Determinism

i’m going to have to disagree, gentlemen, and propose the contrary. all religious belief - whether in the form of animism, paganism, deism, polytheism, henotheism, or monotheism - is instead an intellectual attempt to escape nihilism rather then an expression of nihilism. each and all of these people are trying to give a purpose and meaning to life that transcends their mortality. the details of each form of religion are arbitrary and of little importance when this common feature is recognized. and the extent of the reach of a religion depends solely on its usefulness as a tool for controlling larger or smaller numbers of people. you either have great big mind fucks like the abrahamic religions that are more useful for regulating vast numbers of people, or you have little mind fucks like the pagan religions used to regulate smaller societies. the reasons why the monotheisms won is because those kinds of models resolve logical problems with the omnipotence and omniscience of dueling gods. and when you have a billion people to control, you can’t afford to have any uncertainty or disagreement among them about the nature of god. this is why the roman ruling classes adopted a monotheism as the official religion.

but this equivocation of abrahamism with nihilism couldn’t be more erroneous. that’s the very shit that saved half the world from nihilism, to be sure.

i think here we have a couple of fellas who like pagan nonsense more than monotheistic nonsense… and you know what we do when we find people who don’t agree with our nonsense. we call them nihilists. and that’s not fair because they’re only doing the same thing your doing; trying to escape nihilism by believing in some brand of baloney.

Master of nil, Abrahamism offered a relief from the absence of absolutes, what is called ‘negative’ about the real world, as though it owes man meaning, purpose, and immortality, or an eternal absolute being that watches over them.
Your mind is seeped in nil.
The absence of god is not a negative; the absence of universal morality is not a negation of morality. Filling this absence with mental projections - using words - is exactly why you declare philosophy at an end.

As usual, you are clueless.
Best stick to the cynical patronizing jokes, and the noise you enjoy and call ‘music’.

It’s interesting how some minds show a selectively skeptical mind.
They comprehend a kindred spirits allusion to ‘contraptions’ - (imagbiguous) - and yet do not recognize them in the Abrahamic narrative projecting them as absolutes that negate reality as it is experienced.
Quick to doubt, and show skeptical vigour, with any use of prose or metaphor, and yet show no such rigour when reading Nietzsche.

Well, not quite “interesting”, more like predictable, and identifying.
Self-Deceit…to protect the ego.

Identifying, yes. Picking a team, then not criticizing that team, even if the team is the supposed anti-team. And then you don’t even really have to even know your own team or guru well. You can just aim their critiques at the other teams. They will notice when the other teams do this, but not when members of their own team do. You’ll notice, for example, that people who mock the religious on the issue of evolution or the Big Bang or whatever often know only the vague outlines of the science, since it is more about being on the right team. Obviously the Abrahamic do this kind of thing, but so do most, regardless of team.

Yes, and?
In all movements there are the laymen, who only understand the bare minimum and how it feels, and the more aware.

Abrahamism feels good because it projects, as an alternate reality, what the experienced reality lacks and the majority need, i.e. absolutes, by any name: certainty, god, oneness, wholeness, universe, completeness, perfection, immortality, universal morality or purpose, freedom, or unfreedom.
They need final indivisible, immutable answers, and they find them in the words of charlatans and peddlers of nil: even if the ‘positive’ variety.

Is the belief in unicorns and centaurs only about picking a team?
If centaurs and unicorns actually existed, would this not negate our experience and understanding of the real world?

To believe in centaurs and unicorns as representations of an imagined construct, and to believe in their literal existence, declaring the cosmos ‘negative’ if it fails to provide evidence of them, is not about picking teams, unless the teams are rationality and superstition, or realism and nihilism.

Now, I can justify a belief in the existence of centaurs and unicorns using obscurantism and occultism, but that would only expose my motives, not their existence.

The ‘and’ was the teamness. Not just the psychological need for absolutes, but the need for the team. I chose the right team, so I am right. I attack from my team. I don’t attack my team. Then the layman, as you put it, identifies with not just the team, but rides on the back of whoever actually does understand the team’s positions and insights, if any. And then also, in addition to the psychological need, and the need for a team, there is the need to be against. To distinguish oneself as not X. This saves actually doing any work yourself. I am not the heathen, the theist, the communist, the capitalist, whatever…and this is enough. Never creating nor extending anything. Never mastering anything.

Not only. But also. Even belief in Satyrs is not just about picking a team. But it is also about picking a team. A pack to take potshots from. To base one’s smugness on the group and any masters or supposed masters in it. To ride on that. To play to the gallery. Over and over.

As if this was making something.

All humans want to belong. We are a social specie.
But which ‘team’, if you insist,’ is more correct, is what matters, not that you belong to a team.
Which team holds more promise, is more aware…

usually i say at this point ‘nuh-uh, you’re the one that’s clueless’, but i understand that this kind of quibbling comes with the territory of philosophy, something i willingly do (sometimes).

you do understand that the recognition of there being no absolute morality binding all people, is so severe, that merely ‘picking a morality’ not only does nothing to relieve mankind of the terrible gravity of the situtation, but even permits it to become worse. and therein lies the irony of your position; what you propose as a solution would only work inclusively, not exclusively, as as such, whether or not the entire world woke up tomorrow and were no longer ‘abrahamic nihilists believing in absolutes’ (whatever that means), wouldn’t make a bit of difference to the circumstances.

fortunately the world’s problems are anything but philosophical. social, economic, political, but not philosophical. you could put any philosophical spin you wanted on the world and you’d never know you were wrong. that’s the beauty of philosophy. you can’t lose when doing it.

for a great majority of people, the fact that there is no god and no universal morality is a tremendous problem. what the world wants is something that is binding for all. if the world took your advice, it’d be no better off than it presently is. what is worthy of philosophy (when i’ve got nothing better to do) is approaching problems on a much larger scale, surveying long distances at a time. i’m not interested in being part of a philosophical alpha male club on a forum or passing PMs back and forth with my pals about how dumb everyone is. i’m here for kicks (like you), and if i find something worth meddling with once in a while, i become bodacious. if not, i just work on my jokes.

what’s so astonishing is that you would spend so many years immersed in philosophical theory that, being either true or false, would only have the most minor significance. and that’s being generous enough to call any of it coherent to begin with. i’m afraid i’m gonna have to file you away with the ecmandus and the jakobs, sir.

How can it be a “tremendous problem” if the “world’s problems are anything but philosophical”?

If you are correct in the first paragraph, then the only problems are social, economic and political and “universal morality” is irrelevant.

One cannot escape nihilism since death is inevitable and our existence is ultimately of zero consequence
Instead one accepts this and so works within it to give ones own life some meaning while one is still here
Denying reality by creating absolutes which are unfalsiable is most definitely not the way to be doing this

Belonging to a tribe is not necessarily helping either because it will not immunise one against the inevitable
Moral or intellectual superiority counts for absolutely nothing when you are dead and we are all going to die
Better to be an individual and think for yourself because that way there are fewer psychological chains holding you down

Rather than choose a belief system or simply avoid thinking about it until one has to one can seek another approach and this is what I do
I accept the inevitability of death but see it as a positive rather than a negative because it is the end of suffering in all of its many forms
I do not see it as a mere interval to an imaginary Utopia like religion does nor do I wish it was not there because it makes me feel uncomfortable

As with all limitations the solution is not in pretending it does not exist but instead seeking a practical means of circumventing it in some way
Problems get solved using logic and empiricism not metaphysics or ignorance which are entirely unsuitable in dealing with the human condition

When the abyss is staring at you the only thing you should be doing do is staring right back at it with both eyes wide open

If I beat my cat, then it’s not “of zero consequence” to the cat.

Death ain’t got nothing to do with it.

these problems converge indirectly and create problems that become philosophical, but did not begin as philosophical. take for example the incremental increase of existential anxiety at the thought of mortality that primitive man would experience when he was taught to concern himself with his own salvation… no longer to be satisfied with the fact that his people would live on after him… and that that was good enough to make his life meaningful and give it purpose. couple this with the very real material conditions of struggle that produce what marx called ‘the sigh of the oppressed creature’, and you now have an intellectual cluster fuck that would later become one of the weapons of ruling class philosophy.

the ‘tremendous problem’ here that ‘isn’t philosophical’ is that the same material conditions which produce circumstances in which men are taught to believe that they require salvation - and that they are therefore in an original state of imperfection and/or sinfulness - forces them to bring themselves to the mercy of the state/church to provide for them some relief from the struggle they endure in the drudgery of their material existence. here, what is happening is not yet philosophical, because it isn’t derived from theoretical problems, but real, material problems and conflicts.

and here’s the rub. if it were obvious all men were bound by the same god and the same morality, there never would have arrived a situation in which god and objective morality would be needed so much to prevent the conditions that cause men to need to believe.

read that again. it’s tricky on the first pass.

not until men suffer so much that they have to look for god, is it no longer enough to live a happy, mortal life, satisfied with the fact that the species will continue to exist after they’re gone. so what religion did was accidentally compound the problem so much that it was forced to become philosophical; it divided, created ranks, made the individual unnecessarily critical of himself, gave executive power to those exploiters who prospered from the struggling/suffering of others, and so on. all this was only made possible by a very specific kind of material arrangement of the modes of production of a society that created a profound crisis for the majority of its people.

this nonsense remained and was refined further by the scholastics (ruling class lackeys), finally to be fully dismantled by feuerbach, marx and engels in the 19th century. there really is no philosophy behind belief in god (for how can you believe something that you’re not entirely clear about, in the first place). rather its an anthropomorphic projection of human nature that alienates man from himself even more than the original alienation he was already experiencing in his class based society. a magnificent intellectual cluster fuck that would become both the disease and the treatment of the oppressed.

and why does it still exist today? because of philosophy.

well yeah, but damn dude… did you have to say it?

i propose a rational hedonism along the lines of spinoza’s thinking as something to give us purpose. how can i live that will somehow contribute to greater happiness for people who live after me. i mean what else is there to have as a purpose? and silly little shortsighted shit like nationalism would only work for a few thousand years at most, anyway, so it’s got to be something pertaining to Man with a capital M. not ‘these’ men or ‘those’ men, but Man, Men (women too. sorry).

of course my detractors are gonna be all ‘but that’s vulgar materialism and void of spiritual purpose, yada yada.’ no. they don’t understand. any act of will is given spirit when one is faced with a difficult task. this would be profoundly spiritual precisely because it’s so difficult. it’s the committment that evokes the spirit, right? i mean whevever someone shouts ‘that’s the spirit!’, what do they mean? they mean ‘way to stick it through!’

and believe me, creating the world i have in mind is gonna take some sirius work, and therefore requires some sirius spirit.

meanwhile, i’ll remain a stirnerite nihilist and keep watch for those who have eyes to see a little further into the future. but i can’t be bothered with the little shit that don’t amount to nuthin. i play for big stakes, not nickels and dimes.

rational hedonism. when man merges with machine and sets out across the galaxy to go where no dudes have ever gone before. you get a plan like that together and i’m in. i ain’t tryn to sit around here all day arguing about what the word ‘absolute’ means.

There is no one single way to give your life meaning - whatever works for you is it - whatever that may be
Because it is entirely subjective and so does not require the approval of anyone else unless you want it to

Just try not to let it bother you too much that one day there will be precisely zero evidence that we ever existed
As everything is ultimately temporary from our perspective regardless of what greatness anyone may ever achieve

We are just passing through so make the most of it while you are here and try to slowly let go as you get closer to the inevitable as that really helps too
Once we are all dead and free from suffering ever again all of this existential head scratching will just seem like a complete waste of time and energy

And who wants an imaginary unfalsifiable Utopia when Nature already provides us with the real thing anyway and without any special conditions attached
Now consciousness is great and all that but do you really want to experience it forever when you could just as easily be dead and at peace forever instead

You know I was having an absolutely wonderful time free from all of suffering before my parents decided to create me
And so when I return to that state of non existence / non consciousness once again I know exactly what it will feel like

Meaning is a term used to refer to how phenomena inter-relate - interconnect.
The world is full of meaning. What most people mean by ‘meaning’, and so seek it out there, is how they connect and how, or how they should to give their life and tis suffering, the highest outcome.

It doesn’t matter how you define ‘absolute’, because the way I define it means a singularity, an indivisible, immutable oneness.
This is what is absent, and though you can think it, name it, imagine it, represent it, you cannot show it.

Call it ‘Bob’ if you prefer. If it refers to what I defined it as then this is what is non-existent.
The Abrahamic one-god, is an anthropomorphic version.
The one, if defined literally as a singularity, is the secular version.

There is only multiplicity…sometimes conceptualized as a one whole, because only in the mind can it exist as a vague representation.

I think a problem in general is that there will always be a gap between what we perceive and what is actually real
Perceptions can never be a true reflection of reality and sometimes we do not try very hard to actually address this
But also as mind dependent beings we cannot help but make perceptions and so we need to become more self aware
To understand reality is truly independent of our interpretations while still trying to make them as accurate as can be
This is like an ontological catch 22 as those two factors appear mutually incompatible which makes resolution impossible