antonivs at reddit
No, really, when exactly does the beginning here...start? Going all the way back to the pre-Socratics? Or should we just fast forward to Nietzsche, the death of God and an at times truly grim 20th Century that ushered in an existentialism as we know it today.What kind of nihilism are you asking about? Because for example, much of Western philosophy has been shaped by a response to an acceptance of existential nihilism. Quoting from that link:
In The Dark Side: Thoughts on the Futility of Life, Alan Pratt demonstrates that existential nihilism, in one form or another, has been a part of the Western intellectual tradition from the beginning.
Pratt traces it back to the ancient Greeks.
Go ahead, reject existential nihilism. After all, I certainly wish I was able to think up a way to reject it myself.As such, it could make more sense to ask whether there are any philosophers who seriously reject existential nihilism. Although of course the answer to that is yes, for example theistic philosophers.
So, given particular contexts, let's explore this.
Me being one of them, of course. On the other hand, I recognize that all of the existential variables that were crucial in my becoming one might crumble and be replaced by another frame of mind altogether. As, again, this has happened over and again in the past.Similarly, there are certainly philosophers who defend moral nihilism.
Epistemic nihilism? In fact, sans sim worlds and dream worlds and solipsism and Matrix contraptions, I don't see how meaning in the either/or world cannot both be known and readily communicated objectively to others.Of course, you're probably asking about a broader definition of nihilism..."the belief that all values are baseless and that nothing can be known or communicated." I'd be tempted to try and defend that position, but since nothing can be known or communicated, it would be pointless.