Towards a response to epistemic nihilism
Jake Wright
Perhaps the closest use of the term to my own is Arendt’s view of nihilism as ‘a way of thinking that can look rational but is really an attack on the purpose of rationality’.
Again, for those of my ilk, it all comes down to just how far out on the metaphysical limb it's taken. In other words, in the vicinity of sim worlds or dream worlds or solipsism? Sure, if someone is actually able to demonstrate that
all knowledge is illusory, let them give it a try.
In the interim, I'm sticking with the rooted existentially in dasein assumption that knowledge embedded in the laws of nature, in mathematics, in the empirical world around us, in the rules of language, etc., while still profoundly mysterious given The Gap and Rummy's Rule, are clearly less illusory [to me] than knowledge that is claimed to be objective regarding conflicting value judgments.
There's what a doctor either knows or does not know about performing safe abortions. And then there's what ethicists claim to know about the nature of human morality itself here.
Click, of course.
As I discuss cases of epistemic nihilism, a common thread that emerges is the obscurance of truth because the truth is not valuable to the speaker who is attempting to influence their interlocutor’s rational deliberations.
Come on, how is this not far, far, far more pertinent to moral and political and religious conflagrations. Whose truth, after all?
This section examines such nihilism by considering the similarities between three exemplars of nihilistic speech—lying, bullshitting, and trolling—as well as the advantages of viewing activities like these as tokens of a larger type.
Right, that's really all that nihilists ever pursue given their interactions with others...lying, bullshitting and trolling. Now let the epistemic nihilists among us note how, what they think they know about this themselves, is...illusory>
Though, yes, I may simply be misunderstanding what this...
"Epistemic nihilism, as it is termed, is committed to the claim that there are no epistemic facts. It is argued that this type of view yields a radical type of scepticism, according to which there is no reason to believe the view itself or anything else, for that matter." Oxford Academic
...does mean for all practical purposes.
I also discuss how epistemic nihilism can transcend individual instances and become an identity or way of life, which has implications for how we ought to respond when combatting extreme cases of such nihilism.
How on Earth can someone go about the business of living life from day to day without being pretty damn certain that they know lots and lots of things. Things that have been a part of their lives for years, or even decades.