What's not to understand? If Kierkegaard is right about the ontology of despair, the subject of "The Sickness unto Death", then the philosophy of nihilism is built upon a categorical error in metaphysics. No consistent nihilist will talk about the "validity" of his or her philosophy, because "validity" implies an external standard of truth or meaning by which to judge the merits of a claim, and nihilism is the claim that there is no such standard by which we may root our existence. You are right in linking nihilism with Nietzsche's parable of the death of God. But you are wrong in assuming that Nietzsche is unaware of what a great and terrible claim he is making, a grim reality deeply akin to the earth becoming unanchored from the sun to drift into cold, dark space. Basically, the meaning of the parable is that as modernity has exploded the notion that God can provide an absolute foundation for values, but it is this foundation that the entirety of Western culture hitherto has been built on. Consequently, while values are a must for human survival, they can no longer be assumed to have eternal validity, but instead are created ex nihilo. As such, while for Nietszche the triumph of nihilism is the inevitable course of the future, the only path to human survival is for humanity to be transcended in the overmen, those courageous individuals who create values out of nothing, and assert them with the will to power, which is to say the will to more life. Like Arthur Schopenhauer, Nietzsche is an epistemological pessimist, so we should not make much of his view of the "validity" of values beyond their pragmatic usefulness. For Nietzsche, one might say, values are less a matter of "validity" than of viability.Strafe (post: 1373810) wrote:Yeah, but its not the way Nietzsche goes on saying God is dead, then suggesting that it is a good thing. I meant like Anti-Climacus is not inclined to suggest that nihilism is or could be right. Of course it is mentioned, it has to be, but the further possibility isn't as explored. It remains a possibility, not a nature, and Kierkegaard doesn't suggest that it could be correct within the book. I was looking for more of a large disproval of nihilism altogether. That would probably be impossible if working outside of Christian framework though, which is essentially what I'm looking for.
But I guess the book was written for those already in the faith, so it wasn't set out to deal with Nihilism's validity, as it would be expected for the reader to already have the framework presupposing that God was God. I'm just curious on the rationale that Nihilism has though. Would Nietzsche be the one to read to find out the reasoning behind it? Honestly, I just started reading into Philosophy, so I'm a noob. So I'll take any and all suggestions on reading material.
I'm dabbling in Philosophy to find if there is any bridge of framework that could connect the Christian thinking to the non Christian thinking, as I am trying to reach out to several atheist friends. I'm looking if there is a way to explain God in human terms to those who have already dismissed him. I very highly doubt it is possible, since its all so subjective, and words are not really all that strong and cannot cause true heart change. Which is why I guess the only true thing that could work is Prayer in the end. (And one's idea of its own effectiveness is subjective as well.) But apart from that, I am still curious in these things, and I probably will look up more
For Kierkegaard too, the base human condition is a condition of despair without God, particularly because without God we know nothing. But like the Lutherans, Kierkegaard insists upon the transformational effect of the living God, as opposed to any philosophical construct of "God", upon the existent subject. As such, Christianity entails a fundamental change in the very mode of our existence analogous to our first discovery of aesthetic beauty or moral integrity. And because we are relating to a living being, the only way we can know if the promises of God are true is if we make that categorical leap to faith, to change our mode of existence to one in relationship with God. This is a very important corrective to the indefinitely delaying "one more book" syndrome, reminding us that we too are existent participants in this story, and it is intimately about us. Honestly, I have never been consciously responsible for catalyzing anyone's conversion, but when I'm talking with atheists and agnostics, I like to point out the ways in which they dehumanize themselves and others by inserting human existence into ontological brackets. This tends to leave quite an impression, because much of the appeal of atheism and agnosticism lies with its claim to be the paragons of humanism. If it's logical proofs you're looking for, you might be better served reading the work of William Lane Craig and J.P. Moreland. But there's a good reason I stick to reading in existentialism more than any other area of philosophy--it speaks to the condition of the heart. That's why it left such a mark on neo-orthodox theologians like Karl Barth and Paul Tillich. And because Kierkegaard was so influential, he tends to be a useful bridge for relating the insights of secular existentialists back to Christianity. For example, I fuse Kierkegaard's work in "The Sickness unto Death" and "Works of Love" to make theological application of Simone de Beauvoir's The Second Sex, which deals with the dialectics of gender oppression.