Books
André Cancian

Nihilism

A bold philosophical defense of existential nihilism based on modern science.

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When we imagine a machine, the result is always something close to a mechanical system that works by itself. It doesn’t bother us to think that it’s nothing beyond that. But how do we feel when we imagine ourselves as a machine? Empty. We have the feeling that something is missing. And what is missing? What’s there in a human that is missing in a machine? Illusion. The emptiness of the machine is the consciousness that our subjective world is a fiction; the consciousness that our humanity is a delirium, and that there’s nothing behind what we are living. We are machines, and our consciousness is a dream of this machine. Nothing else. Absolutely nothing.

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“Great. I cannot remember the last time I read something so interesting.”
— John
“Divine essay, in a borrowed sense. It took me 40 years to understand this. A text like when I was 18 would have
solved my search for the real nihilism. Worth more than the Zarathustra.”
— Jurandir Vieira da Silva
“Great essay. Special highlight for the phrase: ‘It is preferable to live in a meaningless world to believing in a false meaning to the world, one that points nowhere.’ When we are seeking a grandiose (and fanciful) sense of life, we end up giving little value to life itself. The act of living is the meaning of life.”
— André Felix
“In one word: great! More adjectives would be disposable.”
— Tom Carano
“I have it printed at the head of the bed to reread it a few more times. Great!”
— Julio Neves
65 printed pages
Original publication
2018
Publication year
2017
Have you already read it? How did you like it?
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Quotes

  • Kristina Gojčajhas quoted13 days ago
    the essential concern of the nihilist approach is not to discover the truth, but to point out the lies and to recognize limitations.
  • Kristina Gojčajhas quoted13 days ago
    what troubles us in nihilism is the fact that it harshly confronts us with our own naiveté; that we have been so foolishly deceived that our lives have come to rely on lies, on imaginary assumptions. Therefore, let us realize that when nihilism points out these lies, it is not destroying reality, but our illusions.
  • Kristina Gojčajhas quoted13 days ago
    we must grasp the objective emptiness of existence – being obvious that, as subjects, we can only do so subjectively. The problem is that, in the process of demonstrating that existence itself is empty, we are the very emptiness we are trying to point out – we try to explain that we ourselves have no explanation. It may seem paradoxical, but it is not.
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