https://richardswsmith.wordpress.com/2017/11/18/we-are-here-on-earth-to-fart-around-and-dont-let-anybody-tell-you-any-different/And I’ve had a hell of a good time. I tell you, we are here on Earth to fart around, and don’t let anybody tell you any different.
There are two types of people; those who think people are always one type or another, and the rest of us. :wink: — unenlightened
I didn't say there are two types of people — flannel jesus
When I think depression ...I think "what's the point?" or "I have no self worth". For me the philosophical school of thought and the state of mind are very much overlapped. — Benj96
When I think Nihilism ...I think "nothing matters" or "everything is meaningless". — Benj96
I am unencumbered by dogma — Tom Storm
isn't the reflexive association of 'dogma' with 'transcendence' itself a kind of dogma, or at least a stereotype? — Wayfarer
It doesn't necessarily manifest in dramatic ways, it might just be a shrug, a whatever, a 'makes no difference'. I — Wayfarer
Still, I do think nihilism is more merits more respect than anti-natalism, because I do believe that most people have felt periods of meaninglessness, without going all the way to claiming that the whole of life is meaningless. — Manuel
Are there happy, productive nihilists who bounce out of bed in the morning, glad to be alive, despite the absence of meaning? — BC
it's useful to differentiate the idea of 'feeling meaninglessness' from the phenomenon of believing there is no transcendent meaning (nihilism). The latter doesn't necessitate the former. — Tom Storm
Surely this has no bearing upon what I love and enjoy or whether it’s worth getting up in the morning? — Tom Storm
perhaps other philosophies reflect other mindstates? — Benj96
Most of my days are filled with joy despite my position that life is inherently without meaning. — Tom Storm
As for nihilists "jumping out of bed glad to be alive" I think it is difficult to maintain the joy. I used to associate with a particular group of socialists who were something like the Russian nihilists. They had reached the point where they approved of NOTHING in capitalist society. They were not good socialists, they were bitter old men.
A problem with the term nihilist is that it is absolute and without nuance. It's like "anarchist" in that way -- when used by adolescents it has an extreme, unmodified meaning.
Whether nihilism is a good term or not, carry on with your program of joy. — BC
Nihilism (pronounced: /ˈnaɪ.ɨlɪzəm/ or /ˈniː.ɨlɪzəm/; from the Latin nihil, nothing) refers to sets of beliefs which negate one or more apparently meaningful aspects of Reality. Some are forms of existential nihilism, which argue that life is without objective meaning, purpose, or intrinsic value. Moral nihilists assert that morality does not inherently exist, and that any established moral values are abstractly contrived.
As for nihilists "jumping out of bed glad to be alive" I think it is difficult to maintain the joy. — BC
I think nihilism is endemic in today's culture...
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