No, he actually got it right (pretty much). Nihilism is the meta-ethical standpoint that there are no absolute, objective values. Nothing that is "right" and "wrong" in itself. Murder, for instance, isn't intrinsically wrong (though one can make it so in ones normative-ethics), because there IS no "right" or "wrong" existences in the world.AgentNein said:as I understand it, the first thing you described is better defined as absurdism or rather existentialism.Scrustle said:As I understand it nihilism is the belief that nothing has any intrinsic value, there is no such thing as objective morality, and that objective knowledge is impossible to obtain. To me this has always seemed mostly reasonable and agreeable, and I would describe myself as a nihilist on at least those first two counts. Yet I often hear people talk about nihilism as if it's negative or pointless, similar to how people react to solipsism. Why exactly is this? I don't see anything about nihilism, at least on these three core assertions, that would lead people to treat the position with such disdain, apart from a purely emotional reaction someone might have because of the perceivably cold nature of said claims. But that is obviously not solid grounds for rejecting a philosophical position. So what else is there that makes people think it's bad?
Nihilism is the whole that one might fall in when venturing into existentialism. That rut of "there is no intrinsic value or meaning to anything, so there is no value or meaning period, so fuck it".
Existentialists tend to say that at least we can bring our own personal, invented meanings and values to the world, even though they don't exist universally. Nihilists don't. At least is my personal understanding, anyone feel free to correct me.
There is nothing in the world that exists outside of us that is this "wrongness" or "rightness" is an objective, independent value of humans. In fact, there are no values what so ever (Idealists can say that there are, but that they are depedant upon humans existing), and "right" and "wrong" is simply what we talk about when we make a statement to either say "this pleases me and is in accordance with my normative ethics" or "this does not please me and is not in accorancde with my normative ethics" (Also knowns as Emotivism).
In short: Nihilism doesn't say "nothing is valuable", just that "there is nothing valueable in the world as it self". You can still FEEL that things are valueable, and act accordingly, but they aren't. It's just you projecting.
How is this depressing? It just means that you have to create value yourself.