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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 24.252.240.26 (talk) at 17:55, 16 August 2009 (What if?...). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

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Nihilism in Film section

"The defining contemporary portrayal of Nihilism as a central theme is arguably Fight Club, as best expressed by the antagonist's credo "It is only after we have lost everything that we are free to do anything." The film describes the unnamed narrator's disillusionment with the search for meaning in consumerist emasculated society, and his subsequent Nietzschean reaction."

This quote should really be really be refering to the novel Fight Club by Chuck Palahniuk as the ideas where originally stated in the text rather than the film. It should be in a "Nihilism on literature" section I suppose.

Chuck Palaniuk has stated in a interview that he is NOT a nihilist but rather follows the philosophy of romanticism. There is NO where written that Fight club was intended to be nihilistic. --92.3.38.84 (talk) 22:00, 24 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Nihilism in the Prozakhian sense is Romantic; in the other senses, it is basically anarchism and as such is a moral rejection of life itself. It makes more sense to call that fatalism, although Nietzsche uses the term nihilism for it. death metal maniac (talk) 20:49, 10 March 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Except that the film makers, and the actors (particularly Edward Norton), found and played upon Nihilistic tendencies in the characters' philosophies. While "Jack" may ultimately opt for an Existentialist solution, one hinted at by Tyler himself, this does not diminish the borderline Nihilism of the early parts of the film. Postmodern Beatnik (talk) 06:28, 27 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Nihilism in the teen rocker sense, maybe, but not nihilism as a philosophy. More likely the words you are looking for are ennui and rebellion. death metal maniac (talk) 20:49, 10 March 2009 (UTC)[reply]
So are we to allow that "borderline Nihilism of the early parts of the film" constitute "The defining contemporary portrayal of Nihilism as a central theme?" I think not. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 209.194.42.74 (talk) 13:39, 21 February 2008 (UTC)[reply]
"The defining contemporary portrayal of Nihilism" is an accurate description given that Fight Club is (a) contemporary, and (b) often pointed to as definitive. Nihilism is also a "central theme" in that the struggle between Nihilism and Existentialism is an overarching theme (one which Palahniuk, as a talented writer, can depict without personally adhering to either philosophy). But apparently you failed to notice that concurrent with my above comment, I rewrote the section on Fight Club, replacing that sentence with the far tamer claim that, "Perhaps the most commonly referenced portrayal of Nihilism in contemporary film is the 1999 film Fight Club." And it has stayed that way since (although I plan on editing out some of the redundancy momentarily). It is quite unnecessary to complain about something that has already been changed. Postmodern Beatnik (talk) 16:22, 21 February 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I agree with removing the section about Fight Club.Thprfssnl (talk) 10:05, 23 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I think there might be a place for a nihilism in film section and if there is, The Big Lebowski should be mentioned. In this movie, nihilists are parodied.--67.86.120.246 (talk) 14:04, 3 July 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Famous nihilists

Come on, what about Andy Warhol and Trent Reznor even the Sex "excuse me" Pistols?. They are famous Nihilists, why not put them down?--Nightingale12 (talk) 11:10, 30 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Sure, just make sure you include the reliable sources where you got this information from. Skomorokh 15:58, 30 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

POV

This whole article reads like an essay, and smacks of OR. In addition, the attempt to relate nihilism to pop culture is blatantly OR. There is no reference claiming that Warhol was a nihilist, or that I heart Huckabees is nihilist. This is the opinion of the author, and can't be considered for an encyclopedia entry. This page needs to be flagged and edited profusely.72.92.17.135 (talk) 09:46, 24 May 2008 (UTC)[reply]

The problem is that few people have pointed out how nihilism can be a philosophy separate from fatalism. Fatalism is big in popular culture because it affirms a lack of accountability. death metal maniac (talk) 20:50, 10 March 2009 (UTC)[reply]
I don't really think this deserves to be called a B Class article. If you made an entire page entitled "Criticism of Nihilism", cut and pasted the bulk of this article (opinions of other philosophers on nihilism), the original would be just long enough not to be classified as a stub. 86.12.7.205 (talk) 17:15, 27 January 2009 (UTC)[reply]

I removed the statement "There are no known sources that disprove this claim" which bookended the overview's first paragraph. The wording made it sound as if the article was asserting that all the claims nihilists make about the absence of a higher power and an objective morality were true, which is a blatant violation of the NPOV standard. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 173.21.219.60 (talk) 00:50, 9 February 2009 (UTC)[reply]

What if?...

This one is for all "lovers of wisdom": If the five relationship questions on the chart below the contents at Absurdism were "answered" in a less/non-dogmatic way, what "philosophy" would that be? Example: 1. There is such a thing as "meaning" or "value" to be found in life PERHAPS/MAYBE(?) 2. There is inherent meaning in the universe (either intrinsic or from God) PERHAPS/MAYBE(?), BUT HUMANS MAY NEVER KNOW IT 3. Individuals can create meaning in life themselves PERHAPS/MAYBE(?), BUT IT MAY NOT BE ESSENTIAL 4. The pursuit of intrinsic or extrinsic meaning in the universe is a futile gesture PERHAPS/MAYBE(?), BUT THE PURSUIT ITSELF MAY HAVE MEANING 5. The pursuit of constructed meaning is a futile gesture PERHAPS/MAYBE(?)

Absurdism = solution to the "problem" of Nihilism: Life-affirmation, life as the only true value/necessary good, positivity in a philosophical (not mathematical, of course) sense,realistic optimism, appreciation for happiness, nobly striving to succeed, positive side(s) of Surrealism/Existentialism, anti-negativity/nihilism/pessimism/skepticism.

1) Nihilism = suicide/mass murder (Nietzsche) -- [Skepticism + Pessimism] 2) Existentialism = "philosophical suicide" (Camus) 3) Absurdism = absurdity (Kierkegaard) -- [acceptance/embracing absurdity + rebellion/revolt] 4) ?ism = "non-dogmatic" expression/development of Absurdism?

Is anyone out there working on an "evolution" of Camus' thought? A new 'system'? As he said in the first chapter of 'The Myth of Sisyphus', this is the philosophical question of life. Perhaps an original thesis/dissertation/book (such as 'The Affirmation of Life: Nietzsche on Overcoming Nihilism" by Bernard Reginster... (Please don't offer Optimism a la Leibniz/Godwin)...

Nemo Senki66.213.22.193 (talk) 23:07, 4 June 2008 (UTC)[reply]

This whole section seems really bad. "Nihilism differs from skepticism in that skepticism allows for the possibility of religion, but demands empirical evidence for religious claims.[citation needed] Additionally, skepticism does not necessarily come to any conclusions about the reality of moral concepts nor does it deal so intimately with questions about the meaning of an existence without knowable truth.". Afaik, moral skeptics don't believe in real morality, they say e.g. that morality is ridiculous because there is no god. I don't know the difference between skepticism and nihilism. I have it on good authority that the nihilist believes in nothing, and some skeptics remain simply unsure. But I am sure that skeptics can take a cognitive attitude of "we cannot know x" or "y does not exist". So like I say I can't separate out the two. It's a shame that wikipedia's philosophy articles are so bad. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.148.51.242 (talk) 21:51, 6 June 2008 (UTC) oh i see that was my mistake now. but it remains unclear if nihilists believe that we can justify belief in anything [say the size of the earth, or what time it is now, or if i am male or female]. and i would guess that the skeptic would settle for any kind of good evidence for god. finally, is nihilism a type of skepticism? oh and i think that many people would deny objective meaning to existence but not call themselves or be called nihilists.[reply]

Question

First off let me say that I don't know anything about Nihilism per se, however is it truly nihilist thought to go from "there is no objective reality" to (therefore) "no action is logically preferable to another"? To me that seems completely illogical. I can deny the existence of absolute morality and still not choose to eat dog food for logical cause (bad taste) or not wear my underwear on the outside. I would argue it would be better to say "no action is logically preferable to another in a moral context." Or no ethically related action, or something along those lines. I don't see an article about any school of thought being well to open with such a bad case of logic :x --Kyle Dantarin (talk) 13:24, 16 June 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I'd say that is implied since the full line you quoted is "Objective morality does not exist; therefore no action is logically preferable to any other."
To answer your argument about eating dog food: Nihilism makes no claims about pleasurable things being preferable to unpleasurable things. Possibly you are confusing Nihilism with Hedonism. Of course a nihilist can make the (arguably rational) choice to live a Hedonistic life, and subsequently act in a logical, or illogical manner to experience as much pleasure as possible. --Zero g (talk) 16:52, 16 June 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Someone has changed it in any case :x —Preceding unsigned comment added by KyleDantarin (talkcontribs) 12:58, 16 July 2008 (UTC)[reply]

What I meant was that making a statement about moral reality does not imply preferences about all possible actions. Some moral-neutral actions might still be preferable to others as in the examples above. —Preceding unsigned comment added by KyleDantarin (talkcontribs) 13:11, 16 July 2008 (UTC)[reply]

"Self-consistency and Paradox" section

This section is horrible:

1. It contains no source about who claims what: clearly not all nihilist say that nihilism is unjustifiable. It seems to imply that nihilism is defined as something incoherent, which is false.

2. It makes claims that do not seem impartial. Such a text would more appropriately fit in a "criticism" section/page, but not in the description of nihilism.

3. It repeats the common misconception against the denial of truth that "there is no truth" has to be true in the same way as that which it denies. "There is no truth" generally concerns some precise philosophical theories of truth, generally the correspondance theory of truth, and let the possibility of making correct statements that are not corresponding to anything in reality perfectly possible.

4. It is written as an argument, pushing nihilism by assuming replies in a way that leaves nihilism in a gradually more undefendable corner: not only is this unfit for an encyclopedia article, but it is also a quite bad rhetoric in which few nihilists would fall.

I think this section should be deleted or re-written into a criticism section. 24.202.69.222 (talk) 17:51, 20 June 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Agreed. I'll add a Richard Rorty quote that answers the 'paradox.' The section might need a rewrite, but presenting the other side more strongly is all that I'm in the mood for now.

Meviin (talk) 21:33, 27 June 2008 (UTC) Rorty may be friendly towards nihilism [or not], but are there any nihilist philosophers? is it a live research area in philosophy? are discredited scientific beliefs, old wives tales etc., kept NPOV on wikipedia? if one of these nihilists can provide a list of nihilist philosophers, that would be GREAT, absolutely fantastic, it can be included in the article. but see I read "not all nihilist say that nihilism is unjustifiable. It seems to imply that nihilism is defined as something incoherent, which is false", and I think that a nihilist can't "define" anything; and then I laughed at your use of 'false'. i want wikipedia's nihilism article to be somewhere people can go to learn about 'nihilism', and when i say i think nihilism has nothing or next to nothing to do with professional philosophy, i am not lying. are you? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.134.75.253 (talk) 10:13, 28 June 2008 (UTC)[reply]

This section is ridiculous. It redefines nihilism as the belief that there is no such thing as truth, and then proceeds to argue against that point. But this definition of nihilism isn't supported by citations or by reference to any philosophers who might have defined it as such. It's also at complete odds with the definition of nihilism outlined in the rest of the article -- that nihilism is a disbelief in absolute values, not truth. For this reason I'm going to delete the section -- it's just not relevant to the article, because despite claiming to be about nihilism, it isn't. Reidlophile (talk) 12:10, 14 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Section "See Also"

Hi there. The section "See Also" should be prosified, so that some comment of each link and its relation to Nihilism is given, instead of just being a list. The section "External Links" should also be cleaned. --Anna Lincoln (talk) 10:17, 3 July 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Grounding!

I too am very unhappy with this article, but lack the energy and skill to right it. My biggest objection is that the conceptual framework of "grounding" and "ungroundedness" is entirely lacking. Serious nihilists claim that the world we inhabit is ungrounded by any overarching or totalizing firmament. That stance is easily defensible and challenges just about everything we think or know - the article must do a better job of explaining both sides. To the nihilist, if we are in a room, the room has no floor - the furniture (us and our toys) are floating, not standing. I find this word picture helpful - it means that however we might arrange the furniture, it cannot, and therefore will not, reach a floor. If we lay out items of furniture, they must merely connect to each other, or not, but they have no requirement to connect via gravity to the floor, because in our most scientific efforts, we have failed to find one. Thus, while we may speak of truth or morality, we cannot treat them like a floor, and stand things on them as if there were no other way to do it. With this insight, we sharpen up the real underlying debate: either we find the floor that is missing (by scientifically discovering either the Ultimate Theory of Everything, or God, or something from which all this arises) or we get used to living in houses we build, but cannot in any way adequately ground against our own over-developed sense of doubt. KTyson (talk) 22:22, 20 July 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Nihilism and Atheism

Why is this page listed as under Wikiproject Atheism? I can't think of any reason why nihilism would have anything to do with atheism, why would a deity existing have any more 'meaning' than anything else existing? 79.78.128.43 (talk) 14:04, 2 October 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Aye, there is plenty wrong here. 'and many aspects of modernity[3] represent the rejection of God, and therefore are nihilistic' That statement needs serious review. Many nihilists suggest that even the existence of god would not imply meaning or negate meaninglessness. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 138.130.102.79 (talk) 11:02, 23 October 2008 (UTC)[reply]

This article really needs work. I mean, really. We should start a Nihilist Task force. Zazaban (talk) 19:49, 23 October 2008 (UTC)[reply]
What makes you think nihilists care about this article to fix it? There's a piece of thought for you.Annihilatron (talk) 17:27, 24 March 2009 (UTC)[reply]
I don't, all I know is that I care about this article to fix it. Zazaban (talk) 23:21, 24 March 2009 (UTC)[reply]
i do think it is a philossophy only any athiest could adopt and im both an athiest anda nilhist the reason why is it isnt jjust a god or messiah or titan or what ever you wanna can them that religon gives you it is purpose and a moral code thats what the 10 commandments are also just because becase you are nihlist doesnt mean you are completely dark and consantly depressed or a suicidal state this article make it sound extremely bleak i belive nature didn't evolve us a porpose so ther isnt one same thing with morals 204.186.26.213 (talk) 02:51, 9 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Nihilists believe in ultimate meaninglessness. They understand and/or believe that the universe only has meaning that we assign to it. Just because a nihilist believes in ultimate meaningless, doesn't mean they have no drives, passions, and ambitions, just understands that in the end, they matter not. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 204.209.209.129 (talk) 21:23, 13 August 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Nihilism on TV

I am sure some shows on TV other than House pose the concept of nihilism. House is accused of being nihilist in one episode ("97 Seconds"), but a doctor comments that "[House's] nihilism must have caught up with him" after a doctor is paged to a room where House had deliberately electrocuted himself.

BANZ111 (talk) 00:32, 6 October 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I have true belief that all nihilists believe in absolutely nothing, including god and all its fallacies. A true nihilist knows that when it is born, it has to die, and everything in between life and death means nothing and has a minimal impact of the process of life or being in general. Death is the constant, and that is the only thing to expect, the way our race has evolved enough to understand these things, and our galactic data should be enough to prove, that there is no meaning in life, and that we are all in this situation by a big fucking coincident. Deal with it, and take what theyve created as a grain of sand. In all actuality, we are free men, and free beings, forced into a situation created by our race hundreds of years ago, because we cannot evolve passed them

Art section

Nihilism is a complicated subject, it clashes with many people's personal views - no need to go further than this article's edit history -. Quite frankly, a Wikipedia article is not the right place to 'fight' over the way we see things. It's a place where a lot of us share information so that others, as well as ourselves, can have quick access to reliable information on the net.

Please, do not post your personal interpretations of books, movies, art movements, songs. This is not needed, let people enjoy art and reach unbiased interpretation of masterpieces - or any work of art - by themselves.

Honestly, this article looks a tad bit like a high school essay. We'd all get an F. Try to keep your opinions to yourselves. LombrizFeliz (talk) 03:19, 30 November 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I tagged some of the examples as needing cites, pending removal, as some look to be OR. Overall the section looks too listy to me, with little discussion as to the aims or influence of any of the works. Without such a discusion, adding examples to this sections really does nothing to expand on the subject of nihilism in art, which i'm sure must have a lot written about in scholarly books. Pop culture references are fun, and can help connect to general readers, but should only be used to illuminate points about the general subject. This is not a List of nihilist themed art article.Yobmod (talk) 10:02, 4 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Dada

There are lots of sources about dada in this article. but it seems not a single one called it nihilism. It looks like synthesis to me, to compare the descriptions of the two, and announce they must mean the same thing. If the source said Dada is nihilist, why is there a paragrpah long quote instead, that doesn't use the word?Yobmod (talk) 17:04, 5 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]

That is because I can't find a single source that openly claims DADA is a 'nihilistic movement'. All the sources I find suggest that it has certain tendencies, but none of them directly call it nihilistic. However, I was reluctant to remove the whole section. What I did when editing it was soften the harsh and biased vocabulary. Calling DADA nihilistic, seems like OR. ¿Do you have any suggestions on how to proceed with this section? Thx. LombrizFeliz (talk) 07:46, 10 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Maybe these:

"If, on the other hand, efforts to destroy, regardless of ultimate intention, are nihilist by definition, then and only then may the Dadaists justly be so considered" from Artists and Revolution: Dada and the Bauhaus, 1917-1925 by Allan Carl Greenberg, p.115 UMI Research Press, 1979, ISBN 0835710807.
"Although the artists in this group were really advocates of Data nihilism, the...." The Visual Arts in Germany 1890-1937: Utopia and Despair by Shearer West, p.102 Manchester University Press, 2000, ISBN 0719052793.
Hope these help, seems to be more than one opinion about whether Nihilist is a good label - there are lots of Googlebooks hits, some of which allow search inside.Yobmod (talk) 10:55, 10 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Thanks! I've searched Google books and found a couple of great sources. It is very divided, but I've now found a book that talks about DADA's "destructive and constructive" aspects. As well as two that link DADA and Nietzsche, though, so far, they do not mention nihilism per se, I will continue reading and work on something. LombrizFeliz (talk) 19:31, 10 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]

it seems strange to have two of the links be to polemics against nihilism by christians. one link maybe, but as it is it seems like an odd way of presenting things.

Since you had counter-order and Elisha Shapiro, I've added a link to the original nihilists on the net at Nihil.org. death metal maniac (talk) 12:25, 9 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Nihilism as a position of denying reality

Buridan has twice removed my addition regarding the extreme form of nihilism that denies reality itself.

[Oxford[1]]

[Answers[2]]

I just wanted to bring this up. I have not used language that implies that this is a necessary nor common form of nihilism. But, nevertheless, it is still a form of nihilism, and thus should be included. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 87.194.121.164 (talk) 17:52, 25 February 2009 (UTC)[reply]

---

what you just said is 'dear sir, i just copied a definition from somewhere else without giving proper citation'. we don't allow that. please try to find a reputable philosophical dictionary also. You may want to introduce your cited 'common usage' in the article below. --Buridan (talk) 18:26, 25 February 2009 (UTC)[reply]

---

Well I apologise if I am not following the rules of Wikipedia, I edit extremely rarely. My point is simply that: - the denial of knowledge (epistemological nihilism) should be included in the opening of the article - the denial of existence/reality as a whole should also be included in the opening, as this is a valid (albeit the most extreme) form of nihlism. It is not a form of solipsism as it denies all existence, and thus the self, as well.

To be honest the article is biased towards existential and moral nihilism in its current form.

Please explain to me what you would want to see for my contribution to be valid. I am not trying to antagonise the community, but I am bringing forward true information and it should be included.

IEP defines epistemological nihilism, and also states it is associated with a 'radical skepticism that condemns existence' [IEP[3]]

I also apologise if naming you appeared hostile, it was not meant to be. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 87.194.121.164 (talk) 18:50, 25 February 2009 (UTC)[reply]


Ok I made the changes and it meets the standards you set. Thanks for the advice. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 87.194.121.164 (talk) 19:54, 25 February 2009 (UTC)[reply]

ok, i gave it it's own section so it can be expanded. I'm afraid I still don't think it is a primary definition in my book, and we should keep that first paragraph as clear and true as we can. --Buridan (talk) 19:58, 25 February 2009 (UTC)[reply]

--

Cool. [[4]] lists all the different forms Nihilism can take. When people talk about Nihilism, they are usually referring to existential or moral nihilism, true. However, these other forms are also valid forms of nihilism, and a nihilist will usually have to reconcile one form of nihilism with another. The extreme nihilist position I have mentioned, the negation of existence, is more accurately described as a branch of metaphysical nihilism, and I have changed the title of the section accordingly. Glad we shifted the article away from the typical bias.

On a side note, I've always been taught all forms of nihilism, so I was a little surprised at the article's lack of mention of these additional forms. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 87.194.121.164 (talk) 20:36, 25 February 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Removed. Non-notable. death metal maniac (talk) 01:28, 10 March 2009 (UTC)[reply]

I've reverted your edit as the guideline you cite, Wikipedia:Notability, has no bearing on the inclusion of external links. Notable topics relevant to the article are placed in the See also section; the External links section is reserved for useful links with information that could not be accommodated into the article for space and reliability concerns. Please read the Wikipedia:External links guideline before making further edits to the section. Regards, Skomorokh 01:32, 10 March 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Nihilism is a denial of OBJECTIVE values

Nihilism is not a denial of the existence of values altogether, but only a denial of OBJECTIVE values. It is fully compatible with a belief in nihilism for one to hold subjective values of their own. The idea that values are somehow part of the fabric of the world is one that nihilism rejects.

I have made this change before, but it was reverted for some reason. Please be aware that nihilists are NOT valueless, otherwise they would go around raping, killing, pillaging, etc as much as they could. This is not the case.

The objective v subjective values distinction is a vital one to the idea of Nihilism.

Hikingkyle393 (talk) 17:55, 25 March 2009 (UTC)[reply]

"reverted for some reason" A specific reason actually was given. I'll give you another: WP:CITE --76.247.105.43 (talk) 04:57, 27 March 2009 (UTC)[reply]

IPA pronunciation

Can someone include the IPA pronunciation in the article? WilliamTheaker (talk) 23:52, 9 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]

In art

I removed the following from the "cultural manifestations" section and bring it here for discussion:

In art, there have been movements criticized for being nihilistic. Indeed, there are certain movements, like Dada and Situationism, in which certain nihilistic tendencies may be found.[citation needed] Literature and music, at times, deal with nihilism.
The Situationist International (1957-1972) could be considered an example of a political, social, and artistic movement rooted in nihilistic views and ideas.[citation needed] The Situationists attempted to abolish the earlier concepts established by Dadaism and Surrealism in deconstructing the notion of "art" as a separate form, subject or entity[citation needed].
Modern art is sometimes said to be nihilistic in its lack of any deeper meaning than aesthetics. The Nazi party's Degenerate art exhibit is a specific instance in history in which modern art has been strongly publicly criticized[citation needed].

This is written in such a simplistic manner that, even if we took most of its unreferenced assertions at face value, we would still have to question their encyclopædic merit. This reads like a junior high essay on a topic the author does not fully grasp. That there have been fact tags all over this for 6 months only makes the matter worse. The Dadaism subsection is also very problematic, but at least it is sourced. Truth be told, we could lose the entire "cultural manifestations" section and it would not be a terrible loss. Any thoughts? ---RepublicanJacobiteThe'FortyFive' 02:43, 27 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]

On the section about Nietzsche

This is the point of view of a visitor to the site looking for a general background and some references to the 'Nihilism': I don't think the section on Nietzsche's take on Nihilism works. I think it is necessary to incorporate, or to at least indicate, the wide diversity of how Nietzsche's take on nihilism is interpreted. Simply extracting quotes from his texts and either inferring conclusions from it or using a single point of view (which, in this case, falls within the 'analytical' school's point of view), which is quite narrow and restrictive is, in all senses of the term, counter-productive. This is especially the case when contentious and critical philosophical concepts are being explicated. Thanks. Quadruped (talk) 17:59, 22 July 2009 (UTC)[reply]

I have problems with the section on Nietzsche as well. The idea that christianity is the opposite of nihilism seems a bit strange. I don't think it is appropriate to turn this totally unrelated article into a propaganda site for one religion. This section needs to be rephrased.
I don't know what you mean with your criticism on the section on Nietzsche. You say it falls within the analytical school, which is quite narrow and restrictive, but you don't say what you mean with that.Daanschr (talk) 09:41, 27 July 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Christianity is not the opposite of nihilism

I like to have a discussion on this issue. It is debatable whether Nietzsche is right with his remark that christianity is similar to nihilism. What can be said is that christians dissagree with this. But the present statement is too much propaganda for christianity.Daanschr (talk) 19:33, 27 July 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Orthodox Christianity is completely opposed to nihilism. This is a matter of history not opinion. As can be seen in the works of Dostoevsky and his Orthodox Christian opposition to the very much so Russian movement all the way to Dostoevsky's friend Turgenev. Nihilism denies the transcendence of God as apodictic. Orthodox Christianity does not teach the nihilism of Western Christianity that Nietsche spoke of. This is at the very conflict between East and West. I repeat the East teaches that one can see and experience God in this life in the here and now. It does not teach that God can never be known or experience. Only that God is unknownable in his being or essence not in his existences which are immanent. [5] V Lossky states quote clearly it is not natural, good or healthy for a person to suffer though the Dark night of the soul to have doubt so sever that one suffers a spirtual crisis of the meaning of life. Maybe Western Christianity, but Eastern Christianity (as Dostoevsky and the Slavophils argued) did not spawn nihilism it is a transplant to the East that then mutates and parasitically sustaines itself off of a completely incorrect depiction of apophaticism. LoveMonkey (talk) 13:43, 28 July 2009 (UTC)[reply]
The point made by Nietzsche and other atheists, is that there isn't a god. So, believing in a god or heaven is seen as nihilistic. Nietzsche refers to christianity in general, which includes eastern christianity. A compromise would be to say that it is debatable whether christianity is nihilistic and that some christians might say that christianity is the opposite of nihilism.Daanschr (talk) 15:42, 28 July 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Where did Nietzche say he was an atheist? No- where. You are engaging in WP:OR. You are taking your opinion of Nietzche as fact. Because if Neitzche took such a position he would have been engaging in pseudo. Meaning he was supporting a position he could not validate. Since a belief that this life is given value by having an eternal afterlife is not a belief in nihil or nothing. Since it is not up to you or him (what appears to be your position) that nihilism now is not, a belief in the meaninglessness of life, existence period, here or in an afterlife. Quote me the anti-christ passages so that each comment can be addressed. That is of course if you have them.LoveMonkey (talk) 15:24, 29 July 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Nietzsche is not the main issue here. The main issue is whether christianity is the opposite of nihilism or not. Nietzsche's texts are anachronistic. But there are atheists who disagree that christianity is the opposite of nihilism. I could get quotes from Feuerbach, Dawkins, Dennett and Harris.
The WP:OR rule only applies for the text in the article, not for the texts in the talk pages. I don't intend to say in this article that Nietzsche is an atheist, only that the text stating that christianity is the opposite of atheism should be changed. The atheistic aspect of Nietzsche is my idea. Nietzsche himself is clearly anti-christian, which can be seen from the quotes in this article. This quote might imply the naturalist (in my view atheist) nature of Nietzsche's philosophy:

From Die Fröhliche Wissenschaft:

"Vom "Genius der Gattung"

"354.

"Vom "Genius der Gattung". — Das Problem des Bewusstseins (richtiger: des Sich-Bewusst-Werdens) tritt erst dann vor uns hin, wenn wir zu begreifen anfangen, inwiefern wir seiner entraten könnten: und an diesen Anfang des Begreifens stellt uns jetzt Physiologie und Tiergeschichte (welche also zwei Jahrhunderte nötig gehabt haben, um den vorausfliegenden Argwohn Leibnitzens einzuholen). Wir könnten nämlich denken, fühlen, wollen, uns erinnern, wir könnten ebenfalls "handeln" in jedem Sinne des Wortes: und trotzdem brauchte das Alles nicht uns "in's Bewusstsein zu treten" (wie man im Bilde sagt). Das ganze Leben wäre möglich, ohne dass es sich gleichsam im Spiegel sähe: wie ja tatsächlich auch jetzt noch bei uns der bei weitem überwiegende Teil dieses Lebens sich ohne diese Spiegelung abspielt —, und zwar auch unsres denkenden, fühlenden, wollenden Lebens, so beleidigend dies einem älteren Philosophen klingen mag. Wozu überhaupt Bewusstsein, wenn es in der Hauptsache überflüssig ist? — Nun scheint mir, wenn man meiner Antwort auf diese Frage und ihrer vielleicht ausschweifenden Vermutung Gehör geben will, die Feinheit und Stärke des Bewusstseins immer im Verhältnis zur Mitteilungs-Fähigkeit eines Menschen (oder Tiers) zu stehen, die Mitteilungs-Fähigkeit wiederum im Verhältnis zur Mitteilungs-Bedürftigkeit: letzteres nicht so verstanden, als ob gerade der einzelne Mensch selbst, welcher gerade Meister in der Mitteilung und Verständlichmachung seiner Bedürfnisse ist, zugleich auch mit seinen Bedürfnissen am meisten auf die Andern angewiesen sein müsste. Wohl aber scheint es mir so in Bezug auf ganze Rassen und Geschlechter-Ketten zu stehen: wo das Bedürfnis,die Not die Menschen lange gezwungen hat, sich mitzuteilen, sich gegenseitig rasch und fein zu verstehen, da ist endlich ein Überschuss dieser Kraft und Kunst der Mitteilung da, gleichsam ein Vermögen, das sich allmählich aufgehäuft hat und nun eines Erben wartet, der es verschwenderisch ausgibt ( — die sogenannten Künstler sind diese Erben, insgleichen die Redner, Prediger, Schriftsteller, Alles Menschen, welche immer am Ende einer langen Kette kommen, "Spätgeborne" jedes Mal, im besten Verstande des Wortes, und, wie gesagt, ihrem Wesen nach Verschwender). Gesetzt, diese Beobachtung ist richtig, so darf ich zu der Vermutung weitergehen, dass Bewusstsein überhaupt sich nur unter dem Druck des Mitteilungs-Bedürfnisses entwickelt hat, — dass es von vornherein nur zwischen Mensch und Mensch (zwischen Befehlenden und Gehorchenden in Sonderheit) nötig war, nützlich war, und auch nur im Verhältnis zum Grade dieser Nützlichkeit sich entwickelt hat. Bewusstsein ist eigentlich nur ein Verbindungsnetz zwischen Mensch und Mensch, — nur als solches hat es sich entwickeln müssen: der einsiedlerische und raubtierhafte Mensch hätte seiner nicht bedurft. Dass uns unsre Handlungen, Gedanken, Gefühle, Bewegungen selbst in's Bewusstsein kommen — wenigstens ein Teil derselben —, das ist die Folge eines furchtbaren langen über dem Menschen waltenden "Muss": er brauchte, als das gefährdetste Tier, Hilfe, Schutz, er brauchte Seines-Gleichen, er musste seine Not auszudrücken, sich verständlich zu machen wissen — und zu dem Allen hatte er zuerst "Bewusstsein" nötig, also selbst zu "wissen" was ihm fehlt, zu "wissen", wie es ihm zu Mute ist, zu "wissen", was er denkt. Denn nochmals gesagt: der Mensch, wie jedes lebende Geschöpf, denkt immerfort, aber weiß es nicht; das bewusst werdende Denken ist nur der kleinste Teil davon, sagen wir: der oberflächlichste, der schlechteste Teil: — denn allein dieses bewusste Denken geschieht in Worten, das heißt in Mitteilungszeichen, womit sich die Herkunft des Bewusstseins selber aufdeckt. Kurz gesagt, die Entwicklung der Sprache und die Entwicklung des Bewusstseins (nicht der Vernunft, sondern allein des Sichbewusst-werdens der Vernunft) gehen Hand in Hand. Man nehme hinzu, dass nicht nur die Sprache zur Brücke zwischen Mensch und Mensch dient, sondern auch der Blick, der Druck, die Gebärde; das Bewusstwerden unserer Sinneseindrücke bei uns selbst, die Kraft, sie fixieren zu können und gleichsam außer uns zu stellen, hat in dem Maße zugenommen, als die Nötigung wuchs, sie Andern durch Zeichen zu übermitteln. Der Zeichen-erfindende Mensch ist zugleich der immer schärfer seiner selbst bewusste Mensch; erst als soziales Tier lernte der Mensch seiner selbst bewusst werden, — er tut es noch, er tut es immer mehr. — Mein Gedanke ist, wie man sieht: dass das Bewusstsein nicht eigentlich zur Individual-Existenz des Menschen gehört, vielmehr zu dem, was an ihm Gemeinschafts- und Herden-Natur ist; dass es, wie daraus folgt, auch nur in Bezug auf Gemeinschafts- und Herden-Nützlichkeit fein entwickelt ist, und dass folglich Jeder von uns, beim besten Willen, sich selbst so individuell wie möglich zu verstehen, "sich selbst zu kennen", doch immer nur gerade das Nicht-Individuelle an sich zum Bewusstsein bringen wird, sein "Durchschnittliches", — dass unser Gedanke selbst fortwährend durch den Charakter des Bewusstseins — durch den in ihm gebietenden "Genius der Gattung" — gleichsam majorisiert und in die Herden-Perspektive zurück-übersetzt wird. Unsre Handlungen sind im Grunde allesamt auf eine unvergleichliche Weise persönlich, einzig, unbegrenzt-individuell, es ist kein Zweifel; aber sobald wir sie in's Bewusstsein übersetzen, scheinen sie es nicht mehr ... Dies ist der eigentliche Phänomenalismus und Perspektivismus, wie ich ihn verstehe: die Natur des tierischen Bewusstseins bringt es mit sich, dass die Welt, deren wir bewusst werden können, nur eine Oberflächen- und Zeichenwelt ist, eine verallgemeinerte, eine vergemeinerte Welt, — dass Alles, was bewusst wird, ebendamit flach, dünn, relativ-dumm, generell, Zeichen, Herden-Merkzeichen wird, dass mit allem Bewusstwerden eine große gründliche Verderbnis, Fälschung, Veroberflächlichung und Generalisation verbunden ist. Zuletzt ist das wachsende Bewusstsein eine Gefahr; und wer unter den bewusstesten Europäern lebt, weiß sogar, dass es eine Krankheit ist. Es ist, wie man errät, nicht der Gegensatz von Subjekt und Objekt, der mich hier angeht: diese Unterscheidung überlasse ich den Erkenntnistheoretikern, welche in den Schlingen der Grammatik (der Volks-Metaphysik) hängen geblieben sind. Es ist erst recht nicht der Gegensatz von "Ding an sich" und Erscheinung: denn wir "erkennen" bei weitem nicht genug, um auch nur so scheiden zu dürfen. Wir haben eben gar kein Organ für das Erkennen, für die "Wahrheit": wir "wissen" (oder glauben oder bilden uns ein) gerade so viel als es im Interesse der Menschen-Herde, der Gattung, nützlich sein mag: und selbst, was hier "Nützlichkeit" genannt wird, ist zuletzt auch nur ein Glaube, eine Einbildung und vielleicht gerade jene verhängnisvollste Dummheit, an der wir einst zu Grunde gehen."

End of the quote.Daanschr (talk) 18:57, 29 July 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Christianity belief in something (Christ), nihilism is belief in nothing = not the same thing. Very simple..LoveMonkey (talk) 01:14, 30 July 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Nietzsche apparantly dissagrees with you, so and i agree with Nietzsche on this. Are you trying to come to a compromise, or should i ask for arbitration?Daanschr (talk) 08:05, 30 July 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Bring it to arb. As for Nietzsche so what...He takes boths sides of the argument since he is Mr Duplicitous which doesn't make this whole thing wiki worthy. Since the article now properly reflects the issues I have with your blanket statement. I object to what you seem to imply in wanting to change it further from where it is right now. Forgive my lack of good faith but much of that lack would dry up if you'd post from the anti-christ (and any of Nietzche's other works). Where he stated that all of Christianity is nihilistic at heart. Quote the passages. Please pretty please. Since this takes us down the road of including how Nietzche blames the Jews for all of this in the Geneology of Morality.[User:LoveMonkey|LoveMonkey]] (talk) 14:45, 30 July 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Nietzsche wasn't the issue here. You wanted a quote from Nietzsche and i was so kind to deliver it to you. I am not much of a fan of Nietzsche and have more feeling for other writers, but i do like some of Nietzsche's observations.
The main issue that i liked to discuss had nothing to do with Nietzsche, it was the remark that christianity is the opposite of nihilism. This is where i disagree and according to the NPOV-rule, which is forms the heart of Wikipedia, we need to come to an agreement we can both live with. If you don't want to change anything to this article, than you are breaking the NPOV-rule. I don't mind if your view is included in this article, but my view that christianity doesn't necessarily be the opposite of nihilism should be included as well, and else the NPOV-rule is not observed.Daanschr (talk) 07:37, 31 July 2009 (UTC)[reply]