- #1
Jonny_trigonometry
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What does it mean to believe in everything, nothing at all? How is it possible to believe in everything? Granted no practice attains perfection, but why concern yourself with perfection if you aren't concerned with being hypocritical? Is it wrong to ask that an element of character in the 'structure that is perfection' be the virtue of non-contradiction?
Whats with nihilism? How can it exist? How is it possible to believe in nothing? Is believing in everything any less wierd?
Isn't nihilism a belief? Wouldn't a nihilist acknowledge that they must believe to believe in nothing? Is it bad to contradict oneself like this? I'd imagine a nihilist would also not believe that contradictions are bad... but at the same time, a nihilist can't believe in right or wrong, and for that matter, good or bad.
Similarly; a beleif in everything would produce contradictions since you'd have to believe that, for example, god exists, and god doesn't exist. Also similarly, one who believes in everything would say that they believe contradictions aren't bad. Then again, they would also have to believe that contradictions are bad. In essence, believing in everything must include nihilism as one of its subsets.
Does it go against logic to always overlook contradictions? Does it go against science to believe in nothing or everything?
as a side thought, are both of these beliefs sort of like an uncollapsed wavefunction... as in, a nihilist can't believe that the cat is dead, and a nihilist can't believe that the cat is alive (since a nihilist believes nothing). Likewise, a person who believes in everything would believe that the cat is both dead and alive. In a way, aren't the two beliefs really the same belief? Logically, saying "the cat is neither dead nor alive" is the same thing as saying "the cat is both dead and alive". Perhaps they are at the same footing, and nihilism is kind of like a glass is half empty type deal whereas believing in everything is like a glass is half full type deal...
Whats with nihilism? How can it exist? How is it possible to believe in nothing? Is believing in everything any less wierd?
Isn't nihilism a belief? Wouldn't a nihilist acknowledge that they must believe to believe in nothing? Is it bad to contradict oneself like this? I'd imagine a nihilist would also not believe that contradictions are bad... but at the same time, a nihilist can't believe in right or wrong, and for that matter, good or bad.
Similarly; a beleif in everything would produce contradictions since you'd have to believe that, for example, god exists, and god doesn't exist. Also similarly, one who believes in everything would say that they believe contradictions aren't bad. Then again, they would also have to believe that contradictions are bad. In essence, believing in everything must include nihilism as one of its subsets.
Does it go against logic to always overlook contradictions? Does it go against science to believe in nothing or everything?
as a side thought, are both of these beliefs sort of like an uncollapsed wavefunction... as in, a nihilist can't believe that the cat is dead, and a nihilist can't believe that the cat is alive (since a nihilist believes nothing). Likewise, a person who believes in everything would believe that the cat is both dead and alive. In a way, aren't the two beliefs really the same belief? Logically, saying "the cat is neither dead nor alive" is the same thing as saying "the cat is both dead and alive". Perhaps they are at the same footing, and nihilism is kind of like a glass is half empty type deal whereas believing in everything is like a glass is half full type deal...
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