But much of this argument hinges on very specific, expressions or versions of religion. — Tom Storm
How could we determine the difference between the purported nihilism of secularism and the potential nihilism of religion? — Tom Storm
As is well known, Nietszche - I'm not an admirer - forecast that nihilism would be the default condition of Western culture, which had supposedly killed its God. Heidegger likewise believed that the root cause of nihilism was the technological way of thinking that has come to dominate modern society, reducing everything quantifiable facts, and leaving no room for the kinds of intangible values and meanings that are essential to human existence, which he sought to re-articulate in a non-religious framework (albeit many suggest that his concerns and preoccupations remained religious in some sense.) — Wayfarer
What do you mean by 'the purported nihilism of religion'? — Wayfarer
It's not good for you, and probably ought be discouraged in children. Certainly philosophy is not something for adolescent minds.
If you have a choice. — Banno
Twisted and degraded forms of religious belief are not necessarily illustrative of what was originally meaningful about them. — Wayfarer
The Eclipse of Reason — Wayfarer
Damn you for adding to my reading list. The prose looks... interesting — Banno
you have accepted the almost ubiquitous presumption that philosophical enquiry consists in self-reflection. I think that presumption mistaken. — Banno
It's the philosophers' inept response to "everyone likes a good book" - when you read that, do you immediately look for counter instances? — Banno
The failed mathematician bit will fall flat — Banno
I'll get all analytic and point out that the arguments and strategies philosophy provides to us have a more general application than just the critique of religion, and cite the threads on Trump, Covid and the invasion of Ukraine as evidence. — Banno
Plainly I will agree that such fundamentalism and extremism are abhorrent, but I don't think that makes them nihilistic as such. — Wayfarer
kamikaze pilots and jihadi suicide bombers are both motivated by a belief in the afterlife. — Wayfarer
thanks for the opportunity of holding forth on one of my favourite themes. — Wayfarer
Dorothy Day — frank
kamikaze pilots and jihadi suicide bombers are both motivated by a belief in the afterlife.
— Wayfarer
If that were the only motivation, and I don’t think it is, wouldn’t that be self centered and essentially nihilistic in the sense that their actions aren’t based on values or principles but merely selfishness? — praxis
Well, for me Islamic State or Westboro Church might be seen as examples of more extreme instantiations. — Tom Storm
The Westboro Baptist Church (WBC) is made up of its leader, Pastor Fred Waldron Phelps, nine of his 13 children (the other four are estranged), their children and spouses, and a small number of other families and individuals.
I really can't see how the kamikaze pilot could be interpreted as self-centred when the entire narrative was created around self sacrifice. Same for jihadis (and even though I think their zealotry is tragically warped.) They are indoctrinated to believe that they will receive their just rewards in the hereafter. — Wayfarer
I'm sure that many suicidal mass shooters firmly believe that when they die, there are no consequences in any kind of life beyond. That is what distinguishes nihilism from religious indoctrination. — Wayfarer
By 'nihilism' I understand the belief that nothing human (i.e. mortal, finite, caused, contingent, imperfect) is meaningful or significant or real. Thus, I interpret 'supernatural religions' (e.g. Abrahamic, Vedic, pantheonic, shamanic, animist, ancestral, divine rightist, paranormal, ... cults) as manifest 'nihilisms' which, as Freddy points out, devalue this worldly life by projecing – idealizing (i.e. idolizing, disembodying) – 'infinite meaning, significance & reality' as originating with and/or only belonging to some purported 'eternal otherworldly life'. :sparkle: :eyes: :roll:What is nihilism? It is variously expressed as the idea that nothing is real, or that nothing has any real meaning. — Wayfarer
Not exactly representative of anything other than psychopathy. — BC
The point I'm labouring in all this, is the philosophical one - that (true or false) religious philosophies provide a framework within which to situate humankind in the Cosmos, and not just as the accidental collocation of atoms (Bertrand Russell's phrase) - which seems to me the bottom line of secular philosophy. — Wayfarer
not just as the accidental collocation of atoms (Bertrand Russell's phrase) - which seems to me the bottom line of secular philosophy. — Wayfarer
The Bible has lost every major battle it has ever fought. The Bible was quoted to defend slavery and the Bible lost. The Bible was quoted to keep women silent, and the Bible lost. And the Bible is being quoted to deny homosexuals their equal rights, and the Bible will lose.
- Episcopal Bishop John Shelby Spong
Are secular humanists unable to be hateful bastards? No, they are able. — BC
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