Everything about Nihilism totally explained
Nihilism (from the
Latin nihil, nothing) is a
philosophical position which argues that
existence is without objective meaning,
purpose, or
intrinsic value. Nihilists generally assert some or all of the following:
- Objective morality doesn't exist; therefore no action is logically preferable to any other.
- In the absence of morality, existence has no higher meaning or goal.
- There is no reasonable proof or argument for the existence of a higher ruler or creator.
- Even if a higher ruler or creator exists, mankind has no moral obligation to worship them.
The term nihilism is sometimes used synonymously with
anomie to denote a general mood of despair at the pointlessness of existence.
Movements such as
Dada,
Futurism, and
deconstructionism, among others, have been identified by commentators as "nihilistic" at various times in various contexts. Often this means or is meant to imply that the beliefs of the accuser are more
substantial or
truthful, whereas the beliefs of the accused are nihilistic, and thereby comparatively amount to
nothing (or are simply claimed to be destructively
amoralistic).
Nihilism is also a characteristic that has been ascribed to time periods: for example,
Jean Baudrillard and others have called
postmodernity a nihilistic epoch, and some
Christian theologians and figures of religious authority have asserted that
postmodernity and many aspects of
modernity For while Nietzsche could be accurately categorized as a nihilist in the descriptive sense, he never advocated nihilism as a practical mode of living and was typically quite critical of nihilism as he construed it. His later work displays a preoccupation with nihilism. Nietzsche characterized nihilism as emptying the world and especially human existence of meaning, purpose, comprehensible truth, or essential value. He hints that nihilism can become a false belief, when it leads individuals to discard any hope of meaning in the world and thus to invent some compensatory alternate measure of significance. Nietzsche used the phrase 'Christians and other nihilists', which is in line with his low estimation of
Christianity in general.
Another prominent philosopher who has written on the subject is
Martin Heidegger, who argued that "[theterm]
nihilism has a very specific meaning. What remains unquestioned and forgotten in metaphysics is being; and hence, it's nihilistic."
Nietzschean nihilism
While few philosophers would claim to be nihilists, nihilism is most often associated with
Friedrich Nietzsche. In most contexts, Nietzsche defined the term as any philosophy that results in an
apathy toward life and a poisoning of the human soul—and opposed it vehemently. Nietzsche's deep concern with nihilism was part of his intense reaction to
Schopenhauer's doctrine of the denial of the will. Nietzsche describes it as "the will to
nothingness" or, more specifically:
A nihilist is a man who judges of the world as it's that it ought NOT to be, and of the world as it ought to be that it doesn't 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. |
Stanley Rosen identifies Nietzsche's equation of nihilism with "the situation which obtains when 'everything is permitted.'" Nietzsche asserts that this nihilism is a result of valuing "higher", "divine" or "meta-physical" things (such as God), that don't in turn value "base", "human" or "earthly" things. But a person who rejects God and the divine may still retain the belief that all "base", "earthly", or "human" ideas are still valueless because they were considered so in the previous belief system (such as a Christian who becomes a communist and believes fully in the party structure and leader).In this interpretation, any form of idealism, after being rejected by the idealist, leads to nihilism. Moreover, this is the source of "inconsistency on the part of the nihilists". The nihilist continues to believe that only "higher" values and truths are worthy of being called such, but rejects the idea that they exist. Because of this rejection, all ideas described as true or valuable are rejected by the nihilist as impossible because they don't meet the previously established standards.
In this sense, it's the philosophical equivalent to the
Russian political movement: the leap beyond skepticism — the desire to destroy meaning, knowledge, and value. To Nietzsche, it was irrational because the human soul thrives on value. Nihilism, then, was in a sense like suicide and mass murder all at once. He considered faith in the categories of reason, seeking either to overcome or ignore nature, to be the cause of such nihilism. "We have measured the value of the world according to categories that refer to a purely fictitious world". He saw this philosophy as present in
Christianity (which he described as 'slave morality'),
Buddhism,
morality,
asceticism and any excessively skeptical philosophy.
As the first philosopher to study nihilism extensively, however, Nietzsche was also quite influenced by its ideas. Nietzsche's complex relationship with nihilism is most evident in the following well-known quote:
I praise, I don't reproach, [nihilism's] arrival. I believe it's one of the greatest crises, a moment of the deepest self-reflection of humanity. Whether man recovers from it, whether he becomes master of this crisis, is a question of his strength! |
While this may appear to imply his allegiance to the nihilist viewpoint, it would be more accurate to say that Nietzsche saw the coming of nihilism as valuable in the long term (as well as ironically acknowledging that nihilism exists in the world so has more gravity compared with categories that refer to a purely fictitious world). According to Nietzsche, it's only once 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. Still, he didn't consider all values of equal worth. Recognizing the chaos of nihilism, he advocated a philosophy that willfully transcends it. Furthermore, his positive attitude towards truth as a vehicle of faith and belief distinguishes him from the extreme pessimism that nihilism is often associated with.
'To the clean are all things clean' — thus say the people. I, however, say unto you: To the swine all things become swinish! Therefore preach the visionaries and bowed-heads (whose hearts are also bowed down): 'The world itself is a filthy monster.' For these are all unclean spirits; especially those, however, who have no peace or rest, unless they see the world FROM THE BACKSIDE — the backworldsmen! TO THOSE do I say it to the face, although it sound unpleasantly: the world resembleth man, in that it hath a backside, — SO MUCH is true! There is in the world much filth: SO MUCH is true! But the world itself isn't therefore a filthy monster! |
A major cause of Nietzsche's continued association with nihilism is his famous proclamation that "
God is dead." This is Nietzsche's way of saying that the idea of God is no longer capable of acting as a source of any
moral code or
teleology. God is dead, then, in the sense that his existence is now irrelevant to the bulk of humanity. "And we," writes Nietzsche in
The Gay Science, "have killed him." Alternately, some have interpreted Nietzsche's comment to be a statement of faith that the world has no rational order. Nietzsche also believed that, even though he thought Christian morality was nihilistic, without God humanity is left with no epistemological or moral base from which we can derive absolute beliefs. Thus, even though nihilism has been a threat in the past, through Christianity,
Platonism, and various political movements that aim toward a distant
utopian future, and any other philosophy that devalues human life and the world around us (and any philosophy that devalues the world around us by privileging some other or future world necessarily devalues human life), Nietzsche tells us it's also a threat for humanity's future. This warning can also be taken as a
polemic against 19th and 20th century
scientism.
Nietzsche advocated a remedy for nihilism's destructive effects and a hope for humanity's future in the form of the
Übermensch (English: overman or superman), a position especially apparent in his works
Thus Spoke Zarathustra and
The Antichrist. The
Übermensch is an exercise of action and life: one must give value to their existence by behaving as if one's very existence were
a work of art. Nietzsche believed that the
Übermensch "exercise" would be a necessity for human survival in the post-religious era. Another part of Nietzsche's remedy for nihilism is a revaluation of morals — he hoped that we're able to discard the old morality of equality and servitude and adopt a new code, turning
Judeo-Christian morality on its head. Excess, carelessness, callousness, and sin, then, are not the damning acts of a person with no regard for his
salvation, nor that which plummets a society toward
decadence and decline, but the signifier of a soul already withering and the sign that a society is in decline. The only true sin to Nietzsche is that which is — against a human nature — aimed at the expression and venting of one's power over oneself.
Virtue, likewise, isn't to act according to what has been commanded, but to contribute to all that betters a human soul.
Nietzsche attempts to reintroduce what he calls a
master morality, which values personal excellence over forced compassion and creative acts of will over the herd instinct, a moral outlook he attributes to the
ancient Greeks. The Christian moral ideals developed in opposition to this master morality, he says, as the reversal of the value system of the elite
social class due to the oppressed class' resentment of their
Roman masters. Nietzsche, however, didn't believe that humans should adopt master morality as the be-all-end-all code of behavior - he believed that the revaluation of morals would correct the inconsistencies in both master and slave morality - but simply that master morality was preferable to slave morality, although this is debatable.
Walter Kaufmann, for one, disagrees that Nietzsche actually preferred master morality to slave morality. He certainly gives slave morality a much harder time, but this is partly because he believes that slave morality is modern society's more imminent danger.
The Antichrist had been meant as the first book in a four-book series, "Toward a Re-Evaluation of All Morals", which might have made his views more explicit, but Nietzsche was afflicted by mental collapse that rendered him unable to write the later three books.
Postmodernism and the breakdown of knowledge
Postmodern and
poststructuralist thought deny 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 the ideals of
humanism and
the Enlightenment.
Jacques Derrida, whose
deconstruction is perhaps most commonly labeled nihilistic didn't himself make the nihilistic move that others have claimed. Derridean deconstructionists argue that this approach rather frees texts, individuals or organisations from a restrictive truth, and that deconstruction opens up the possibility of other ways of being.
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. Derrida himself built a philosophy based upon a 'responsibility to the other' Deconstruction can thus be seen not as a denial of truth, but as a denial of our ability to know truth (it makes an
epistemological claim compared to nihilism's
ontological claim).
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 which is inseparable 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 one characterized by a rejection both of these meta-narratives and of the process of
legitimation by meta-narratives. "In lieu of meta-narratives we've 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." This concept of the instability of truth and meaning leads in the direction of nihilism, though Lyotard stops short of embracing the latter.
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 that the real world is composed of. The uses of meaning was an important subject in Baudrillard's discussion of nihilism:
The apocalypse is finished, today it's 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's 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. |
Self-consistency and paradox
Nihilism is often described as a belief in the nonexistence of truth. In its more extreme forms, such a belief is difficult to justify, because it contains a variation on the
liar paradox: if it's true that truth doesn't exist, the statement "truth doesn't exist" is itself a truth, therefore showing itself to be inconsistent. A formally identical criticism has been leveled against
relativism and
the verifiability theory of meaning of
logical positivism.
A more sophisticated interpretation of the claim might be that while truth may exist, it's inaccessible in practice, but this leaves open the problem of how the nihilist has accessed it. It may be a reasonable reply that the nihilist hasn't accessed truth directly, but has come to the conclusion, based on past experience, that truth is ultimately unattainable within the confines of human circumstance. Thus, since nihilists believe they've learned that truth can't be attained in this life, they look upon the activities of those rigorously seeking truth as futile. Of course one may add that nihilism is a
self fulfilling prophecy, as without making any attempts to attain the truth one is presumably less likely to find it.
Extreme versions of nihilism would maintain that the truth of logical propositions can't be known, so the fact that nihilism leads to a contradiction isn't a problem, since contradictions are only problematic for those who accept logic. The classification of nihilism as a 'belief' can also be contested, as believing one is a nihilist would constitute believing in something and having a belief, a position incompatible with some interpretations of nihilism.
Cultural manifestations
In art
In art, there have been movements, such as
surrealism and
cubism, criticised for being nihilistic, and others, like
Dada, which openly embrace it. Generally,
modern art is criticised as nihilistic for not being representative, for example the
Nazi party's
Degenerate art exhibit. In some Stalinist regimes,
modern art is seen as degenerative, and official rules for "
aesthetic realism" are established to halt its public and artistic influence.
Literature and music thematically deal with nihilism, especially contemporary literature and music, wherein the uncertainty following modernism's demise is explored in detail. The character
Rorschach, from
Alan Moore's graphic novel
Watchmen, is a borderline nihilist who says: "We are born to scrawl our own designs upon this morally blank world", observing that existence: "Has no pattern, save what we imagine after staring at it for too long"; however, Rorschach abides
moral absolutism, as reflected in his journal.
Dada
The term
Dada was first used during
World War I, an event that precipitated the movement, which lasted from approximately 1916 to 1923. The Dada Movement began in the old town of Zürich, Switzerland known as the "Niederdorf" or "Niederdörfli," which is now sporadically inhabited by dadaist squatters. The Dadaists claimed that Dada wasn't an art movement, but an
anti-art movement, sometimes using found objects in a manner similar to
found poetry and labeling them art, thus undermining ideas of what art is and what it can be. The "anti-art" drive is thought to have stemmed from a
post-war emptiness that lacked passion or meaning in life. Sometimes Dadaists paid attention to
aesthetic guidelines only so they could be avoided, attempting to render their works devoid of meaning and aesthetic value. This tendency toward devaluation of art has led many to claim that Dada was an essentially nihilist movement; a destruction without creation. War and destruction had washed away peoples' mindset of creation and aesthetic.
In film
Perhaps the most commonly referenced portrayal of Nihilism in contemporary film is
1999's
Fight Club, in which the unnamed narrator's disillusionment with the search for meaning in a consumerist, emasculated society results at first in the antagonist (Tyler Durden) winning him over to a philosophy of antipathy, self-mutilation, and outright animosity towards life. Durden's Nihilism is blurred, however, by the Existentialist flavor of his rebellion against society. His credo that "It is only after we've lost everything that we're free to do anything" reflects a Sartrean insistence on the infinite responsibility of free will, while his desire for common men to rise up and overthrow the shallow values of society is reminiscent of Nietzsche's discussion of
master-slave morality.
John Malkovich's character in the 1993 movie
In the Line of Fire espouses an outlook on life that could be seen as nihilistic over a telephone conversation with a secret service agent played by
Clint Eastwood. Malkovich's character, a would-be presidential assassin, describes life and death as lacking any intrinsic justice and being random and meaningless, and gives his motive for the assassination attempt as being "to punctuate the dreariness".
A more fatalist treatment of Nihilism can be seen in the later
I ♥ Huckabees, which includes Nihilism among other theories to develop the film's take on life in general. A similar use of Nihilism as a study in futility and meaninglessness can be seen in
Jim Jarmusch's 2005 film
Broken Flowers.
The 1998 movie
The Big Lebowski written and directed by
Joel and
Ethan Coen, without treating Nihilism as a serious thematic concern, uses several Nihilist characters as comic narrative devices. Three black-clad men with
German accents confront protagonist "The Dude" (Lebowski) claiming "We are Nihilists, Lebowski. We believe in nothing. Yeah, nothing." Also, upon being told that a man on a chair that's floating in a pool with a bottle of
Jack Daniels next to him is a Nihilist, "The Dude" responds "Oh, that must be exhausting." This satirical treatment of Nihilists is in contrast with one of the earliest Nihilist characters in cinema, "Animal Mother" in
Stanley Kubrick's
Full Metal Jacket. Animal Mother is a machine gunner who believes victory should be the only object of war, is contemptuous of any authority other than his own, and rules by intimidation.
Famous Nihilists
Luis Buñuel - film maker,
David Lynch - film maker and artist,
Trent Reznor - musician (
Nine Inch Nails),
Chuck Palahniuk - author (
Fight Club),
John Dewey - social
psychologist,
The Sex Pistols - Rock Band,
Andy Warhol [AndrejWarhola] - Artist.
From
Nihilistic people from Counterorder.com
Further Information
Get more info on 'Nihilism'.
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