillness of death, where one can hear one's own heartbeat, a stillness like death, into which nothing can penetrate, in which everything sinks, powerless. One person can head a rebellion, but one person cannot head this levelling process, for that would make him a leader and he would avoid being levelled. Each individual can in his little circle participate in this levelling, but it is an abstract process, and levelling is abstraction conquering individuality.

— The Present Age, translated by Alexander Dru. Foreword by Walter Kaufmann, 1962, pp. 51–53.

Kierkegaard, an advocate of a philosophy of life, generally argued against levelling and its nihilistic consequences, although he believed it would be "genuinely educative to live in the age of levelling [because] people will be forced to face the judgement of [levelling] alone."[47] George Cotkin asserts Kierkegaard was against "the standardization and levelling of belief, both spiritual and political, in the nineteenth century," and that Kierkegaard "opposed tendencies in mass culture to reduce the individual to a cipher of conformity and deference to the dominant opinion."[48] In his day, tabloids (like the Danish magazine Corsaren) and apostate Christianity were instruments of levelling and contributed to the "reflective apathetic age" of 19th-century Europe.[49] Kierkegaard argues that individuals who can overcome the levelling process are stronger for it, and that it represents a step in the right direction towards "becoming a true self."[47][50] As we must overcome levelling,[51] Hubert Dreyfus and Jane Rubin argue that Kierkegaard's interest, "in an increasingly nihilistic age, is in how we can recover the sense that our lives are meaningful."[52]

Russian nihilism

 
Portrait of a nihilist student by Ilya Repin

From the period 1860–1917, Russian nihilism was both a nascent form of nihilist philosophy and broad cultural movement which overlapped with certain revolutionary tendencies of the era,[53] for which it was often wrongly characterized as a form of political terrorism.[54] Russian nihilism centered on the dissolution of existing values and ideals, incorporating theories of hard determinism, atheism, materialism, positivism, and rational egoism, while rejecting metaphysics, sentimentalism, and aestheticism.[55] Leading philosophers of this school of thought included Nikolay Chernyshevsky and Dmitry Pisarev.[56]

The intellectual origins of the Russian nihilist movement can be traced back to 1855 and perhaps earlier,[57] where it was principally a philosophy of extreme moral and epistemological skepticism.[58] However, it was not until 1862 that the name nihilism was first popularized, when Ivan Turgenev used the term in his celebrated novel Fathers and Sons to describe the disillusionment of the younger generation towards both the progressives and traditionalists that came before them,[59] as well as its manifestation in the view that negation and value-destruction were most necessary to the present conditions.[60] The movement very soon adopted the name, despite the novel's initial harsh reception among both the conservatives and younger generation.[61]

Though philosophically both nihilistic and skeptical, Russian nihilism did not unilaterally negate ethics and knowledge as may be assumed, nor did it espouse meaninglessness unequivocally.[62] Even so, contemporary scholarship has challenged the equating of Russian nihilism with mere skepticism, instead identifying it as a fundamentally Promethean movement.[63] As passionate advocates of negation, the nihilists sought to liberate the Promethean might of the Russian people which they saw embodied in a class of prototypal individuals, or new types in their own words.[64] These individuals, according to Pisarev, in freeing themselves from all authority become exempt from moral authority as well, and are distinguished above the rabble or common masses.[65]

Later interpretations of nihilism were heavily influenced by works of anti-nihilistic literature, such as those of Fyodor Dostoevsky, which arose in response to Russian nihilism.[66] "In contrast to the corrupted nihilists [of the real world], who tried to numb their nihilistic sensitivity and forget themselves through self-indulgence, Dostoevsky's figures voluntarily leap into nihilism and try to be themselves within its boundaries.", writes contemporary scholar Nishitani. "The nihility expressed in 'if there is no God, everything is permitted', or 'après moi, le déluge', provides a principle whose sincerity they try to live out to the end. They search for and experiment with ways for the self to justify itself after God has disappeared."[67]

Nietzsche

Nihilism is often associated with the German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, who provided a detailed diagnosis of nihilism as a widespread phenomenon of Western culture. Though the notion appears frequently throughout Nietzsche's work, he uses the term in a variety of ways, with different meanings and connotations.

With regard to Nietzsche's development of thought, it has been noted in research that although he dealt with "nihilistic" themes from 1869 onwards ("pessimism, with nirvana and with nothingness and non-being"[68]), a conceptual use of nihilism occurred for the first time in handwritten notes in the middle of 1880 (KSA 9.127-128). This was the time of a then popular scientific work that reconstructed the so-called "Russian nihilism" on the basis of Russian newspaper reports on nihilistic incidents (N. Karlowitsch: Die Entwicklung des Nihilismus. Berlin 1880). This collection of material, published in three editions, was not only known to a broad German readership, but its influence on Nietzsche can also be proven.[69]

Karen L. Carr describes Nietzsche's characterization of nihilism as "a condition of tension, as a disproportion between what we want to value (or need) and how the world appears to operate."[31]: 25  When we find out that the world does not possess the objective value or meaning that we want it to have or have long since believed it to have, we find ourselves in a crisis.[70] Nietzsche asserts that with the decline of Christianity and the rise of physiological decadence,[clarification needed] nihilism is in fact characteristic of the modern age,[71] though he implies that the rise of nihilism is still incomplete and that it has yet to be overcome.[72] Though the problem of nihilism becomes especially explicit in Nietzsche's notebooks (published posthumously), it is mentioned repeatedly in his published works and is closely connected to many of the problems mentioned there.

Nietzsche characterized nihilism as emptying the world and especially human existence of meaning, purpose, comprehensible truth, or essential value. This observation stems in part from Nietzsche's perspectivism, or his notion that "knowledge" is always by someone of some thing: it is always bound by perspective, and it is never mere fact.[73] Rather, there are interpretations through which we understand the world and give it meaning. Interpreting is something we can not go without; in fact, it is a condition of subjectivity. One way of interpreting the world is through morality, as one of the fundamental ways that people make sense of the world, especially in regard to their own thoughts and actions. Nietzsche distinguishes a morality that is strong or healthy, meaning that the person in question is aware that he constructs it himself, from weak morality, where the interpretation is projected on to something external.

Nietzsche discusses Christianity, one of the major topics in his work, at length in the context of the problem of nihilism in his notebooks, in a chapter entitled "European Nihilism."[74] Here he states that the Christian moral doctrine provides people with intrinsic value, belief in God (which justifies the evil in the world) and a basis for objective knowledge. In this sense, in constructing a world where objective knowledge is possible, Christianity is an antidote against a primal form of nihilism, against the despair of meaninglessness. However, it is exactly the element of truthfulness in Christian doctrine that is its undoing: in its drive towards truth, Christianity eventually finds itself to be a construct, which leads to its own dissolution. It is therefore that Nietzsche states that we have outgrown Christianity "not because we lived too far from it, rather because we lived too close."[75] As such, the self-dissolution of Christianity constitutes yet another form of nihilism. Because Christianity was an interpretation that posited itself as the interpretation, Nietzsche states that this dissolution leads beyond skepticism to a distrust of all meaning.[76][31]: 41–2 

Stanley Rosen identifies Nietzsche's concept of nihilism with a situation of meaninglessness, in which "everything is permitted." According to him, the loss of higher metaphysical values that exist in contrast to the base reality of the world, or merely human ideas, gives rise to the idea that all human ideas are therefore valueless. Rejecting idealism thus results in nihilism, because only similarly transcendent ideals live up to the previous standards that the nihilist still implicitly holds.[77] The inability for Christianity to serve as a source of valuating the world is reflected in Nietzsche's famous aphorism of the madman in The Gay Science.[78] The death of God, in particular the statement that "we killed him", is similar to the self-dissolution of Christian doctrine: due to the advances of the sciences, which for Nietzsche show that man is the product of evolution, that Earth has no special place among the stars and that history is not progressive, the Christian notion of God can no longer serve as a basis for a morality.

One such reaction to the loss of meaning is what Nietzsche calls passive nihilism, which he recognizes in the pessimistic philosophy of Schopenhauer. Schopenhauer's doctrine, which Nietzsche also refers to as Western Buddhism, advocates separating oneself from will and desires in order to reduce suffering. Nietzsche characterizes this attitude as a "will to nothingness", whereby life turns away from itself, as there is nothing of value to be found in the world. This mowing away of all value in the world is characteristic of the nihilist, although in this, the nihilist appears inconsistent: this "will to nothingness" is still a form of valuation or willing.[79] He describes this as "an inconsistency on the part of the nihilists":

A nihilist is a man who judges of the world as it is that it ought not to be, and of the world as it ought to be that it does not exist. According to this view, our existence (action, suffering, willing, feeling) has no meaning: the pathos of 'in vain' is the nihilists' pathos – at the same time, as pathos, an inconsistency on the part of the nihilists.

— Friedrich Nietzsche, KSA 12:9 [60], The Will to Power, Section 585, Translated by Walter Kaufmann.

Nietzsche's relation to the problem of nihilism is a complex one. He approaches the problem of nihilism as deeply personal, stating that this predicament of the modern world is a problem that has "become conscious" in him.[80] According to Nietzsche, it is only when nihilism is overcome that a culture can have a true foundation upon which to thrive. He wished to hasten its coming only so that he could also hasten its ultimate departure.[71]

He states that there is at least the possibility of another type of nihilist in the wake of Christianity's self-dissolution, one that does not stop after the destruction of all value and meaning and succumb to the following nothingness. This alternate, 'active' nihilism on the other hand destroys to level the field for constructing something new. This form of nihilism is characterized by Nietzsche as "a sign of strength,"[81] a willful destruction of the old values to wipe the slate clean and lay down one's own beliefs and interpretations, contrary to the passive nihilism that resigns itself with the decomposition of the old values. This willful destruction of values and the overcoming of the condition of nihilism by the constructing of new meaning, this active nihilism, could be related to what Nietzsche elsewhere calls a free spirit[31]: 43–50  or the Übermensch from Thus Spoke Zarathustra and The Antichrist, the model of the strong individual who posits his own values and lives his life as if it were his own work of art. It may be questioned, though, whether "active nihilism" is indeed the correct term for this stance, and some question whether Nietzsche takes the problems nihilism poses seriously enough.[82]

Heideggerian interpretation of Nietzsche

Martin Heidegger's interpretation of Nietzsche influenced many postmodern thinkers who investigated the problem of nihilism as put forward by Nietzsche. Only recently has Heidegger's influence on Nietzschean nihilism research faded.[83] As early as the 1930s, Heidegger was giving lectures on Nietzsche's thought.[84] Given the importance of Nietzsche's contribution to the topic of nihilism, Heidegger's influential interpretation of Nietzsche is important for the historical development of the term nihilism.

Heidegger's method of researching and teaching Nietzsche is explicitly his own. He does not specifically try to present Nietzsche as Nietzsche. He rather tries to incorporate Nietzsche's thoughts into his own philosophical system of Being, Time and Dasein.[85] In his Nihilism as Determined by the History of Being (1944–46),[86] Heidegger tries to understand Nietzsche's nihilism as trying to achieve a victory through the devaluation of the, until then, highest values. The principle of this devaluation is, according to Heidegger, the will to power. The will to power is also the principle of every earlier valuation of values.[87] How does this devaluation occur and why is this nihilistic? One of Heidegger's main critiques on philosophy is that philosophy, and more specifically metaphysics, has forgotten to discriminate between investigating the notion of a being (seiende) and Being (Sein). According to Heidegger, the history of Western thought can be seen as the history of metaphysics. Moreover, because metaphysics has forgotten to ask about the notion of Being (what Heidegger calls Seinsvergessenheit), it is a history about the destruction of Being. That is why Heidegger calls metaphysics nihilistic.[88] This makes Nietzsche's metaphysics not a victory over nihilism, but a perfection of it.[89]

Heidegger, in his interpretation of Nietzsche, has been inspired by Ernst Jünger. Many references to Jünger can be found in Heidegger's lectures on Nietzsche. For example, in a letter to the rector of Freiburg University of November 4, 1945, Heidegger, inspired by Jünger, tries to explain the notion of "God is dead" as the "reality of the Will to Power." Heidegger also praises Jünger for defending Nietzsche against a too biological or anthropological reading during the Nazi era.[90]

Heidegger's interpretation of Nietzsche influenced a number of important postmodernist thinkers. Gianni Vattimo points at a back-and-forth movement in European thought, between Nietzsche and Heidegger. During the 1960s, a Nietzschean 'renaissance' began, culminating in the work of Mazzino Montinari and Giorgio Colli. They began work on a new and complete edition of Nietzsche's collected works, making Nietzsche more accessible for scholarly research. Vattimo explains that with this new edition of Colli and Montinari, a critical reception of Heidegger's interpretation of Nietzsche began to take shape. Like other contemporary French and Italian philosophers, Vattimo does not want, or only partially wants, to rely on Heidegger for understanding Nietzsche. On the other hand, Vattimo judges Heidegger's intentions authentic enough to keep pursuing them.[91] Philosophers who Vattimo exemplifies as a part of this back and forth movement are French philosophers Deleuze, Foucault and Derrida. Italian philosophers of this same movement are Cacciari, Severino and himself.[92] Jürgen Habermas, Jean-François Lyotard and Richard Rorty are also philosophers who are influenced by Heidegger's interpretation of Nietzsche.[93]

Deleuzean interpretation of Nietzsche

Gilles Deleuze's interpretation of Nietzsche's concept of nihilism is different - in some sense diametrically opposed - to the usual definition (as outlined in the rest of this article). Nihilism is one of the main topics of Deleuze's early book Nietzsche and Philosophy (1962).[94] There, Deleuze repeatedly interprets Nietzsche's nihilism as "the enterprise of denying life and depreciating existence".[95] Nihilism thus defined is therefore not the denial of higher values, or the denial of meaning, but rather the depreciation of life in the name of such higher values or meaning. Deleuze therefore (with, he claims, Nietzsche) says that Christianity and Platonism, and with them the whole of metaphysics, are intrinsically Nihilist.

Postmodernism

Postmodern and poststructuralist thought has questioned the very grounds on which Western cultures have based their 'truths': absolute knowledge and meaning, a 'decentralization' of authorship, the accumulation of positive knowledge, historical progress, and certain ideals and practices of humanism and the Enlightenment.

Derrida

Jacques Derrida, whose deconstruction is perhaps most commonly labeled nihilistic, did not himself make the nihilistic move that others have claimed. Derridean deconstructionists argue that this approach rather frees texts, individuals or organizations from a restrictive truth, and that deconstruction opens up the possibility of other ways of being.[96] Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, for example, uses deconstruction to create an ethics of opening up Western scholarship to the voice of the subaltern and to philosophies outside of the canon of western texts.[97] Derrida himself built a philosophy based upon a 'responsibility to the other'.[98] Deconstruction can thus be seen not as a denial of truth, but as a denial of our ability to know truth. That is to say, it makes an epistemological claim, compared to nihilism's ontological claim.

Lyotard

Lyotard argues that, rather than relying on an objective truth or method to prove their claims, philosophers legitimize their truths by reference to a story about the world that can not be separated from the age and system the stories belong to—referred to by Lyotard as meta-narratives. He then goes on to define the postmodern condition as characterized by a rejection both of these meta-narratives and of the process of legitimation by meta-narratives. This concept of the instability of truth and meaning leads in the direction of nihilism, though Lyotard stops short of embracing the latter.[citation needed]

In lieu of meta-narratives we have created new language-games in order to legitimize our claims which rely on changing relationships and mutable truths, none of which is privileged over the other to speak to ultimate truth.[citation needed]

Baudrillard

Postmodern theorist Jean Baudrillard wrote briefly of nihilism from the postmodern viewpoint in Simulacra and Simulation. He stuck mainly to topics of interpretations of the real world over the simulations of which the real world is composed. The uses of meaning were an important subject in Baudrillard's discussion of nihilism:

The apocalypse is finished, today it is the precession of the neutral, of forms of the neutral and of indifference ... all that remains, is the fascination for desertlike and indifferent forms, for the very operation of the system that annihilates us. Now, fascination (in contrast to seduction, which was attached to appearances, and to dialectical reason, which was attached to meaning) is a nihilistic passion par excellence, it is the passion proper to the mode of disappearance. We are fascinated by all forms of disappearance, of our disappearance. Melancholic and fascinated, such is our general situation in an era of involuntary transparency.

— Jean Baudrillard, Simulacra and Simulation, "On Nihilism," trans. 1995.[page needed]

Positions

From the 20th century, nihilism has encompassed a range of positions within various fields of philosophy. Each of these, as the Encyclopædia Britannica states, "denied the existence of genuine moral truths or values, rejected the possibility of knowledge or communication, and asserted the ultimate meaninglessness or purposelessness of life or of the universe."[99]

  • Cosmic nihilism is the position that reality or the cosmos is either wholly or significantly unintelligible and that it provides no foundation for human aims and principles.[3] Particularly, it may regard the cosmos as distinctly hostile or indifferent to humanity.[100] It is often related to both epistemological and existential nihilism, as well as cosmicism.
  • Epistemological nihilism is a form of philosophical skepticism according to which knowledge does not exist, or, if it does exist, it is unattainable for human beings. It should not be confused with epistemological fallibilism, according to which all knowledge is uncertain.
  • Existential nihilism is the position that life has no intrinsic meaning or value.[3] With respect to the universe, existential nihilism posits that a single human or even the entire human species is insignificant, without purpose, and unlikely to change in the totality of existence. The meaninglessness of life is largely explored in the philosophical school of existentialism, where one can create their own subjective meaning or purpose. In popular use, "nihilism" now most commonly refers to forms of existential nihilism.
  • Metaphysical nihilism is the position that concrete objects and physical constructs might not exist in the possible world, or that, even if there exist possible worlds that contain some concrete objects, there is at least one that contains only abstract objects.
    • Extreme metaphysical nihilism, also sometimes called ontological nihilism, is the position that nothing actually exists at all.[101][102] The American Heritage Medical Dictionary defines one form of nihilism as "An extreme form of skepticism that denies all existence."[103] A similar skepticism concerning the concrete world can be found in solipsism. However, despite the fact that both views deny the certainty of objects' true existence, the nihilist would deny the existence of self, whereas the solipsist would affirm it.[104] Both of these positions are considered forms of anti-realism.
    • Mereological nihilism, also called compositional nihilism, is the metaphysical position that objects with proper parts do not exist. This position applies to objects in space, and also to objects existing in time, which are posited to have no temporal parts. Rather, only basic building blocks without parts exist, and thus the world we see and experience, full of objects with parts, is a product of human misperception (i.e., if we could see clearly, we would not perceive compositive objects). This interpretation of existence must be based on resolution: The resolution with which humans see and perceive the "improper parts" of the world is not an objective fact of reality, but is rather an implicit trait that can only be qualitatively explored and expressed. Therefore, there is no arguable way to surmise or measure the validity of mereological nihilism. For example, an ant can get lost on a large cylindrical object because the circumference of the object is so large with respect to the ant that the ant effectively feels as though the object has no curvature. Thus, the resolution with which the ant views the world it exists "within" is an important determining factor in how the ant experiences this "within the world" feeling.
  • Moral nihilism, also called ethical nihilism, is the meta-ethical position that no morality or ethics exists whatsoever; therefore, no action is ever morally preferable to any other. Moral nihilism is distinct from both moral relativism and expressivism in that it does not acknowledge socially constructed values as personal or cultural moralities. It may also differ from other moral positions within nihilism that, rather than argue there is no morality, hold that if it does exist, it is a human construction and thus artificial, wherein any and all meaning is relative for different possible outcomes. An alternative scholarly perspective is that moral nihilism is a morality in itself. Cooper writes, "In the widest sense of the word 'morality', moral nihilism is a morality."[105]
  • Passive and active nihilism, the former of which is also equated to philosophical pessimism, refer to two approaches to nihilist thought; passive nihilism sees nihility as an end in itself, whereas active nihilism attempts to surpass it. For Nietzsche, passive nihilism further encapsulates the "will to nothing" and the modern condition of resignation or unawareness towards the dissolution of higher values brought about by the 19th century.[31][106]
  • Political nihilism is the position holding no political goals whatsoever, except for the complete destruction of all existing political institutions—along with the principles, values, and social institutions that uphold them.[107] Though often related to anarchism, it may differ in that it presents no method of social organisation after a negation of the current political structure has taken place. An analysis of political nihilism is further presented by Leo Strauss.[108]
  • Therapeutic nihilism, also called medical nihilism, is the position that the effectiveness of medical intervention is dubious or without merit.[109] Dealing with the philosophy of science as it relates to the contextualized demarcation of medical research, Jacob Stegenga applies Bayes' theorem to medical research and argues for the premise that "Even when presented with evidence for a hypothesis regarding the effectiveness of a medical intervention, we ought to have low confidence in that hypothesis."[110][111]

In culture, the arts, and media

Dada

The term Dada was first used by Richard Huelsenbeck and Tristan Tzara in 1916.[112] The movement, which lasted from approximately 1916 to 1923, arose during World War I, an event that influenced the artists.[113] The Dada Movement began in the old town of Zürich, Switzerland—known as the "Niederdorf" or "Niederdörfli"—in the Café Voltaire.[114] The Dadaists claimed that Dada was not an art movement, but an anti-art movement, sometimes using found objects in a manner similar to found poetry.

This tendency toward devaluation of art has led many[who?] to claim that Dada was an essentially nihilistic movement.[115] Given that Dada created its own means for interpreting its products, it is difficult to classify alongside most other contemporary art expressions. Due to perceived ambiguity, it has been classified as a nihilistic modus vivendi.[113]

Literature

The term "nihilism" was actually popularized in 1862 by Ivan Turgenev in his novel Fathers and Sons, whose hero, Bazarov, was a nihilist and recruited several followers to the philosophy. He found his nihilistic ways challenged upon falling in love.[116]

Anton Chekhov portrayed nihilism when writing Three Sisters. The phrase "what does it matter" or variants of this are often spoken by several characters in response to events; the significance of some of these events suggests a subscription to nihilism by said characters as a type of coping strategy.

The philosophical ideas of the French author, the Marquis de Sade, are often noted as early examples of nihilistic principles.[117]

Media

The frequently self-destructive and amoral tendencies of a nihilistic worldview can be seen in many of today's mediums, including movies and TV shows.

Rick Sanchez from Rick and Morty is portrayed as a high-functioning alcoholic burdened with knowledge. In his self-proclaimed genius, he adapts an existential nihilistic understanding that there is little to no reason to live.

Patrick Bateman in Bret Easton Ellis's 1991 novel American Psycho and 2000 film adaptation, displays both moral and existential nihilism. Throughout the film, Bateman does not shy away from murder or torture to accomplish his goals. As he realizes the evil in his deeds he tries to confess and take on the punishment for his acts of crime.[118]

Phil Connors in the 1993 comedy film Groundhog Day, develops existential nihilistic tendencies near the middle of the film. As he lives the same day an unspoken countless number of times he slips into a depression and attempts to commit suicide in a variety of different ways. He will also resort to kidnapping Punxsutawney Phil, the groundhog to which he credits his looping days, and drives off a cliff, killing both of them.[119]

Vincent, the main antagonist of the 2004 film Collateral believes that life has no meaning because that human nature is intrinsically evil, and that deep down, people care only about themselves.

In the 2022 film Everything Everywhere All at Once, the lead antagonist, Jobu Tupaki, comes to an existential nihilistic conclusion that the infinite chaos of the multiverse means that there is no reason to continue to exist. She manifests her nihilism by creating a black hole-like "everything bagel" in which she will destroy herself and the rest of the multiverse. Her mother Evelyn is briefly persuaded by her logic but then refutes it in favor of a more positive outlook based on the value of human relationships and choice.[120]

See also

Citations

  1. ^ Crosby, Donald A. (1998). "Nihilism". Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Taylor and Francis. doi:10.4324/9780415249126-N037-1. ISBN 9780415250696. As its name implies (from Latin nihil, 'nothing'), philosophical nihilism is a philosophy of negation, rejection, or denial of some or all aspects of thought or life.
  2. ^ Deleuze, Gilles (1962). Nietzsche and Philosophy. Translated by Tomlinson, Hugh. London: The Athlone Press (published 1983). ISBN 978-0-231-13877-2. Nietzsche calls the enterprise of denying life and depreciating existence nihilism.
  3. ^ a b c Veit, Walter (2018). "Existential Nihilism: The Only Really Serious Philosophical Problem". Journal of Camus Studies: 211–236. doi:10.13140/RG.2.2.26965.24804.
  4. ^
    • Crosby, Donald A. (1998). "Nihilism". Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Taylor and Francis. doi:10.4324/9780415249126-N037-1. ISBN 9780415250696. As its name implies (from Latin nihil, 'nothing'), philosophical nihilism is a philosophy of negation, rejection, or denial of some or all aspects of thought or life.
    • Pratt, Alan. . Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Archived from the original on 2010-04-12. Nihilism is the belief that all values are baseless and that nothing can be known or communicated. It is often associated with extreme pessimism and a radical skepticism that condemns existence.
    • "Nihilism". Encyclopædia Britannica. In the 20th century, nihilism encompassed a variety of philosophical and aesthetic stances that, in one sense or another, denied the existence of genuine moral truths or values, rejected the possibility of knowledge or communication, and asserted the ultimate meaninglessness or purposelessness of life or of the universe.
    • Harper, Douglas. "nihilism". Online Etymology Dictionary.
  5. ^ a b c Pratt, Alan. "Nihilism." Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. . Archived from the original on 2010-04-12. Retrieved 2003-08-26.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link).
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  9. ^ Gillespie, Michael Allen (1996). Nihilism Before Nietzsche. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226293486.
  10. ^
    • Gillespie, Michael Allen (1996). Nihilism Before Nietzsche. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226293486.
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  11. ^ Cited in Woodward, Ashley. 2002. "." Minerva 6. ISSN 1393-614X. Archived from the original on 2010-04-05.
  12. ^ Baudrillard, Jean. 1993. "Game with Vestiges." In Baudrillard Live, edited by M. Gane.
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  14. ^ See:
  15. ^ See: Rose, Gillian. 1984. Dialectic of Nihilism; Carr, Karen L. 1988. The Banalization of Nihilism; Pope John-Paul II. 1995. Evangelium vitae: Il valore e l'inviolabilita delta vita umana. Milan: Paoline Editoriale Libri."
  16. ^ Leffel, Jim; Dennis McCallum. . Christian Research Institute. Archived from the original on 2006-08-19. ...the nihilism and loneliness of postmodern culture...
  17. ^ Phillips, Robert (1999). . Latin Mass Magazine (Winter). Archived from the original on 2004-04-17. For deconstructionists, not only is there no truth to know, there is no self to know it and so there is no soul to save or lose." and "In following the Enlightenment to its logical end, deconstruction reaches nihilism. The meaning of human life is reduced to whatever happens to interest us at the moment...
  18. ^ Pratt, Alan. "Existential Nihilism | Nihilism." Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. . Archived from the original on 2010-04-12. Retrieved 2003-08-26.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link): Existential nihilism is "the notion that life has no intrinsic meaning or value, and it is, no doubt, the most commonly used and understood sense of the word today."
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  21. ^ "Nihilism". Encyclopædia Britannica. The term is an old one, applied to certain heretics in the Middle Ages.
  22. ^ "nihilism". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. September 2003. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
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  25. ^ Harper, Douglas. "nihilism". Online Etymology Dictionary.
  26. ^ "Nihilism". Encyclopædia Britannica. In Russian literature, nihilism was probably first used by N.I. Nadezhdin, in an 1829 article in the Messenger of Europe, in which he applied it to Aleksandr Pushkin. Nadezhdin, as did V.V. Bervi in 1858, equated nihilism with skepticism. Mikhail Nikiforovich Katkov, a well-known conservative journalist who interpreted nihilism as synonymous with revolution, presented it as a social menace because of its negation of all moral principles.
  27. ^ Gillespie, Michael Allen (1996). Nihilism Before Nietzsche. University of Chicago Press. p. 110. ISBN 9780226293486.
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    • Frank, Joseph (1995). Dostoevsky: The Miraculous Years, 1865–1871. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-01587-2. For it was Bazarov who had first declared himself to be a "Nihilist" and who announced that, "since at the present time, negation is the most useful of all," the Nihilists "deny—everything."
    • Turgenev, Ivan. "Chapter 5". Fathers and Sons. Translated by Constance Garnett. A nihilist is a man who does not bow down before any authority, who does not take any principle on faith, whatever reverence that principle may be enshrined in.
  29. ^ Petrov, Kristian (2019). "'Strike out, right and left!': a conceptual-historical analysis of 1860s Russian nihilism and its notion of negation". Stud East Eur Thought. 71 (2): 73–97. doi:10.1007/s11212-019-09319-4. S2CID 150893870.
  30. ^ "Nihilism". Encyclopædia Britannica. The term was famously used by Friedrich Nietzsche to describe the disintegration of traditional morality in Western society.
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    • "Nihilism". Encyclopædia Britannica. Nihilism, (from Latin nihil, "nothing"), originally a philosophy of moral and epistemological skepticism that arose in 19th-century Russia during the early years of the reign of Tsar Alexander II.
    • Pratt, Alan. "Nihilism". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. In Russia, nihilism became identified with a loosely organized revolutionary movement (C.1860-1917) that rejected the authority of the state, church, and family.
    • Lovell, Stephen (1998). "Nihilism, Russian". Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Taylor and Francis. doi:10.4324/9780415249126-E072-1. ISBN 9780415250696. Nihilism was a broad social and cultural movement as well as a doctrine.
  54. ^ "Nihilism". Encyclopædia Britannica. The philosophy of nihilism then began to be associated erroneously with the regicide of Alexander II (1881) and the political terror that was employed by those active at the time in clandestine organizations opposed to absolutism.
  55. ^
    • Petrov, Kristian (2019). "'Strike out, right and left!': a conceptual-historical analysis of 1860s Russian nihilism and its notion of negation". Stud East Eur Thought. 71 (2): 73–97. doi:10.1007/s11212-019-09319-4. S2CID 150893870.
    • Scanlan, James P. (1999). "The Case against Rational Egoism in Dostoevsky's Notes from Underground". Journal of the History of Ideas. University of Pennsylvania Press. 60 (3): 553–554. doi:10.2307/3654018. JSTOR 3654018.
  56. ^ Lovell, Stephen (1998). "Nihilism, Russian". Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Taylor and Francis. doi:10.4324/9780415249126-E072-1. ISBN 9780415250696. The major theorists of Russian Nihilism were Nikolai Chernyshevskii and Dmitrii Pisarev, although their authority and influence extended well beyond the realm of theory.
  57. ^
    • Lovell, Stephen (1998). "Nihilism, Russian". Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Taylor and Francis. doi:10.4324/9780415249126-E072-1. ISBN 9780415250696. Russian Nihilism is perhaps best regarded as the intellectual pool of the period 1855–66 out of which later radical movements emerged.
    • Nishitani, Keiji (1990). McCormick, Peter J. (ed.). The Self-Overcoming of Nihilism. Translated by Graham Parkes; with Setsuko Aihara. State University of New York Press. ISBN 0791404382. Nihilism and anarchism, which for a while would completely dominate the intelligentsia and become a major factor in the history of nineteenth-century Russia, emerged in the final years of the reign of Alexander I.
  58. ^ "Nihilism". Encyclopædia Britannica. Nihilism, (from Latin nihil, "nothing"), originally a philosophy of moral and epistemological skepticism that arose in 19th-century Russia during the early years of the reign of Tsar Alexander II.
  59. ^
    • Petrov, Kristian (2019). "'Strike out, right and left!': a conceptual-historical analysis of 1860s Russian nihilism and its notion of negation". Stud East Eur Thought. 71 (2): 73–97. doi:10.1007/s11212-019-09319-4. S2CID 150893870. Even so, the term nihilism did not become popular until Turgenev published F&C in 1862. Turgenev, a sorokovnik (an 1840s man), used the term to describe "the children", the new generation of students and intellectuals who, by virtue of their relation to their fathers, were considered šestidesjatniki.
    • "Nihilism". Encyclopædia Britannica. It was Ivan Turgenev, in his celebrated novel Fathers and Sons (1862), who popularized the term through the figure of Bazarov the nihilist.
    • "Fathers and Sons". Encyclopædia Britannica. Fathers and Sons concerns the inevitable conflict between generations and between the values of traditionalists and intellectuals.
    • Edie, James M.; Scanlan, James; Zeldin, Mary-Barbara (1994). Russian Philosophy Volume II: The Nihilists, The Populists, Critics of Religion and Culture. University of Tennessee Press. p. 3. The "fathers" of the novel are full of humanitarian, progressive sentiments ... But to the "sons," typified by the brusque scientifically minded Bazarov, the "fathers" were concerned too much with generalities, not enough with the specific material evils of the day.
  60. ^ Frank, Joseph (1995). Dostoevsky: The Miraculous Years, 1865–1871. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-01587-2. For it was Bazarov who had first declared himself to be a "Nihilist" and who announced that, "since at the present time, negation is the most useful of all," the Nihilists "deny—everything."
  61. ^
    • "Fathers and Sons". Encyclopædia Britannica. At the novel's first appearance, the radical younger generation attacked it bitterly as a slander, and conservatives condemned it as too lenient
    • "Fathers and Sons". Novels for Students. Retrieved August 11, 2020 – via Encyclopedia.com. When he returned to Saint Petersburg in 1862 on the same day that young radicals—calling themselves "nihilists"—were setting fire to buildings.
  62. ^
    • "Nihilism". Encyclopædia Britannica. Originally a philosophy of moral and epistemological skepticism that arose in 19th-century Russia during the early years of the reign of Tsar Alexander II.
    • Petrov, Kristian (2019). "'Strike out, right and left!': a conceptual-historical analysis of 1860s Russian nihilism and its notion of negation". Stud East Eur Thought. 71 (2): 73–97. doi:10.1007/s11212-019-09319-4. S2CID 150893870. Russian nihilism did not imply, as one might expect from a purely semantic viewpoint, a universal "negation" of ethical normativity, the foundations of knowledge or the meaningfulness of human existence.
  63. ^ Gillespie, Michael Allen (1996). Nihilism Before Nietzsche. University of Chicago Press. p. 139. ISBN 9780226293486. This nihilist movement was essentially Promethean."; "It has often been argued that Russian nihilism is little more than skepticism or empiricism. While there is a certain plausibility to this assertion, it ultimately fails to capture the millenarian zeal the characterized Russian nihilism. These nihilists were not skeptics but passionate advocates of negation and liberation.
  64. ^
    • Gillespie, Michael Allen (1996). Nihilism Before Nietzsche. University of Chicago Press. pp. 139, 143–144. ISBN 9780226293486. These nihilists were not skeptics but passionate advocates of negation and liberation."; "While the two leading nihilist groups disagreed on details, they both sought to liberate the Promethean might of the Russian people"; "The nihilists believed that the prototypes of this new Promethean humanity already existed in the cadre of the revolutionary movement itself.
    • Petrov, Kristian (2019). "'Strike out, right and left!': a conceptual-historical analysis of 1860s Russian nihilism and its notion of negation". Stud East Eur Thought. 71 (2): 73–97. doi:10.1007/s11212-019-09319-4. S2CID 150893870. These "new types", to borrow Pisarev's designation
  65. ^ Frank, Joseph (1995). Dostoevsky: The Miraculous Years, 1865–1871. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-01587-2.
  66. ^ Petrov, Kristian (2019). "'Strike out, right and left!': a conceptual-historical analysis of 1860s Russian nihilism and its notion of negation". Stud East Eur Thought. 71 (2): 73–97. doi:10.1007/s11212-019-09319-4. S2CID 150893870.
  67. ^ Nishitani, Keiji (1990). McCormick, Peter J. (ed.). The Self-Overcoming of Nihilism. Translated by Graham Parkes; with Setsuko Aihara. State University of New York Press. p. 132. ISBN 0791404382.
  68. ^ Elisabeth Kuhn. Nietzsches Philosophie des europäischen Nihilismus, Berlin / New York 1992, p. 10-14.
  69. ^ Martin Walter, Jörg Hüttner. Nachweis aus Nicolai Karlowitsch, Die Entwickelung des Nihilismus (1880) und aus Das Ausland (1880). In: Nietzsche-Studien, Vol. 51. 2022, p. 330–333.
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  77. ^ Rosen, Stanley. 1969. Nihilism: A Philosophical Essay. New Haven: Yale University Press. p. xiii.
  78. ^ F. Nietzsche, The Gay Science: 125.
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  81. ^ F. Nietzsche, KSA 12:9 [35].
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  83. ^ "Heideggers, Aus-einander-setzung' mit Nietzsches hat mannigfache Resonanz gefunden. Das Verhältnis der beiden Philosophen zueinander ist dabei von unterschiedlichen Positionen aus diskutiert worden. Inzwischen ist es nicht mehr ungewöhnlich, daß Heidegger, entgegen seinem Anspruch auf, Verwindung' der Metaphysik und des ihr zugehörigen Nihilismus, in jenen Nihilismus zurückgestellt wird, als dessen Vollender er Nietzsche angesehen hat." Wolfgang Müller-Lauter, Heidegger und Nietzsche. Nietzsche-Interpretationen III, Berlin-New York 2000, p. 303.
  84. ^ Cf. Heidegger: Vol. I, Nietzsche I (1936-39). Translated as Nietzsche I: The Will to Power as Art by David F. Krell (New York: Harper & Row, 1979); Vol. II, Nietzsche II (1939-46). Translated as "The Eternal Recurrence of the Same" by David F. Krell in Nietzsche II: The Eternal Recurrence of the Same (New York, Harper & Row, 1984).
  85. ^ "Indem Heidegger das von Nietzsche Ungesagte im Hinblick auf die Seinsfrage zur Sprache zu bringen sucht, wird das von Nietzsche Gesagte in ein diesem selber fremdes Licht gerückt.", Müller-Lauter, Heidegger und Nietzsche, p. 267.
  86. ^ Original German: Die seinsgeschichtliche Bestimmung des Nihilismus. Found in the second volume of his lectures: Vol. II, Nietzsche II (1939-46). Translated as "The Eternal Recurrence of the Same" by David F. Krell in Nietzsche II: The Eternal Recurrence of the Same (New York, Harper & Row, 1984).
  87. ^ "Heidegger geht davon aus, daß Nietzsche den Nihilismus als Entwertung der bisherigen obersten Werte versteht; seine Überwindung soll durch die Umwertung der Werte erfolgen. Das Prinzip der Umwertung wie auch jeder früheren Wertsetzung ist der Wille zur Macht.", Müller-Lauter, Heidegger und Nietzsche, p. 268.
  88. ^ "What remains unquestioned and forgotten in metaphysics is being; and hence, it is nihilistic.", UTM.edu 2010-06-14 at the Wayback Machine, visited on November 24, 2009.
  89. ^ Müller-Lauter, Heidegger und Nietzsche, p. 268.
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General and cited sources

Primary texts

Secondary texts

  • Arena, Leonardo Vittorio (1997), Del nonsense: tra Oriente e Occidente, Urbino: Quattroventi.
  • Arena, Leonardo Vittorio (2012), Nonsense as the Meaning, ebook.
  • Arena, Leonardo Vittorio (2015), On Nudity. An Introduction to Nonsense, Mimesis International.
  • Barnett, Christopher (2011), Kierkegaard, pietism and holiness, Ashgate Publishing.
  • Carr, Karen (1992), The Banalisation of Nihilism, State University of New York Press.
  • Cattarini, L. S. (2018), Beyond Sartre and Sterility: Surviving Existentialism (Montreal: contact argobookshop.ca)
  • Cunningham, Conor (2002), Genealogy of Nihilism: Philosophies of Nothing & the Difference of Theology, New York, NY: Routledge.
  • Dent, G., Wallace, M., & Dia Center for the Arts. (1992). "Black popular culture" (Discussions in contemporary culture ; no. 8). Seattle: Bay Press.
  • Dod, Elmar (2013), Der unheimlichste Gast. Die Philosophie des Nihilismus. Marburg: Tectum 2013.
  • Dreyfus, Hubert L. (2004), Kierkegaard on the Internet: Anonymity vs. Commitment in the Present Age. Retrieved at December 1, 2009.
  • Fraser, John (2001), "Nihilism, Modernisn and Value", retrieved at December 2, 2009.
  • Galimberti, Umberto (2008), L'ospite inquietante. Il nichilismo e i giovani, Milano: Feltrinelli. ISBN 9788807171437.
  • Gillespie, Michael Allen (1996), Nihilism Before Nietzsche, Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
  • Giovanni, George di (2008), "Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Edward N. Zalta (ed.). Retrieved on December 1, 2009.
  • Harper, Douglas, "Nihilism", in: Online Etymology Dictionary, retrieved at December 2, 2009.
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  • Hibbs, Thomas S. (2000), Shows About Nothing: Nihilism in Popular Culture from The Exorcist to Seinfeld, Dallas, TX: Spence Publishing Company.
  • Kopić, Mario (2001), S Nietzscheom o Europi, Zagreb: Jesenski i Turk.
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  • Löwith, Karl (1995), Martin Heidegger and European Nihilism, New York, NY: Columbia UP.
  • Marmysz, John (2003), Laughing at Nothing: Humor as a Response to Nihilism, Albany, NY: SUNY Press.
  • Müller-Lauter, Wolfgang (2000), Heidegger und Nietzsche. Nietzsche-Interpretationen III, Berlin-New York.
  • Parvez Manzoor, S. (2003), "", retrieved at December 2, 2009.
  • Rose, Eugene Fr. Seraphim (1995), Nihilism, The Root of the Revolution of the Modern Age, Forestville, CA: Fr. Seraphim Rose Foundation.
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  • Severino, Emanuele (1982), Essenza del nichilismo, Milano: Adelphi. ISBN 9788845904899.
  • Slocombe, Will (2006), Nihilism and the Sublime Postmodern: The (Hi)Story of a Difficult Relationship, New York, NY: Routledge.
  • Tigani, Francesco (2010), Rappresentare Medea. Dal mito al nichilismo, Roma: Aracne. ISBN 978-88-548-3256-5.
  • Tigani, Francesco (2014), Lo spettro del nulla e il corpo del nichilismo, in La nave di Teseo. Saggi sull'Essere, il mito e il potere, Napoli: Guida. ISBN 9788868660499.
  • Villet, Charles (2009), Towards Ethical Nihilism: The Possibility of Nietzschean Hope, Saarbrücken: Verlag Dr. Müller.
  • Williams, Peter S. (2005), I Wish I Could Believe in Meaning: A Response to Nihilism, Damaris Publishing.

External links

nihilism, this, article, about, philosophical, viewpoint, other, uses, disambiguation, nihilist, redirects, here, other, uses, nihilist, disambiguation, from, latin, nihil, nothing, philosophy, family, views, within, philosophy, that, rejects, generally, accep. This article is about the philosophical viewpoint For other uses see Nihilism disambiguation Nihilist redirects here For other uses see Nihilist disambiguation Nihilism ˈ n aɪ h ɪ l ɪ z em ˈ n iː from Latin nihil nothing is a philosophy or family of views within philosophy that rejects generally accepted or fundamental aspects of human existence 1 2 such as objective truth knowledge morality values or meaning 3 4 The term was popularized by Ivan Turgenev and more specifically by his character Bazarov in the novel Fathers and Sons There have been different nihilist positions including that human values are baseless that life is meaningless that knowledge is impossible or that some set of entities do not exist or are meaningless or pointless 5 6 Scholars of nihilism may regard it as merely a label that has been applied to various separate philosophies 7 or as a distinct historical concept arising out of nominalism skepticism and philosophical pessimism as well as possibly out of Christianity itself 8 Contemporary understanding of the idea stems largely from the Nietzschean crisis of nihilism from which derive the two central concepts the destruction of higher values and the opposition to the affirmation of life 9 5 Earlier forms of nihilism however may be more selective in negating specific hegemonies of social moral political and aesthetic thought 10 The term is sometimes used in association with anomie to explain the general mood of despair at a perceived pointlessness of existence or arbitrariness of human principles and social institutions Nihilism has also been described as conspicuous in or constitutive of certain historical periods For example 11 Jean Baudrillard 12 13 and others have characterized postmodernity as a nihilistic epoch 14 or mode of thought 15 Likewise some theologians and religious figures have stated that postmodernity 16 and many aspects of modernity 17 represent nihilism by a negation of religious principles Nihilism has however been widely ascribed to both religious and irreligious viewpoints 8 In popular use the term commonly refers to forms of existential nihilism according to which life is without intrinsic value meaning or purpose 18 Other prominent positions within nihilism include the rejection of all normative and ethical views Moral nihilism the rejection of all social and political institutions Political nihilism the stance that no knowledge can or does exist Epistemological nihilism and a number of metaphysical positions which assert that non abstract objects do not exist Metaphysical nihilism that composite objects do not exist Mereological nihilism or even that life itself does not exist Contents 1 Etymology terminology and definition 2 History 2 1 Buddhism 2 1 1 Nirvana and nihilism 2 2 Jacobi 2 3 Kierkegaard 2 4 Russian nihilism 2 5 Nietzsche 2 5 1 Heideggerian interpretation of Nietzsche 2 5 2 Deleuzean interpretation of Nietzsche 2 6 Postmodernism 2 6 1 Derrida 2 6 2 Lyotard 2 6 3 Baudrillard 3 Positions 4 In culture the arts and media 4 1 Dada 4 2 Literature 4 3 Media 5 See also 6 Citations 7 General and cited sources 7 1 Primary texts 7 2 Secondary texts 8 External linksEtymology terminology and definition EditThe etymological origin of nihilism is the Latin root word nihil meaning nothing which is similarly found in the related terms annihilate meaning to bring to nothing 5 and nihility meaning nothingness 19 The term nihilism emerged in several places in Europe during the 18th century 7 notably in the German form Nihilismus 20 though was also in use during the Middle Ages to denote certain forms of heresy 21 The concept itself first took shape within Russian and German philosophy which respectively represented the two major currents of discourse on nihilism prior to the 20th century 20 The term likely entered English from either the German Nihilismus Late Latin nihilismus or French nihilisme 22 Early examples of the term s use are found in German publications In 1733 German writer Friedrich Leberecht Goetz used it as a literary term in combination with noism German Neinismus 23 In the period surrounding the French Revolution the term was also a pejorative for certain value destructive trends of modernity namely the negation of Christianity and European tradition in general 7 Nihilism first entered philosophical study within a discourse surrounding Kantian and post Kantian philosophies notably appearing in the writings of Swiss esotericist Jacob Hermann Obereit in 1787 and German philosopher Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi in 1799 24 As early as 1824 the term began to take on a social connotation with German journalist Joseph von Gorres attributing it to a negation of existing social and political institutions 25 The Russian form of the word nigilizm Russian nigilizm entered publication in 1829 when Nikolai Nadezhdin used it synonymously with skepticism In Russian journalism the word continued to have significant social connotations 26 From the time of Jacobi the term almost fell completely out of use throughout Europe until it was revived by Russian author Ivan Turgenev who brought the word into popular use with his 1862 novel Fathers and Sons leading many scholars to believe he coined the term 27 The nihilist characters of the novel define themselves as those who deny everything who do not take any principle on faith whatever reverence that principle may be enshrined in and who regard at the present time negation is the most useful of all 28 Despite Turgenev s own anti nihilistic leanings many of his readers likewise took up the name of nihilist thus ascribing the Russian nihilist movement its name 29 Nihilism was further discussed by German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche who used the term to describe the Western world s disintegration of traditional morality 30 For Nietzsche nihilism applied to both the modern trends of value destruction expressed in the death of God as well as what he saw as the life denying morality of Christianity 31 32 Under Nietzsche s profound influence the term was then further treated within French philosophy and continental philosophy more broadly while the influence of nihilism in Russia arguably continued well into the Soviet era 33 Religious scholars such as Altizer have stated that nihilism must necessarily be understood in relation to religion and that the study of core elements of its character requires fundamentally theological consideration 34 History EditBuddhism Edit The concept of nihilism was discussed by the Buddha 563 B C to 483 B C as recorded in the Theravada and Mahayana Tripiṭaka 35 The Tripiṭaka originally written in Pali refers to nihilism as natthikavada and the nihilist view as micchadiṭṭhi 36 Various sutras within it describe a multiplicity of views held by different sects of ascetics while the Buddha was alive some of which were viewed by him to be morally nihilistic In the Doctrine of Nihilism in the Apannaka Sutta the Buddha describes moral nihilists as holding the following views 37 The act of giving produces no beneficial results Good and bad actions produce no results After death beings are not reborn into the present world or into another world There is no one in the world who through direct knowledge can confirm that beings are reborn into this world or into another world The Buddha further states that those who hold these views will fail to see the virtue in good mental verbal and bodily conduct and the corresponding dangers in misconduct and will therefore tend towards the latter 37 Nirvana and nihilism Edit The culmination of the path that the Buddha taught was nirvana a place of nothingness nonpossession and non attachment which is the total end of death and decay 38 Ajahn Amaro an ordained Buddhist monk of more than 40 years observes that in English nothingness can sound like nihilism However the word could be emphasized in a different way so that it becomes no thingness indicating that nirvana is not a thing you can find but rather a state where you experience the reality of non grasping 38 In the Alagaddupama Sutta the Buddha describes how some individuals feared his teaching because they believe that their self would be destroyed if they followed it He describes this as an anxiety caused by the false belief in an unchanging everlasting self All things are subject to change and taking any impermanent phenomena to be a self causes suffering Nonetheless his critics called him a nihilist who teaches the annihilation and extermination of an existing being The Buddha s response was that he only teaches the cessation of suffering When an individual has given up craving and the conceit of I am their mind is liberated they no longer come into any state of being and are no longer born again 39 The Aggi Vacchagotta Sutta records a conversation between the Buddha and an individual named Vaccha that further elaborates on this In the sutta Vaccha asks the Buddha to confirm one of the following with respect to the existence of the Buddha after death 40 After death a Buddha reappears somewhere else After death a Buddha does not reappear After death a Buddha both does and does not reappear After death a Buddha neither does nor does not reappear To all four questions the Buddha answers that the terms reappears somewhere else does not reappear both does and does not reappear and neither does nor does not reappear do not apply When Vaccha expresses puzzlement the Buddha asks Vaccha a counter question to the effect of if a fire were to go out and someone were to ask you whether the fire went north south east or west how would you reply Vaccha replies that the question does not apply and that an extinguished fire can only be classified as out 40 Ṭhanissaro Bhikkhu elaborates on the classification problem around the words reappear etc with respect to the Buddha and Nirvana by stating that a Person who has attained the goal nirvana is thus indescribable because they have abandoned all things by which they could be described 41 The Suttas themselves describe the liberated mind as untraceable or as consciousness without feature making no distinction between the mind of a liberated being that is alive and the mind of one that is no longer alive 39 42 Despite the Buddha s explanations to the contrary Buddhist practitioners may at times still approach Buddhism in a nihilistic manner Ajahn Amaro illustrates this by retelling the story of a Buddhist monk Ajahn Sumedho who in his early years took a nihilistic approach to Nirvana A distinct feature of Nirvana in Buddhism is that an individual attaining it is no longer subject to rebirth Ajahn Sumedho during a conversation with his teacher Ajahn Chah comments that he is Determined above all things to fully realize Nirvana in this lifetime deeply weary of the human condition and is determined not to be born again To this Ajahn Chah replies What about the rest of us Sumedho Don t you care about those who ll be left behind Ajahn Amaro comments that Ajahn Chah could detect that his student had a nihilistic aversion to life rather than true detachment 43 Jacobi EditThe term nihilism was first introduced to philosophy by Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi 1743 1819 who used the term to characterize rationalism 44 and in particular the Spinoza s determinism and the Aufklarung in order to carry out a reductio ad absurdum according to which all rationalism philosophy as criticism reduces to nihilism and thus it should be avoided and replaced with a return to some type of faith and revelation Bret W Davis writes for example 45 The first philosophical development of the idea of nihilism is generally ascribed to Friedrich Jacobi who in a famous letter criticized Fichte s idealism as falling into nihilism According to Jacobi Fichte s absolutization of the ego the absolute I that posits the not I is an inflation of subjectivity that denies the absolute transcendence of God A related but oppositional concept is fideism which sees reason as hostile and inferior to faith Kierkegaard Edit Main article Philosophy of Soren Kierkegaard Unfinished sketch c 1840 of Soren Kierkegaard by his cousin Niels Christian Kierkegaard Soren Kierkegaard 1813 1855 posited an early form of nihilism which he referred to as leveling 46 He saw leveling as the process of suppressing individuality to a point where an individual s uniqueness becomes non existent and nothing meaningful in one s existence can be affirmed Levelling at its maximum is like the stillness of death where one can hear one s own heartbeat a stillness like death into which nothing can penetrate in which everything sinks powerless One person can head a rebellion but one person cannot head this levelling process for that would make him a leader and he would avoid being levelled Each individual can in his little circle participate in this levelling but it is an abstract process and levelling is abstraction conquering individuality The Present Age translated by Alexander Dru Foreword by Walter Kaufmann 1962 pp 51 53 Kierkegaard an advocate of a philosophy of life generally argued against levelling and its nihilistic consequences although he believed it would be genuinely educative to live in the age of levelling because people will be forced to face the judgement of levelling alone 47 George Cotkin asserts Kierkegaard was against the standardization and levelling of belief both spiritual and political in the nineteenth century and that Kierkegaard opposed tendencies in mass culture to reduce the individual to a cipher of conformity and deference to the dominant opinion 48 In his day tabloids like the Danish magazine Corsaren and apostate Christianity were instruments of levelling and contributed to the reflective apathetic age of 19th century Europe 49 Kierkegaard argues that individuals who can overcome the levelling process are stronger for it and that it represents a step in the right direction towards becoming a true self 47 50 As we must overcome levelling 51 Hubert Dreyfus and Jane Rubin argue that Kierkegaard s interest in an increasingly nihilistic age is in how we can recover the sense that our lives are meaningful 52 Russian nihilism Edit Main article Russian nihilist movement Portrait of a nihilist student by Ilya Repin From the period 1860 1917 Russian nihilism was both a nascent form of nihilist philosophy and broad cultural movement which overlapped with certain revolutionary tendencies of the era 53 for which it was often wrongly characterized as a form of political terrorism 54 Russian nihilism centered on the dissolution of existing values and ideals incorporating theories of hard determinism atheism materialism positivism and rational egoism while rejecting metaphysics sentimentalism and aestheticism 55 Leading philosophers of this school of thought included Nikolay Chernyshevsky and Dmitry Pisarev 56 The intellectual origins of the Russian nihilist movement can be traced back to 1855 and perhaps earlier 57 where it was principally a philosophy of extreme moral and epistemological skepticism 58 However it was not until 1862 that the name nihilism was first popularized when Ivan Turgenev used the term in his celebrated novel Fathers and Sons to describe the disillusionment of the younger generation towards both the progressives and traditionalists that came before them 59 as well as its manifestation in the view that negation and value destruction were most necessary to the present conditions 60 The movement very soon adopted the name despite the novel s initial harsh reception among both the conservatives and younger generation 61 Though philosophically both nihilistic and skeptical Russian nihilism did not unilaterally negate ethics and knowledge as may be assumed nor did it espouse meaninglessness unequivocally 62 Even so contemporary scholarship has challenged the equating of Russian nihilism with mere skepticism instead identifying it as a fundamentally Promethean movement 63 As passionate advocates of negation the nihilists sought to liberate the Promethean might of the Russian people which they saw embodied in a class of prototypal individuals or new types in their own words 64 These individuals according to Pisarev in freeing themselves from all authority become exempt from moral authority as well and are distinguished above the rabble or common masses 65 Later interpretations of nihilism were heavily influenced by works of anti nihilistic literature such as those of Fyodor Dostoevsky which arose in response to Russian nihilism 66 In contrast to the corrupted nihilists of the real world who tried to numb their nihilistic sensitivity and forget themselves through self indulgence Dostoevsky s figures voluntarily leap into nihilism and try to be themselves within its boundaries writes contemporary scholar Nishitani The nihility expressed in if there is no God everything is permitted or apres moi le deluge provides a principle whose sincerity they try to live out to the end They search for and experiment with ways for the self to justify itself after God has disappeared 67 Nietzsche Edit Main article Philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche Nihilism is often associated with the German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche who provided a detailed diagnosis of nihilism as a widespread phenomenon of Western culture Though the notion appears frequently throughout Nietzsche s work he uses the term in a variety of ways with different meanings and connotations With regard to Nietzsche s development of thought it has been noted in research that although he dealt with nihilistic themes from 1869 onwards pessimism with nirvana and with nothingness and non being 68 a conceptual use of nihilism occurred for the first time in handwritten notes in the middle of 1880 KSA 9 127 128 This was the time of a then popular scientific work that reconstructed the so called Russian nihilism on the basis of Russian newspaper reports on nihilistic incidents N Karlowitsch Die Entwicklung des Nihilismus Berlin 1880 This collection of material published in three editions was not only known to a broad German readership but its influence on Nietzsche can also be proven 69 Karen L Carr describes Nietzsche s characterization of nihilism as a condition of tension as a disproportion between what we want to value or need and how the world appears to operate 31 25 When we find out that the world does not possess the objective value or meaning that we want it to have or have long since believed it to have we find ourselves in a crisis 70 Nietzsche asserts that with the decline of Christianity and the rise of physiological decadence clarification needed nihilism is in fact characteristic of the modern age 71 though he implies that the rise of nihilism is still incomplete and that it has yet to be overcome 72 Though the problem of nihilism becomes especially explicit in Nietzsche s notebooks published posthumously it is mentioned repeatedly in his published works and is closely connected to many of the problems mentioned there Nietzsche characterized nihilism as emptying the world and especially human existence of meaning purpose comprehensible truth or essential value This observation stems in part from Nietzsche s perspectivism or his notion that knowledge is always by someone of some thing it is always bound by perspective and it is never mere fact 73 Rather there are interpretations through which we understand the world and give it meaning Interpreting is something we can not go without in fact it is a condition of subjectivity One way of interpreting the world is through morality as one of the fundamental ways that people make sense of the world especially in regard to their own thoughts and actions Nietzsche distinguishes a morality that is strong or healthy meaning that the person in question is aware that he constructs it himself from weak morality where the interpretation is projected on to something external Nietzsche discusses Christianity one of the major topics in his work at length in the context of the problem of nihilism in his notebooks in a chapter entitled European Nihilism 74 Here he states that the Christian moral doctrine provides people with intrinsic value belief in God which justifies the evil in the world and a basis for objective knowledge In this sense in constructing a world where objective knowledge is possible Christianity is an antidote against a primal form of nihilism against the despair of meaninglessness However it is exactly the element of truthfulness in Christian doctrine that is its undoing in its drive towards truth Christianity eventually finds itself to be a construct which leads to its own dissolution It is therefore that Nietzsche states that we have outgrown Christianity not because we lived too far from it rather because we lived too close 75 As such the self dissolution of Christianity constitutes yet another form of nihilism Because Christianity was an interpretation that posited itself as the interpretation Nietzsche states that this dissolution leads beyond skepticism to a distrust of all meaning 76 31 41 2 Stanley Rosen identifies Nietzsche s concept of nihilism with a situation of meaninglessness in which everything is permitted According to him the loss of higher metaphysical values that exist in contrast to the base reality of the world or merely human ideas gives rise to the idea that all human ideas are therefore valueless Rejecting idealism thus results in nihilism because only similarly transcendent ideals live up to the previous standards that the nihilist still implicitly holds 77 The inability for Christianity to serve as a source of valuating the world is reflected in Nietzsche s famous aphorism of the madman in The Gay Science 78 The death of God in particular the statement that we killed him is similar to the self dissolution of Christian doctrine due to the advances of the sciences which for Nietzsche show that man is the product of evolution that Earth has no special place among the stars and that history is not progressive the Christian notion of God can no longer serve as a basis for a morality One such reaction to the loss of meaning is what Nietzsche calls passive nihilism which he recognizes in the pessimistic philosophy of Schopenhauer Schopenhauer s doctrine which Nietzsche also refers to as Western Buddhism advocates separating oneself from will and desires in order to reduce suffering Nietzsche characterizes this attitude as a will to nothingness whereby life turns away from itself as there is nothing of value to be found in the world This mowing away of all value in the world is characteristic of the nihilist although in this the nihilist appears inconsistent this will to nothingness is still a form of valuation or willing 79 He describes this as an inconsistency on the part of the nihilists A nihilist is a man who judges of the world as it is that it ought not to be and of the world as it ought to be that it does not exist According to this view our existence action suffering willing feeling has no meaning the pathos of in vain is the nihilists pathos at the same time as pathos an inconsistency on the part of the nihilists Friedrich Nietzsche KSA 12 9 60 The Will to Power Section 585 Translated by Walter Kaufmann Nietzsche s relation to the problem of nihilism is a complex one He approaches the problem of nihilism as deeply personal stating that this predicament of the modern world is a problem that has become conscious in him 80 According to Nietzsche it is only when nihilism is overcome that a culture can have a true foundation upon which to thrive He wished to hasten its coming only so that he could also hasten its ultimate departure 71 He states that there is at least the possibility of another type of nihilist in the wake of Christianity s self dissolution one that does not stop after the destruction of all value and meaning and succumb to the following nothingness This alternate active nihilism on the other hand destroys to level the field for constructing something new This form of nihilism is characterized by Nietzsche as a sign of strength 81 a willful destruction of the old values to wipe the slate clean and lay down one s own beliefs and interpretations contrary to the passive nihilism that resigns itself with the decomposition of the old values This willful destruction of values and the overcoming of the condition of nihilism by the constructing of new meaning this active nihilism could be related to what Nietzsche elsewhere calls a free spirit 31 43 50 or the Ubermensch from Thus Spoke Zarathustra and The Antichrist the model of the strong individual who posits his own values and lives his life as if it were his own work of art It may be questioned though whether active nihilism is indeed the correct term for this stance and some question whether Nietzsche takes the problems nihilism poses seriously enough 82 Heideggerian interpretation of Nietzsche Edit Martin Heidegger s interpretation of Nietzsche influenced many postmodern thinkers who investigated the problem of nihilism as put forward by Nietzsche Only recently has Heidegger s influence on Nietzschean nihilism research faded 83 As early as the 1930s Heidegger was giving lectures on Nietzsche s thought 84 Given the importance of Nietzsche s contribution to the topic of nihilism Heidegger s influential interpretation of Nietzsche is important for the historical development of the term nihilism Heidegger s method of researching and teaching Nietzsche is explicitly his own He does not specifically try to present Nietzsche as Nietzsche He rather tries to incorporate Nietzsche s thoughts into his own philosophical system of Being Time and Dasein 85 In his Nihilism as Determined by the History of Being 1944 46 86 Heidegger tries to understand Nietzsche s nihilism as trying to achieve a victory through the devaluation of the until then highest values The principle of this devaluation is according to Heidegger the will to power The will to power is also the principle of every earlier valuation of values 87 How does this devaluation occur and why is this nihilistic One of Heidegger s main critiques on philosophy is that philosophy and more specifically metaphysics has forgotten to discriminate between investigating the notion of a being seiende and Being Sein According to Heidegger the history of Western thought can be seen as the history of metaphysics Moreover because metaphysics has forgotten to ask about the notion of Being what Heidegger calls Seinsvergessenheit it is a history about the destruction of Being That is why Heidegger calls metaphysics nihilistic 88 This makes Nietzsche s metaphysics not a victory over nihilism but a perfection of it 89 Heidegger in his interpretation of Nietzsche has been inspired by Ernst Junger Many references to Junger can be found in Heidegger s lectures on Nietzsche For example in a letter to the rector of Freiburg University of November 4 1945 Heidegger inspired by Junger tries to explain the notion of God is dead as the reality of the Will to Power Heidegger also praises Junger for defending Nietzsche against a too biological or anthropological reading during the Nazi era 90 Heidegger s interpretation of Nietzsche influenced a number of important postmodernist thinkers Gianni Vattimo points at a back and forth movement in European thought between Nietzsche and Heidegger During the 1960s a Nietzschean renaissance began culminating in the work of Mazzino Montinari and Giorgio Colli They began work on a new and complete edition of Nietzsche s collected works making Nietzsche more accessible for scholarly research Vattimo explains that with this new edition of Colli and Montinari a critical reception of Heidegger s interpretation of Nietzsche began to take shape Like other contemporary French and Italian philosophers Vattimo does not want or only partially wants to rely on Heidegger for understanding Nietzsche On the other hand Vattimo judges Heidegger s intentions authentic enough to keep pursuing them 91 Philosophers who Vattimo exemplifies as a part of this back and forth movement are French philosophers Deleuze Foucault and Derrida Italian philosophers of this same movement are Cacciari Severino and himself 92 Jurgen Habermas Jean Francois Lyotard and Richard Rorty are also philosophers who are influenced by Heidegger s interpretation of Nietzsche 93 Deleuzean interpretation of Nietzsche Edit Gilles Deleuze s interpretation of Nietzsche s concept of nihilism is different in some sense diametrically opposed to the usual definition as outlined in the rest of this article Nihilism is one of the main topics of Deleuze s early book Nietzsche and Philosophy 1962 94 There Deleuze repeatedly interprets Nietzsche s nihilism as the enterprise of denying life and depreciating existence 95 Nihilism thus defined is therefore not the denial of higher values or the denial of meaning but rather the depreciation of life in the name of such higher values or meaning Deleuze therefore with he claims Nietzsche says that Christianity and Platonism and with them the whole of metaphysics are intrinsically Nihilist Postmodernism Edit Postmodern and poststructuralist thought has questioned the very grounds on which Western cultures have based their truths absolute knowledge and meaning a decentralization of authorship the accumulation of positive knowledge historical progress and certain ideals and practices of humanism and the Enlightenment Derrida Edit Jacques Derrida whose deconstruction is perhaps most commonly labeled nihilistic did not himself make the nihilistic move that others have claimed Derridean deconstructionists argue that this approach rather frees texts individuals or organizations from a restrictive truth and that deconstruction opens up the possibility of other ways of being 96 Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak for example uses deconstruction to create an ethics of opening up Western scholarship to the voice of the subaltern and to philosophies outside of the canon of western texts 97 Derrida himself built a philosophy based upon a responsibility to the other 98 Deconstruction can thus be seen not as a denial of truth but as a denial of our ability to know truth That is to say it makes an epistemological claim compared to nihilism s ontological claim Lyotard Edit Lyotard argues that rather than relying on an objective truth or method to prove their claims philosophers legitimize their truths by reference to a story about the world that can not be separated from the age and system the stories belong to referred to by Lyotard as meta narratives He then goes on to define the postmodern condition as characterized by a rejection both of these meta narratives and of the process of legitimation by meta narratives This concept of the instability of truth and meaning leads in the direction of nihilism though Lyotard stops short of embracing the latter citation needed In lieu of meta narratives we have created new language games in order to legitimize our claims which rely on changing relationships and mutable truths none of which is privileged over the other to speak to ultimate truth citation needed Baudrillard Edit Postmodern theorist Jean Baudrillard wrote briefly of nihilism from the postmodern viewpoint in Simulacra and Simulation He stuck mainly to topics of interpretations of the real world over the simulations of which the real world is composed The uses of meaning were an important subject in Baudrillard s discussion of nihilism The apocalypse is finished today it is the precession of the neutral of forms of the neutral and of indifference all that remains is the fascination for desertlike and indifferent forms for the very operation of the system that annihilates us Now fascination in contrast to seduction which was attached to appearances and to dialectical reason which was attached to meaning is a nihilistic passion par excellence it is the passion proper to the mode of disappearance We are fascinated by all forms of disappearance of our disappearance Melancholic and fascinated such is our general situation in an era of involuntary transparency Jean Baudrillard Simulacra and Simulation On Nihilism trans 1995 page needed Positions EditFrom the 20th century nihilism has encompassed a range of positions within various fields of philosophy Each of these as the Encyclopaedia Britannica states denied the existence of genuine moral truths or values rejected the possibility of knowledge or communication and asserted the ultimate meaninglessness or purposelessness of life or of the universe 99 Cosmic nihilism is the position that reality or the cosmos is either wholly or significantly unintelligible and that it provides no foundation for human aims and principles 3 Particularly it may regard the cosmos as distinctly hostile or indifferent to humanity 100 It is often related to both epistemological and existential nihilism as well as cosmicism Epistemological nihilism is a form of philosophical skepticism according to which knowledge does not exist or if it does exist it is unattainable for human beings It should not be confused with epistemological fallibilism according to which all knowledge is uncertain Existential nihilism is the position that life has no intrinsic meaning or value 3 With respect to the universe existential nihilism posits that a single human or even the entire human species is insignificant without purpose and unlikely to change in the totality of existence The meaninglessness of life is largely explored in the philosophical school of existentialism where one can create their own subjective meaning or purpose In popular use nihilism now most commonly refers to forms of existential nihilism Metaphysical nihilism is the position that concrete objects and physical constructs might not exist in the possible world or that even if there exist possible worlds that contain some concrete objects there is at least one that contains only abstract objects Extreme metaphysical nihilism also sometimes called ontological nihilism is the position that nothing actually exists at all 101 102 The American Heritage Medical Dictionary defines one form of nihilism as An extreme form of skepticism that denies all existence 103 A similar skepticism concerning the concrete world can be found in solipsism However despite the fact that both views deny the certainty of objects true existence the nihilist would deny the existence of self whereas the solipsist would affirm it 104 Both of these positions are considered forms of anti realism Mereological nihilism also called compositional nihilism is the metaphysical position that objects with proper parts do not exist This position applies to objects in space and also to objects existing in time which are posited to have no temporal parts Rather only basic building blocks without parts exist and thus the world we see and experience full of objects with parts is a product of human misperception i e if we could see clearly we would not perceive compositive objects This interpretation of existence must be based on resolution The resolution with which humans see and perceive the improper parts of the world is not an objective fact of reality but is rather an implicit trait that can only be qualitatively explored and expressed Therefore there is no arguable way to surmise or measure the validity of mereological nihilism For example an ant can get lost on a large cylindrical object because the circumference of the object is so large with respect to the ant that the ant effectively feels as though the object has no curvature Thus the resolution with which the ant views the world it exists within is an important determining factor in how the ant experiences this within the world feeling Moral nihilism also called ethical nihilism is the meta ethical position that no morality or ethics exists whatsoever therefore no action is ever morally preferable to any other Moral nihilism is distinct from both moral relativism and expressivism in that it does not acknowledge socially constructed values as personal or cultural moralities It may also differ from other moral positions within nihilism that rather than argue there is no morality hold that if it does exist it is a human construction and thus artificial wherein any and all meaning is relative for different possible outcomes An alternative scholarly perspective is that moral nihilism is a morality in itself Cooper writes In the widest sense of the word morality moral nihilism is a morality 105 Passive and active nihilism the former of which is also equated to philosophical pessimism refer to two approaches to nihilist thought passive nihilism sees nihility as an end in itself whereas active nihilism attempts to surpass it For Nietzsche passive nihilism further encapsulates the will to nothing and the modern condition of resignation or unawareness towards the dissolution of higher values brought about by the 19th century 31 106 Political nihilism is the position holding no political goals whatsoever except for the complete destruction of all existing political institutions along with the principles values and social institutions that uphold them 107 Though often related to anarchism it may differ in that it presents no method of social organisation after a negation of the current political structure has taken place An analysis of political nihilism is further presented by Leo Strauss 108 Therapeutic nihilism also called medical nihilism is the position that the effectiveness of medical intervention is dubious or without merit 109 Dealing with the philosophy of science as it relates to the contextualized demarcation of medical research Jacob Stegenga applies Bayes theorem to medical research and argues for the premise that Even when presented with evidence for a hypothesis regarding the effectiveness of a medical intervention we ought to have low confidence in that hypothesis 110 111 In culture the arts and media EditDada Edit The term Dada was first used by Richard Huelsenbeck and Tristan Tzara in 1916 112 The movement which lasted from approximately 1916 to 1923 arose during World War I an event that influenced the artists 113 The Dada Movement began in the old town of Zurich Switzerland known as the Niederdorf or Niederdorfli in the Cafe Voltaire 114 The Dadaists claimed that Dada was not an art movement but an anti art movement sometimes using found objects in a manner similar to found poetry This tendency toward devaluation of art has led many who to claim that Dada was an essentially nihilistic movement 115 Given that Dada created its own means for interpreting its products it is difficult to classify alongside most other contemporary art expressions Due to perceived ambiguity it has been classified as a nihilistic modus vivendi 113 Literature Edit The term nihilism was actually popularized in 1862 by Ivan Turgenev in his novel Fathers and Sons whose hero Bazarov was a nihilist and recruited several followers to the philosophy He found his nihilistic ways challenged upon falling in love 116 Anton Chekhov portrayed nihilism when writing Three Sisters The phrase what does it matter or variants of this are often spoken by several characters in response to events the significance of some of these events suggests a subscription to nihilism by said characters as a type of coping strategy The philosophical ideas of the French author the Marquis de Sade are often noted as early examples of nihilistic principles 117 Media Edit The frequently self destructive and amoral tendencies of a nihilistic worldview can be seen in many of today s mediums including movies and TV shows Rick Sanchez from Rick and Morty is portrayed as a high functioning alcoholic burdened with knowledge In his self proclaimed genius he adapts an existential nihilistic understanding that there is little to no reason to live Patrick Bateman in Bret Easton Ellis s 1991 novel American Psycho and 2000 film adaptation displays both moral and existential nihilism Throughout the film Bateman does not shy away from murder or torture to accomplish his goals As he realizes the evil in his deeds he tries to confess and take on the punishment for his acts of crime 118 Phil Connors in the 1993 comedy film Groundhog Day develops existential nihilistic tendencies near the middle of the film As he lives the same day an unspoken countless number of times he slips into a depression and attempts to commit suicide in a variety of different ways He will also resort to kidnapping Punxsutawney Phil the groundhog to which he credits his looping days and drives off a cliff killing both of them 119 Vincent the main antagonist of the 2004 film Collateral believes that life has no meaning because that human nature is intrinsically evil and that deep down people care only about themselves In the 2022 film Everything Everywhere All at Once the lead antagonist Jobu Tupaki comes to an existential nihilistic conclusion that the infinite chaos of the multiverse means that there is no reason to continue to exist She manifests her nihilism by creating a black hole like everything bagel in which she will destroy herself and the rest of the multiverse Her mother Evelyn is briefly persuaded by her logic but then refutes it in favor of a more positive outlook based on the value of human relationships and choice 120 See also EditAbsurdism Acosmism Agnosticism Anatta Anti anti art Anti humanism Antinatalism Apatheism Apathy Cynicism philosophy Dysteleology Existentialism Eliminative materialism Fatalism Hedonism Historical nihilism U G Krishnamurti Legal nihilism Misanthropy Misotheism National nihilism Paradox of nihilism Philosophical pessimism Postmodernism Post structuralism Radical skepticism Rational egoism Russian nihilist movement Solipsism Tao Te Ching Trivialism Portals Philosophy Psychology ReligionCitations Edit Crosby Donald A 1998 Nihilism Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy Taylor and Francis doi 10 4324 9780415249126 N037 1 ISBN 9780415250696 As its name implies from Latin nihil nothing philosophical nihilism is a philosophy of negation rejection or denial of some or all aspects of thought or life Deleuze Gilles 1962 Nietzsche and Philosophy Translated by Tomlinson Hugh London The Athlone Press published 1983 ISBN 978 0 231 13877 2 Nietzsche calls the enterprise of denying life and depreciating existence nihilism a b c Veit Walter 2018 Existential Nihilism The Only Really Serious Philosophical Problem Journal of Camus Studies 211 236 doi 10 13140 RG 2 2 26965 24804 Crosby Donald A 1998 Nihilism Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy Taylor and Francis doi 10 4324 9780415249126 N037 1 ISBN 9780415250696 As its name implies from Latin nihil nothing philosophical nihilism is a philosophy of negation rejection or denial of some or all aspects of thought or life Pratt Alan Nihilism Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Archived from the original on 2010 04 12 Nihilism is the belief that all values are baseless and that nothing can be known or communicated It is often associated with extreme pessimism and a radical skepticism that condemns existence Nihilism Encyclopaedia Britannica In the 20th century nihilism encompassed a variety of philosophical and aesthetic stances that in one sense or another denied the existence of genuine moral truths or values rejected the possibility of knowledge or communication and asserted the ultimate meaninglessness or purposelessness of life or of the universe Harper Douglas nihilism Online Etymology Dictionary a b c Pratt Alan Nihilism Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Archived copy Archived from the original on 2010 04 12 Retrieved 2003 08 26 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link The Meaning of Life Nihilism Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 3 August 2020 a b c ter Borg Meerten B 1988 The Problem of Nihilism A Sociological Approach Sociological Analysis 49 1 1 16 doi 10 2307 3711099 JSTOR 3711099 a b Gillespie Michael Allen 1996 Nihilism Before Nietzsche University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226293486 Deleuze Gilles 1983 1962 Nietzsche and Philosophy Translated by Tomlinson Hugh London The Athlone Press ISBN 978 0 231 13877 2 Gillespie Michael Allen 1996 Nihilism Before Nietzsche University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226293486 Gillespie Michael Allen 1996 Nihilism Before Nietzsche University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226293486 Petrov Kristian 2019 Strike out right and left a conceptual historical analysis of 1860s Russian nihilism and its notion of negation Stud East Eur Thought 71 2 73 97 doi 10 1007 s11212 019 09319 4 S2CID 150893870 Cited in Woodward Ashley 2002 Nihilism and the Postmodern in Vattimo s Nietzsche Minerva 6 ISSN 1393 614X Archived from the original on 2010 04 05 Baudrillard Jean 1993 Game with Vestiges In Baudrillard Live edited by M Gane Baudrillard Jean 1981 1994 On Nihilism In Simulacra and Simulation translated by S F Glasser See Toynbee Arnold J 1963 A Study of History VIII amp IX Mills C Wright 1959 The Sociological Imagination Bell Daniel 1976 The Cultural Contradictions of Capitalism See Rose Gillian 1984 Dialectic of Nihilism Carr Karen L 1988 The Banalization of Nihilism Pope John Paul II 1995 Evangelium vitae Il valore e l inviolabilita delta vita umana Milan Paoline Editoriale Libri Leffel Jim Dennis McCallum The Postmodern Challenge Facing the Spirit of the Age Christian Research Institute Archived from the original on 2006 08 19 the nihilism and loneliness of postmodern culture Phillips Robert 1999 Deconstructing the Mass Latin Mass Magazine Winter Archived from the original on 2004 04 17 For deconstructionists not only is there no truth to know there is no self to know it and so there is no soul to save or lose and In following the Enlightenment to its logical end deconstruction reaches nihilism The meaning of human life is reduced to whatever happens to interest us at the moment Pratt Alan Existential Nihilism Nihilism Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Archived copy Archived from the original on 2010 04 12 Retrieved 2003 08 26 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Existential nihilism is the notion that life has no intrinsic meaning or value and it is no doubt the most commonly used and understood sense of the word today Nihility Merriam Webster com Dictionary Merriam Webster Retrieved November 4 2020 a b Nichilismo Enciclopedia Italiana Enciclopedia online in Italian Treccani Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana Retrieved October 30 2020 Nihilism Encyclopaedia Britannica The term is an old one applied to certain heretics in the Middle Ages nihilism Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press September 2003 Subscription or participating institution membership required Gloy Karen 2014 Nihilismus Pessimismus Zwischen Gluck und Tragik in German Wilhelm Fink pp 145 200 doi 10 30965 9783846756454 007 ISBN 9783846756454 Klemme Heiner F Kuehn Manfred eds 2010 Obereit Jacob Hermann The Dictionary of Eighteenth Century German Philosophers Continuum ISBN 9780199797097 di Giovanni George Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi In Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of philosophy Fall 2008 ed Archived from the original on 2013 12 02 Harper Douglas nihilism Online Etymology Dictionary Nihilism Encyclopaedia Britannica In Russian literature nihilism was probably first used by N I Nadezhdin in an 1829 article in the Messenger of Europe in which he applied it to Aleksandr Pushkin Nadezhdin as did V V Bervi in 1858 equated nihilism with skepticism Mikhail Nikiforovich Katkov a well known conservative journalist who interpreted nihilism as synonymous with revolution presented it as a social menace because of its negation of all moral principles Gillespie Michael Allen 1996 Nihilism Before Nietzsche University of Chicago Press p 110 ISBN 9780226293486 Frank Joseph 1995 Dostoevsky The Miraculous Years 1865 1871 Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 01587 2 For it was Bazarov who had first declared himself to be a Nihilist and who announced that since at the present time negation is the most useful of all the Nihilists deny everything Turgenev Ivan Chapter 5 Fathers and Sons Translated by Constance Garnett A nihilist is a man who does not bow down before any authority who does not take any principle on faith whatever reverence that principle may be enshrined in Petrov Kristian 2019 Strike out right and left a conceptual historical analysis of 1860s Russian nihilism and its notion of negation Stud East Eur Thought 71 2 73 97 doi 10 1007 s11212 019 09319 4 S2CID 150893870 Nihilism Encyclopaedia Britannica The term was famously used by Friedrich Nietzsche to describe the disintegration of traditional morality in Western society a b c d e Carr Karen L 1992 The Banalisation of Nihilism Albany State University of New York Press Deleuze Gilles 1983 1962 Nietzsche and Philosophy Translated by Tomlinson Hugh London The Athlone Press ISBN 978 0 231 13877 2 Ramos Alice 1996 Triumph of the Will The Review of Politics 58 1 181 184 doi 10 1017 S0034670500051779 S2CID 181941969 Altizer Thomas J J 1997 Review Nihilism before Nietzsche by Michael Allen Gillespie and Metaphysics by Michel Haar amp Michael Gendre The Journal of Religion University of Chicago Press 77 2 328 330 doi 10 1086 490005 JSTOR 1205805 Altizer Thomas J J 1997 Review Nihilism before Nietzsche by Michael Allen Gillespie and Metaphysics by Michel Haar amp Michael Gendre The Journal of Religion University of Chicago Press 77 2 328 330 doi 10 1086 490005 JSTOR 1205805 Buddhists celebrate birth of Gautama Buddha HISTORY Archived from the original on September 2 2019 Retrieved Apr 7 2020 Bhikkhu Bodhi Pali English Glossary and Index of Subjects In The Connected Discourses of the Buddha A New Translation of the Samyutta Nikkaya a b Bhikkhu Naṇamoli and Bhikkhu Bodhi trans Apannaka Sutta In The Middle Length Discourses of the Buddha Note 425 a b Pasanno Ajahn Amaro Ajahn October 2009 Knowing Emptiness and the Radiant Mind PDF Forest Sangha Newsletter 88 5 Archived PDF from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 24 June 2019 a b Alagaddupama Sutta The Middle Length Discourses of the Buddha PDF Translated by Nanamoli Bikkhu Bodhi Bikkhu Archived PDF from the original on 2015 09 26 Retrieved 2019 06 24 a b Aggi Vacchagotta Sutta To Vacchagotta on Fire Translated by Bhikkhu Thanissaro 1997 Archived from the original on 6 June 2019 Retrieved 24 June 2019 via Accesstoinsight org Bhikkhu Thanissaro 1999 This fire that has gone out in which direction from here has it gone Mind Like Fire Unbound Fourth ed Retrieved 24 June 2019 via Accesstoinsight org Kevatta Kevaddha Sutta To Kevatta Translated by Bhikkhu Thanissaro 1997 Archived from the original on 24 March 2019 Retrieved 24 June 2019 via Accesstoinsight org Amaro Ajahn 7 May 2015 2008 A Dhamma article by Ajahn Amaro The View from the Centre Amaravati Buddhist Monastery Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 24 June 2019 di Giovanni George Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi plato stanford edu Retrieved 2022 07 14 Davis Bret W 2004 Zen After Zarathustra The Problem of the Will in the Confrontation Between Nietzsche and Buddhism Journal of Nietzsche Studies 28 89 138 p 107 Dreyfus Hubert 2004 Kierkegaard on the Internet Anonymity vs Commitment in the Present Age Berkeley edu Archived from the original on 2013 12 22 a b Hannay Alastair Kierkegaard p 289 Cotkin George Existential America p 59 Kierkegaard Soren The Present Age translated by Alexander Dru Foreword by Walter Kaufmann Kierkegaard Soren 1849 The Sickness Unto Death Barnett Christopher Kierkegaard Pietism and Holiness p 156 Wrathall Mark et al Heidegger Authenticity and Modernity p 107 Nihilism Encyclopaedia Britannica Nihilism from Latin nihil nothing originally a philosophy of moral and epistemological skepticism that arose in 19th century Russia during the early years of the reign of Tsar Alexander II Pratt Alan Nihilism Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy In Russia nihilism became identified with a loosely organized revolutionary movement C 1860 1917 that rejected the authority of the state church and family Lovell Stephen 1998 Nihilism Russian Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy Taylor and Francis doi 10 4324 9780415249126 E072 1 ISBN 9780415250696 Nihilism was a broad social and cultural movement as well as a doctrine Nihilism Encyclopaedia Britannica The philosophy of nihilism then began to be associated erroneously with the regicide of Alexander II 1881 and the political terror that was employed by those active at the time in clandestine organizations opposed to absolutism Petrov Kristian 2019 Strike out right and left a conceptual historical analysis of 1860s Russian nihilism and its notion of negation Stud East Eur Thought 71 2 73 97 doi 10 1007 s11212 019 09319 4 S2CID 150893870 Scanlan James P 1999 The Case against Rational Egoism in Dostoevsky s Notes from Underground Journal of the History of Ideas University of Pennsylvania Press 60 3 553 554 doi 10 2307 3654018 JSTOR 3654018 Lovell Stephen 1998 Nihilism Russian Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy Taylor and Francis doi 10 4324 9780415249126 E072 1 ISBN 9780415250696 The major theorists of Russian Nihilism were Nikolai Chernyshevskii and Dmitrii Pisarev although their authority and influence extended well beyond the realm of theory Lovell Stephen 1998 Nihilism Russian Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy Taylor and Francis doi 10 4324 9780415249126 E072 1 ISBN 9780415250696 Russian Nihilism is perhaps best regarded as the intellectual pool of the period 1855 66 out of which later radical movements emerged Nishitani Keiji 1990 McCormick Peter J ed The Self Overcoming of Nihilism Translated by Graham Parkes with Setsuko Aihara State University of New York Press ISBN 0791404382 Nihilism and anarchism which for a while would completely dominate the intelligentsia and become a major factor in the history of nineteenth century Russia emerged in the final years of the reign of Alexander I Nihilism Encyclopaedia Britannica Nihilism from Latin nihil nothing originally a philosophy of moral and epistemological skepticism that arose in 19th century Russia during the early years of the reign of Tsar Alexander II Petrov Kristian 2019 Strike out right and left a conceptual historical analysis of 1860s Russian nihilism and its notion of negation Stud East Eur Thought 71 2 73 97 doi 10 1007 s11212 019 09319 4 S2CID 150893870 Even so the term nihilism did not become popular until Turgenev published F amp C in 1862 Turgenev a sorokovnik an 1840s man used the term to describe the children the new generation of students and intellectuals who by virtue of their relation to their fathers were considered sestidesjatniki Nihilism Encyclopaedia Britannica It was Ivan Turgenev in his celebrated novel Fathers and Sons 1862 who popularized the term through the figure of Bazarov the nihilist Fathers and Sons Encyclopaedia Britannica Fathers and Sons concerns the inevitable conflict between generations and between the values of traditionalists and intellectuals Edie James M Scanlan James Zeldin Mary Barbara 1994 Russian Philosophy Volume II The Nihilists The Populists Critics of Religion and Culture University of Tennessee Press p 3 The fathers of the novel are full of humanitarian progressive sentiments But to the sons typified by the brusque scientifically minded Bazarov the fathers were concerned too much with generalities not enough with the specific material evils of the day Frank Joseph 1995 Dostoevsky The Miraculous Years 1865 1871 Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 01587 2 For it was Bazarov who had first declared himself to be a Nihilist and who announced that since at the present time negation is the most useful of all the Nihilists deny everything Fathers and Sons Encyclopaedia Britannica At the novel s first appearance the radical younger generation attacked it bitterly as a slander and conservatives condemned it as too lenient Fathers and Sons Novels for Students Retrieved August 11 2020 via Encyclopedia com When he returned to Saint Petersburg in 1862 on the same day that young radicals calling themselves nihilists were setting fire to buildings Nihilism Encyclopaedia Britannica Originally a philosophy of moral and epistemological skepticism that arose in 19th century Russia during the early years of the reign of Tsar Alexander II Petrov Kristian 2019 Strike out right and left a conceptual historical analysis of 1860s Russian nihilism and its notion of negation Stud East Eur Thought 71 2 73 97 doi 10 1007 s11212 019 09319 4 S2CID 150893870 Russian nihilism did not imply as one might expect from a purely semantic viewpoint a universal negation of ethical normativity the foundations of knowledge or the meaningfulness of human existence Gillespie Michael Allen 1996 Nihilism Before Nietzsche University of Chicago Press p 139 ISBN 9780226293486 This nihilist movement was essentially Promethean It has often been argued that Russian nihilism is little more than skepticism or empiricism While there is a certain plausibility to this assertion it ultimately fails to capture the millenarian zeal the characterized Russian nihilism These nihilists were not skeptics but passionate advocates of negation and liberation Gillespie Michael Allen 1996 Nihilism Before Nietzsche University of Chicago Press pp 139 143 144 ISBN 9780226293486 These nihilists were not skeptics but passionate advocates of negation and liberation While the two leading nihilist groups disagreed on details they both sought to liberate the Promethean might of the Russian people The nihilists believed that the prototypes of this new Promethean humanity already existed in the cadre of the revolutionary movement itself Petrov Kristian 2019 Strike out right and left a conceptual historical analysis of 1860s Russian nihilism and its notion of negation Stud East Eur Thought 71 2 73 97 doi 10 1007 s11212 019 09319 4 S2CID 150893870 These new types to borrow Pisarev s designation Frank Joseph 1995 Dostoevsky The Miraculous Years 1865 1871 Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 01587 2 Petrov Kristian 2019 Strike out right and left a conceptual historical analysis of 1860s Russian nihilism and its notion of negation Stud East Eur Thought 71 2 73 97 doi 10 1007 s11212 019 09319 4 S2CID 150893870 Nishitani Keiji 1990 McCormick Peter J ed The Self Overcoming of Nihilism Translated by Graham Parkes with Setsuko Aihara State University of New York Press p 132 ISBN 0791404382 Elisabeth Kuhn Nietzsches Philosophie des europaischen Nihilismus Berlin New York 1992 p 10 14 Martin Walter Jorg Huttner Nachweis aus Nicolai Karlowitsch Die Entwickelung des Nihilismus 1880 und aus Das Ausland 1880 In Nietzsche Studien Vol 51 2022 p 330 333 F Nietzsche KSA 12 6 25 a b Michels Steven 2004 Nietzsche Nihilism and the Virtue of Nature Dogma Archived from the original on 2004 10 31 F Nietzsche KSA 12 10 142 F Nietzsche KSA 13 14 22 F Nietzsche KSA 12 5 71 F Nietzsche KSA 12 2 200 F Nietzsche KSA 12 2 127 Rosen Stanley 1969 Nihilism A Philosophical Essay New Haven Yale University Press p xiii F Nietzsche The Gay Science 125 F Nietzsche On the Genealogy of Morals III 7 F Nietzsche KSA 12 7 8 F Nietzsche KSA 12 9 35 Doomen J 2012 Consistent Nihilism Journal of Mind and Behavior 33 1 2 103 17 Heideggers Aus einander setzung mit Nietzsches hat mannigfache Resonanz gefunden Das Verhaltnis der beiden Philosophen zueinander ist dabei von unterschiedlichen Positionen aus diskutiert worden Inzwischen ist es nicht mehr ungewohnlich dass Heidegger entgegen seinem Anspruch auf Verwindung der Metaphysik und des ihr zugehorigen Nihilismus in jenen Nihilismus zuruckgestellt wird als dessen Vollender er Nietzsche angesehen hat Wolfgang Muller Lauter Heidegger und Nietzsche Nietzsche Interpretationen III Berlin New York 2000 p 303 Cf Heidegger Vol I Nietzsche I 1936 39 Translated as Nietzsche I The Will to Power as Art by David F Krell New York Harper amp Row 1979 Vol II Nietzsche II 1939 46 Translated as The Eternal Recurrence of the Same by David F Krell in Nietzsche II The Eternal Recurrence of the Same New York Harper amp Row 1984 Indem Heidegger das von Nietzsche Ungesagte im Hinblick auf die Seinsfrage zur Sprache zu bringen sucht wird das von Nietzsche Gesagte in ein diesem selber fremdes Licht geruckt Muller Lauter Heidegger und Nietzsche p 267 Original German Die seinsgeschichtliche Bestimmung des Nihilismus Found in the second volume of his lectures Vol II Nietzsche II 1939 46 Translated as The Eternal Recurrence of the Same by David F Krell in Nietzsche II The Eternal Recurrence of the Same New York Harper amp Row 1984 Heidegger geht davon aus dass Nietzsche den Nihilismus als Entwertung der bisherigen obersten Werte versteht seine Uberwindung soll durch die Umwertung der Werte erfolgen Das Prinzip der Umwertung wie auch jeder fruheren Wertsetzung ist der Wille zur Macht Muller Lauter Heidegger und Nietzsche p 268 What remains unquestioned and forgotten in metaphysics is being and hence it is nihilistic UTM edu Archived 2010 06 14 at the Wayback Machine visited on November 24 2009 Muller Lauter Heidegger und Nietzsche p 268 Muller Lauter Heidegger und Nietzsche pp 272 275 Muller Lauter Heidegger und Nietzsche pp 301 303 Er Vattimo konstatiert in vielen europaischen Philosophien eine Hin und Herbewegung zwischen Heidegger und Nietzsche Dabei denkt er wie seine spateren Ausfuhrungen zeigen z B an Deleuze Foucault und Derrida auf franzosischer Seite an Cacciari Severino und an sich selbst auf italienischer Seite Muller Lauter Heidegger und Nietzsche p 302 Muller Lauter Heidegger und Nietzsche pp 303 304 Deleuze Gilles 1983 1962 Nietzsche and Philosophy Translated by Tomlinson Hugh London The Athlone Press ISBN 978 0 231 13877 2 Deleuze Nietzsche and Philosophy p 34 Borginho Jose Archived 2010 01 07 at the Wayback Machine 1999 Nihilism and Affirmation Retrieved 05 12 07 Spivak Chakravorty Gayatri 1988 Can The Subaltern Speak in Nelson Cary and Grossberg Lawrence eds 1988 Marxism and the Interpretation of Culture Macmillan Education Basingstoke Reynolds Jack 2001 The Other of Derridean Deconstruction Levinas Phenomenology and the Question of Responsibility Archived 2011 06 14 at the Wayback Machine Minerva An Internet Journal of Philosophy 5 31 62 Retrieved 05 12 07 Nihilism Encyclopaedia Britannica In the 20th century nihilism encompassed a variety of philosophical and aesthetic stances that in one sense or another denied the existence of genuine moral truths or values rejected the possibility of knowledge or communication and asserted the ultimate meaninglessness or purposelessness of life or of the universe Crosby Donald A 1998 Nihilism Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy Taylor and Francis doi 10 4324 9780415249126 N037 1 ISBN 9780415250696 Turner Jason 2011 Ontological Nihilism Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780199603039 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 960303 9 Archived from the original on 2019 12 31 Retrieved 2019 12 31 AskOxford nihilism www askoxford com Archived from the original on 2005 11 22 nihilism The American Heritage Medical Dictionary Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 2008 p 363 ISBN 978 0 618 94725 6 Archived from the original on 2016 09 11 Retrieved 2016 01 27 Solipsism and the Problem of Other Minds Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Archived from the original on 2015 10 31 Retrieved 2015 11 03 Cooper Neil 1973 Moral Nihilism Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 74 1973 1974 75 90 doi 10 1093 aristotelian 74 1 75 JSTOR 4544850 Friedrich Nietzsche Nietzsche s Mature Philosophy Encyclopaedia Britannica He thought of the age in which he lived as one of passive nihilism that is as an age that was not yet aware that religious and philosophical absolutes had dissolved in the emergence of 19th century positivism Crosby Donald A 1998 Nihilism Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy Taylor and Francis doi 10 4324 9780415249126 N037 1 ISBN 9780415250696 Political nihilism calls for the complete destruction of existing political institutions along with their supporting outlooks and social structures but has no positive message of what should be put in their place Strauss Leo 1999 German Nihilism Interpretation 26 3 353 378 Stegenga Jacob 2018 Medical Nihilism Oxford UK Oxford University Press p 1 ISBN 978 0 19 874704 8 Smith Richard June 2018 The case for medical nihilism and gentle medicine The BMJ Danaher John April 12 2019 The Argument for Medical Nihilism Philosophical Disquisitions Retrieved September 4 2019 de Micheli Mario 2006 Las vanguardias artisticas del siglo XX Alianza Forma pp 135 137 a b Tzara Tristan December 2005 Trans ed Mary Ann Caws Approximate Man amp Other Writings Black Widow Press p 3 de Micheli Mario 2006 Las vanguardias artisticas del siglo XX Alianza Forma p 137 Adamowicz E Robertson E 2012 Dada and Beyond Volume 2 Dada and Its Legacies Amsterdam Brill Nihilism The University of Tennessee Martin April 1 2012 Archived from the original on January 19 2018 Retrieved January 16 2018 Nihilism Philosophy of Nothingness January 5 2015 Retrieved January 16 2018 A Journey into the Realm of Human Destructiveness in Bret Easton Ellis s American Psycho PDF CHAIB Ahlem and Yamina GHALEB 2017 Manifestations of nihilism in selected contemporary media PDF Olivier Marco Rene 2007 Ravenscroft Eric 22 March 2022 Everything Everywhere All at Once Perfects Optimistic Nihilism Wired Retrieved 9 November 2022 General and cited sources EditPrimary texts Edit Brassier Ray 2007 Nihil Unbound Enlightenment and Extinction New York Palgrave Macmillan Jacobi Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi an Fichte 1799 1816 German Text 1799 1816 Appendix with Jacobi s and Fichte s complementary Texts critical Apparatus Commentary and Italian Translation Istituto Italiano per gli Studi Filosofici Naples 2011 ISBN 978 88 905957 5 2 Heidegger Martin 1982 Nietzsche Vols I IV trans F A Capuzzi San Francisco Harper amp Row Kierkegaard Soren 1998 1854 The Moment and Late Writings Kierkegaard s Writings Vol 23 ed and trans Howard V Hong and Edna H Hong Princeton N J Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 03226 9 Kierkegaard Soren 1978 1846 The Two Ages Kierkegaard s Writings Vol 14 ed and trans Howard V Hong and Edna H Hong Princeton N J Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 07226 5 Kierkegaard Soren 1995 1850 Works of Love Kierkegaard s Writings Vol 16 ed and trans Howard V Hong and Edna H Hong Princeton N J Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 03792 9 Nietzsche Friedrich 2005 1886 Beyond Good and Evil trans Helen Zimmern Nietzsche Friedrich 1974 1887 The Gay Science trans Walter Kaufman Vintage ISBN 0 394 71985 9 Nietzsche Friedrich 1980 Samtliche Werken Kritische Studienausgabe ed C Colli and M Montinari Walter de Gruyter ISBN 3 11 007680 2 Nietzsche Friedrich 2008 1885 Thus Spake Zarathustra trans Thomas Common Tartaglia James 2016 Philosophy in a Meaningless Life A System of Nihilism Consciousness and Reality London Bloomsbury Publishing Secondary texts Edit Arena Leonardo Vittorio 1997 Del nonsense tra Oriente e Occidente Urbino Quattroventi Arena Leonardo Vittorio 2012 Nonsense as the Meaning ebook Arena Leonardo Vittorio 2015 On Nudity An Introduction to Nonsense Mimesis International Barnett Christopher 2011 Kierkegaard pietism and holiness Ashgate Publishing Carr Karen 1992 The Banalisation of Nihilism State University of New York Press Cattarini L S 2018 Beyond Sartre and Sterility Surviving Existentialism Montreal contact argobookshop ca Cunningham Conor 2002 Genealogy of Nihilism Philosophies of Nothing amp the Difference of Theology New York NY Routledge Dent G Wallace M amp Dia Center for the Arts 1992 Black popular culture Discussions in contemporary culture no 8 Seattle Bay Press Dod Elmar 2013 Der unheimlichste Gast Die Philosophie des Nihilismus Marburg Tectum 2013 Dreyfus Hubert L 2004 Kierkegaard on the Internet Anonymity vs Commitment in the Present Age Retrieved at December 1 2009 Fraser John 2001 Nihilism Modernisn and Value retrieved at December 2 2009 Galimberti Umberto 2008 L ospite inquietante Il nichilismo e i giovani Milano Feltrinelli ISBN 9788807171437 Gillespie Michael Allen 1996 Nihilism Before Nietzsche Chicago IL University of Chicago Press Giovanni George di 2008 Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Edward N Zalta ed Retrieved on December 1 2009 Harper Douglas Nihilism in Online Etymology Dictionary retrieved at December 2 2009 Harries Karsten 2010 Between nihilism and faith a commentary on Either or Walter de Gruyter Press Hibbs Thomas S 2000 Shows About Nothing Nihilism in Popular Culture from The Exorcist to Seinfeld Dallas TX Spence Publishing Company Kopic Mario 2001 S Nietzscheom o Europi Zagreb Jesenski i Turk Korab Karpowicz W J 2005 Martin Heidegger 1889 1976 in Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy retrieved at December 2 2009 Kuhn Elisabeth 1992 Friedrich Nietzsches Philosophie des europaischen Nihilismus Walter de Gruyter Irti Natalino 2004 Nichilismo giuridico Laterza Roma Bari Lowith Karl 1995 Martin Heidegger and European Nihilism New York NY Columbia UP Marmysz John 2003 Laughing at Nothing Humor as a Response to Nihilism Albany NY SUNY Press Muller Lauter Wolfgang 2000 Heidegger und Nietzsche Nietzsche Interpretationen III Berlin New York Parvez Manzoor S 2003 Modernity and Nihilism Secular History and Loss of Meaning retrieved at December 2 2009 Rose Eugene Fr Seraphim 1995 Nihilism The Root of the Revolution of the Modern Age Forestville CA Fr Seraphim Rose Foundation Rosen Stanley 2000 Nihilism A Philosophical Essay South Bend Indiana St Augustine s Press 2nd Edition Severino Emanuele 1982 Essenza del nichilismo Milano Adelphi ISBN 9788845904899 Slocombe Will 2006 Nihilism and the Sublime Postmodern The Hi Story of a Difficult Relationship New York NY Routledge Tigani Francesco 2010 Rappresentare Medea Dal mito al nichilismo Roma Aracne ISBN 978 88 548 3256 5 Tigani Francesco 2014 Lo spettro del nulla e il corpo del nichilismo in La nave di Teseo Saggi sull Essere il mito e il potere Napoli Guida ISBN 9788868660499 Villet Charles 2009 Towards Ethical Nihilism The Possibility of Nietzschean Hope Saarbrucken Verlag Dr Muller Williams Peter S 2005 I Wish I Could Believe in Meaning A Response to Nihilism Damaris Publishing External links Edit Look up nihilism in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikiquote has quotations related to Nihilism Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nihilism Nihil center for nihilism and nihilist studies Nihilist Abyss in Italian Friedrich Nietzsche Thus Spake Zarathustra translated by Thomas Common Nihilism Archived 2010 04 12 at the Wayback Machine in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Fathers and Sons by Ivan Turgenev Moral Skepticism section Skeptical Hypotheses in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Nihilism New International Encyclopedia 1905 In the Dust of This Planet Radiolab podcast on nihilism and popular culture Nihilism In Our Time BBC Radio 4 discussion with Rob Hopkins Raymond Tallis and Catherine Belsey Nov 16 2000 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nihilism amp oldid 1155033258, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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