Nihilism and atheism (Endings)

by dhw, Tuesday, June 03, 2008, 13:00 (6015 days ago)

Cary writes that if there is no "just afterlife", "nihilism is true. NOTHING MATTERS. The fact that I was a damn fool for wasting my life betting on a lie doesn't matter any more than anything else." He also regards atheism as even crazier than "all religions...when followed to their logical conclusions", because "clearly it's nihilistic, and offers no justification for ethics. But more basically, it simply can't explain the existence of anything, much less minds, much less intelligent minds..." - There is so much material for discussion here that I have allocated a separate thread for the theme of "afterlife". On this forum we have already discussed at length the existence of life, intelligent minds etc., though there is no reason at all why it should not be discussed again. - I would like in particular to challenge the claims (a) that nothing matters if there is no just afterlife, and (b) that there is no justification for ethics if there is no God. - (a) For me every minute matters, regardless of whether there is or is not an afterlife, just or unjust. The pleasure of the moment is an end in itself ... and enjoyment is infinitely preferable to unhappiness. Pleasure includes love and friendship, helping other people, recognition by other people, fulfilling whatever gifts I have, indulging in activities I enjoy. It should never include doing harm to myself or to others, which leads me to: - (b) Ethics are essential to the smooth functioning of our society, and they are justified by the fact that at least theoretically they will enable all members of society to enjoy the pleasure of the moment. We do not need God to justify codes that help people to enjoy their lives in a non-injurious manner.

Nihilism and atheism

by George Jelliss ⌂ @, Crewe, Tuesday, June 03, 2008, 14:36 (6015 days ago) @ dhw

I will respond to dhw's two points: - (a) that nothing matters if there is no just afterlife. Well there certainly isn't any afterlife, and there is a lot of injustice in the world. As we have seen recently natural disasters claim the lives of many who do not deserve to die. Many young people of great promise are cut off by disease or accident before they can achieve anything. This is the way the world works. We can only do what we can to ameliorate it by trying to predict disasters and find cures for illnesses and so on. - But this doesn't mean "nothing matters". One of my favourite sayings is that "beauty is in the eye of the survivor". We must have evolved a capacity for optimism. This may be sorely tried at times, but until it has been defeated by circumstances, it's still the case that "while there's life there's hope". - As for some sort of "ultimate purpose", well we humans are the only known life forms in the universe with self-consciousness, and Earth is the only known planet on which life has developed. Surely the development of our powers of consciousness and the preservation of life are sufficient objectives to be going on with? - (b) that there is no justification for ethics if there is no God. This is naturally a subject that often comes up for discussion among humanists. The "golden rule" in its various formulations (e.g. "do as you would be done by") usually comes up, and can be found in all moral codes ever formulated. - However there are usually considerable disagreements when it comes to detailed situations. Some humanists broadly accept the validity of the non-religious ones among the ten commandments, while others question them. - For example "honour your father and mother" is OK if they have brought you up well, but Philip Larkin's well known poem takes a more jaundiced view, and isn't it normal for children to go through a rebellious phase, all part of finding their own way in the world? - Then again "thou shalt not commit adultery", but relationships can go sour, and isn't it then better to break with the past than to continue to live together in acrimony? - Humanist ethics can be seen in action in the discussions of medical ethics committees. Rather than depending on applying rigid rules, we tend to look at the consequences of actions, in so far as the results can be known in advance.

Nihilism and atheism

by dhw, Tuesday, June 03, 2008, 19:59 (6015 days ago) @ George Jelliss

George says he is responding to "dhw's two points". - Just to put the record straight, the points were made by Cary and not by me. My posting was to register my disagreement!

Nihilism and atheism

by Cary Cook @, Thursday, June 05, 2008, 02:10 (6014 days ago) @ dhw

In saying that if there is no just afterlife, nothing matters, I deserve to be challenged, because I was only thinking in terms of ethics, and I didn't say to whom nothing matters. - If there is no just afterlife, then the only rewards/punishments for good/bad behavior are in this life. This life rarely offers enough rewards/punishments to motivate good behavior except when people are watching. Yes, there's conscience, but any internal conscience can be suppressed by anyone who sees sufficient reason to suppress it. If doing good does not ultimately benefit the doer of it, there is ultimately no reason to do it. Anyone who figures this out, and is sufficiently convinced of no just afterlife has little or no reason to behave ethically (again except for conscience or people watching. However I know an atheist who behaves ethically just to prove he can do it ... at least he appears to behave ethically, and he said that's the reason.) - I should have said this:
If there is no just afterlife, then there is no reason to behave any more ethically than is likely to get you what you want in this life. - Of course, anyone can make up any subjective values they want. So if ethical behavior makes you feel good, then it matters to you for that reason. But if someone else doesn't enjoy ethical behavior, and behaves unethically, you have no objective justification to accuse him of wrong doing, much less punish him. - I also should have specified that if there is no afterlife, then nothing ultimately matters to me, because though I find trivial pleasures in this life, it has not been enough to outweigh the displeasures. And the majority of the rest of animal life also appears to be experiencing more displeasure than pleasure, and appears to be sustained by nothing but fear of death. So if this life is all there is, the creator of it appears to be evil. In this case, the only sensible desire would be for non-existence, which could not even be guaranteed by blowing one's brain out.

Nihilism and atheism

by George Jelliss ⌂ @, Crewe, Thursday, June 05, 2008, 20:05 (6013 days ago) @ Cary Cook

Cary argues "If there is no just afterlife, then there is no reason to behave any more ethically than is likely to get you what you want in this life." But what is meant by "more ethically" here? Humanistic ethics concerns itself with the consequences of our actions in this life, and indeed it depends on what you can get away with. - You are indeed free to plan a bank robbery that puts the lives of innocent people at risk, and your own life and freedom. Some people do this. They know what they are doing is unethical by the accepted standards of their society. But they are prepared to take the risk, and accept the consequences if their plan fails, and Society has every right to put obstacles in their way. - The same is true of other more conventional ways of life. The soldier risks life and injury for reward or for some cause. The writer of a popular novel risks his literary reputation. "Treason doth never prosper: what's the reason? Why if it prosper, none dare call it treason" (Ovid). If you get away with it you may become a legend (Robin Hood, Ronnie Biggs, Ian Fleming, George Bush ...?). :-) - Cary finds more displeasure in his life than pleasure, and projects this onto the rest of the world. This is a classic symptom of depression. I would advise him to see a physician, or at least to take a break and seek out new experiences. - At the risk of being thought insensitive, my atheistic view is that there certainly is no after life, and non-existence is definitely guaranteed by blowing one's brains out. But I would point out that it is also an irreversible process, and I would even say it is sacrilege against life, since it is throwing away future potential. - This life is indeed "all there is" (though what there is is a great deal), and it exists because of necessity, not because it was "created" by someone, either good or evil. Even if it was created by some evil superFrankenstein in a parallel universe, wouldn't it be better to defy the devil?

Nihilism and atheism

by Matt S. ⌂ @, Friday, June 05, 2009, 17:22 (5648 days ago) @ dhw

dhw, I agree with you here. - For one, atheism is really a position on the belief of god and isn't a religion by any real definition of the word. Cary is giving atheism a definition that doesn't exist. The most neutral definition I've seen for religion was "Man's search for meaning." The definition of Atheism doesn't fit here. Atheism is a one-word description that god does not exist. Theism is exactly the opposite, a one-word description that god(s) exist. They are adjectives, not nouns. (No, I'm not being semantic either.) Atheism's only possible tie to morality would be that it doesn't allow for a theistic basis for universal morality. - There are intrinsic philosophical problems with claims like Cary's... (I'm being generous in not calling them gaping holes.) There are a subset of people that worship gods most would consider as "evil." I have always balked at the notion that 'religions make you moral.' Bull. Ten years ago I did a research paper for school about religion in prison populations. 85% professed some form of Christianity--just as much as the regular U.S. population. However when you looked at atheists (at the time, only 2% of the U.S. population) 0.5% of inmates called themselves atheists. At the time I didn't care so much about looking at the whole population of freethinkers (agnostics/atheists) which I think I just read consists of 15% of the U.S. population. In Japan, the number is 65% atheist/agnostic, and they manage to have a lower crime rate than the U.S. - And what is "moral" anyway... There is a great deal of argument that morals at large are arbitrary. I spent a long time dealing with the problem of moral relativism. - As far as ethics are concerned, I've concocted a proposal for a universal basis in ethics that... no one as of yet has told me has already been thought of or has refuted. Maybe one of you fine people can do one of those here... - Essentially, when observing our species, you almost never see us alone. No one gets to be a hermit in the mountains. This is because in the absence of other people, morals of any kind mean absolutely nothing. If there was only one human being, what purpose does "don't murder" serve? Therefore, morals only have any meaning in the presence of other people. But since we are never in a situation where we're not in the presence of other people, it follows that we cannot escape morality, even if some morals are arbitrary. - Yeah... this is someone that tends to be nihilistic actually stating that there is a universal basis for morality.

Nihilism and atheism

by George Jelliss ⌂ @, Crewe, Friday, June 05, 2009, 19:36 (5648 days ago) @ Matt S.

Matt S writes: "... in the absence of other people, morals of any kind mean absolutely nothing." - On the contrary I think ethics begins with the way you treat yourself. Don't you have standards that you try to keep up? Cleanliness, tidyness, avoiding self-deception, maintenance of self-respect, keeping a balance between work and leisure, keeping reasonably fit and healthy, ... these are just a few things that come to mind. Without this you cannot be ethical in your dealings with other people. I don't think this is just a matter of aesthetics. - I sometime think I'd like to call myself a "nihilist" in the cosmological sense of one who believes that everything came from nothing. That could be justified on etymological grounds, but of course is different from the usual sense of someone who believes "nothing matters".

--
GPJ

Nihilism and atheism

by Matt S. ⌂ @, Friday, June 05, 2009, 20:54 (5648 days ago) @ George Jelliss

George, - I think that's the first time I've ever heard of cleanliness as a prerequisite for moral/ethical behavior. However I can already think of the ready example of Germany ca. Hitler to show an excellent counterpoint to that suggestion. Or, Native American civilizations. How about Thomas Aquinas? Arguably a moral man, but his generation was hardly noted for its practice of cleanliness. I find more faults with the idea than benefits. It seems though, perhaps you miss the scope of my argument... I'm going for very big game. - I'm talking about a basis for a secular and universal ethics here, one that could be applied regardless of cultural background. Prior to the 20th century, this was largely done by invoking God. Universal law as decreed by an abstract creator. - From a secular perspective, this does present a challenging problem to the necessity of ethics. They're not, if you don't care about the kind of society you live in. We need a reason to accept a moral code in the first place, and the reason needs to be a compelling one. Being clean and hygienic doesn't give us that. My argument is that we're born into a social contract and do not have even the marginal ability to change it, therefore we have no logical recourse but to accept it, even if (as some suggest) morals are entirely arbitrary to begin with. - I've thought of ways that this argument can be broken, but the only exceptions are 'hermits.' Which don't exactly exist in human society. We rely on each other for something. - Some people (atheists included) state to use the 'golden rule.' But that rule has some logical fallibility too. It's not general enough. (The masochist problem.)

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