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Deleted member 847
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The more intelligent you get, the more nihilistic you become
Huh it seems i'm a nihilist i really don't think anything i do will seriously matter and the damn society that pushes you to do what it want's or labels you a outcast is completely meaningless but the only reason they give to do any of that is "you can leave behind a legacy" it's stupidHow to know if you're a nihilist.
Step 1, you don't care about being a real "man"/lady, having a reputation, a career, being productive, and doing all the stuff society tells you to do. Because ultimately the importance of anything is subjective, and nothing really matters to you.
The more intelligent you get, the more nihilistic you become
Also, if existential nihilism caused Schopenhauer's hair to look like that, count me in.
still... Schopenhauer died when he was 72.
Not by suicide.
Saying that nihilism is the highest form of intelligence is arrogant.
"I want to suicide, so I'm smarter than all the other pro-lifers becaus I realized the senseless of life???"
That rises my ego... sure... but it's just a lie.
Isn't Philosophy more about asking questions than about giving answers?
Does anyone know what's the opposite philosophy of nihilism?
I would say Hegel's Philosophy of Spirit. Schopenhauer in fact, was his most fierce opposer.
Maybe also positivism, with its endless faith in human rationality and progress.
That sounds interesting, considering the nature of Hegelian discourse.
Hegel is an optimist. He sees in the world the same rationality he sees in our mind, in which he has infinite faith. He thinks that evil doesn't exist per se, but is only a step in the revealing of good. His philosophy is the last step in finalism/theism, before the explosion of nihilism.
He also is an organicist, because the part exists only as function of the whole, which he calls "the Absolute". In the same way, for Hegel human society should mirror this rational organicism he sees in nature.
In fact he delegitimizes the individual, and idolizes the State. For many, Hegel is the founder of the idea of the totalitarian state.
Useless to say, I don't have very much sympathy for Hegel :)