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{"id":3790,"date":"2011-03-06T17:59:26","date_gmt":"2011-03-06T15:59:26","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/xylem.aegean.gr\/~modestos\/mo.blog\/?p=3790"},"modified":"2016-01-12T21:09:35","modified_gmt":"2016-01-12T19:09:35","slug":"i-am-a-nihilist-because-i-still-believe-in-truth","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/xylem.aegean.gr\/~modestos\/mo.blog\/i-am-a-nihilist-because-i-still-believe-in-truth\/","title":{"rendered":"I am a nihilist because I still believe in truth"},"content":{"rendered":"<h2 style=\"text-align: justify;\">Ray Brassier interviewed by Marcin Rychter,<\/h2>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">linked from: <a href=\"http:\/\/kronos.org.pl\/index.php?23151,896\" target=\"_blank\">kronos.org.pl<\/a><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">KRONOS: &#8216;Nihilism&#8217; is one of the most ambiguous philosophical  concepts. What is your idea of it? Would you consider yourself a  nihilist? Does nihilism totally exclude religion? What about  Meillassoux&#8217;s nihilistic faith fuelled by the inexistence of God?<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">RB: Very simply, nihilism is a crisis of meaning. This crisis is  historically conditioned, because what we understand by \u2018meaning\u2019 is  historically conditioned. We\u2019ve moved from a situation in which the  phenomenon of \u2018meaning\u2019 was self-evident to one in which it has become  an enigma, and a primary focus of philosophical investigation. The  attempt to explain what \u2018meaning\u2019 is entails a profound transformation  in our understanding of it; one that I think will turn out to be as  far-reaching as the changes in our understanding of space, time,  causality, and life provoked by physics and biology.<br \/>\nThe pre-modern worldview that lasted several millennia and spanned the  transition from poly- to monotheism, is one in which the world and human  existence are intrinsically meaningful.  (I say \u201cis\u201d rather than \u201cwas\u201d  because this worldview continues to persist today, even among educated  people.) In this worldview, there is a natural order, and that order is  comprehensible to human beings in its broad outline, if not in every  single one of its details. Religion in general, but monotheism in  particular, offers the key required to decipher this natural order by  explaining most (though not all) of God\u2019s intent in creating the world:  God is good, he created us in his image, so that we might strive to  achieve goodness, and thereby be rewarded with eternal happiness if we  succeed, or punished with eternal suffering if we fail. God is the  ultimate source and guarantor of this meaningful order, through which  human beings are able to make sense of their lives in terms of a  struggle between sin and redemption, the conflict between good and evil,  etc.<br \/>\nThe emergence of modern mathematized natural science around the 16th  Century marks the point at which this way of making sense of ourselves  and our world begins to unravel. It does not collapse all at once, but  it begins to lose its official theoretical sanction in the discourse of  theology once the new science starts chipping away at the latter\u2019s basic  conceptual underpinnings. Over the course of a few centuries, the  longstanding assumption that everything exists for a reason, that things  are intrinsically purposeful and have been designed in accordance with a  divine plan, is slowly but systematically dismantled, first in physics,  then in chemistry, and eventually in biology, where it had held out  longest. Curved space-time, the periodic table, natural selection: none  of these are comprehensible in narrative terms. Galaxies, molecules, and  organisms are not <em>for <\/em>anything. Try as we might, it becomes  increasingly difficult to construct a rationally plausible narrative  about the world that satisfies our psychological need for stories that  unfold from beginning, through crisis, to ultimate resolution.<br \/>\nOf course, \u2018nihilism\u2019 in its broadest sense, understood as the  predicament in which human life and existence more generally are  condemned as \u2018meaningless\u2019 (i.e. \u2018purposeless\u2019), certainly predates the  development of modern science (think of <em>Ecclesiastes<\/em>). But the emergence of modern science lends it a <em>cognitive<\/em> import it did not previously enjoy, because where pre-modern nihilism  was a consequence of a failure of understanding \u2013 \u201cWe cannot understand  God, therefore there is no meaning available to creatures of limited  understanding such as we\u201d \u2013 modern nihilism follows from its  unprecedented success \u2013 \u201cWe understand nature better than we did, but  this understanding no longer requires the postulate of an underlying  meaning\u201d.  What has happened in this shift is that intelligibility has  become detached from meaning: with modern science, conceptual  rationality weans itself from the narrative structures that continue to  prevail in theology and theologically inflected metaphysics. This marks a  decisive step forward in the slow process through which human  rationality has gradually abandoned mythology, which is basically the  interpretation of reality in narrative terms. The world has no author  and there is no story enciphered in the structure of reality. No  narrative is unfolding in nature, certainly not the traditional  monotheistic narrative in which the human drama of sin and redemption  occupied centre stage, and humanity was a mirror for God.<br \/>\nAll this may sound platitudinous: surely existentialists had already  realized this? But the difference is that existentialists thought it was  still possible for human consciousness to provide the meaning that was  absent from nature: existence may be meaningless, but man\u2019s task is to  provide it with a meaning. My contention is that this solution is no  longer credible, because a project is now underway to understand and  explain human consciousness in terms that are compatible with the  natural sciences, such that the meanings generated by consciousness can  themselves be understood and explained as the products of purposeless  but perfectly intelligible processes, which are at once neurobiological  and sociohistorical. My claim is not that science has <em>succeeded<\/em> in explaining consciousness, but only that considerable progress has  been made, and that the burden of proof lies with those who insist on  denying such progress and who presume to dismiss the attempt as  impossible in principle. There have been plenty of such attempts, and  doubtless there will be more, but I find none of them remotely  persuasive, and neither should those scientists actually engaged in  trying to understand and explain the human mind.<br \/>\nOf course, many thinkers, including some scientists, persist in trying  to wrest some sort of psychologically satisfying narrative from elements  of the modern scientific worldview. But this effort is doomed because  it is the very category of narrative that has been rendered cognitively  redundant by modern science. Science does not need to deny the  significance of our evident psychological <em>need<\/em> for narrative;  it just demotes it from its previously foundational metaphysical status  to that of an epistemically derivative \u2018useful fiction\u2019.<br \/>\nSome might object that there is a latent contradiction between my denial  of the metaphysical reality of narrative order in nature and my appeal  to a narrative of cognitive progress in intellectual history. But there  is no contradiction: it is perfectly possible to track explanatory  progress in the conceptual realm without invoking some dubious  metaphysical narrative about the ineluctable forward march of Spirit. I  think Robert Brandom\u2019s reconstructive reading of Hegel does just this\u2014it  frees the normative ideal of explanatory progress from its  metaphysical, and ultimately mythological, inflation into the universal  history of Spirit.<br \/>\nLike Nietzsche, I think nihilism is a consequence of the \u2018will to  truth\u2019. But unlike Nietzsche, I do not think nihilism culminates in the  claim that there is no truth. Nietzsche conflated truth with meaning,  and concluded that since the latter is always a result of human  artifice, the former is nothing but a matter of convention. However,  once truth is dismissed, all that remains is the difference between  empowering and disempowering fictions, where \u2018life\u2019 is the fundamental  source of empowerment and the ultimate arbiter of the difference between  life-enhancing and life-depreciating fictions. Since the abandonment of  truth undermines the reason for relinquishing illusion, it ends up  licensing the concoction of further fictional narratives, the only  requirement for which is that they prove to be \u2018life-enhancing\u2019.<br \/>\nI consider myself a nihilist precisely to the extent that I refuse this  Nietzschean solution and continue to believe in the difference between  truth and falsity, reality and appearance. In other words, I am a  nihilist precisely because I still believe in truth, unlike those whose  triumph over nihilism is won at the cost of sacrificing truth. I think  that it is possible to <em>understand<\/em> the meaninglessness of existence, and that this capacity to understand meaning as a regional or <em>bounded<\/em> phenomenon marks a fundamental progress in cognition.<br \/>\nAs for nihilism and religion: well, religion\u2019s rational credibility can  be rebuked without evoking modern science or nihilism: Democritus and  Epicurus did so over two thousand years ago, using arguments that are  still valid today, even if theists prefer to ignore them. But of course,  the irrationality of religious belief has never impeded its  flourishing; indeed, it is precisely what immunizes it against rational  refutation, since religion is designed to satisfy psychological needs,  not rational requirements. Marx was right: religion will never be  eradicated until the <em>need<\/em> for it evaporates. Obviously, this evaporation will have to be accomplished practically as well as cognitively.<br \/>\nI have not read Meillassoux\u2019s <em>L\u2019inexistence divine<\/em> so do not  know what sorts of arguments he adduces to legitimate the hypothesis of  an inexistent \u2018God-to-come\u2019. I am sure they will be exceptionally  ingenious. But I remain skeptical, since I see no need for any such  hypothesis. Indeed, I view this continuing philosophical fascination  with monotheism as deeply pernicious and think a moratorium ought to be  declared to prevent any further \u2018God talk\u2019 by philosophers. I do not  think it mere coincidence that the critique of scientific rationality in  much 20th century philosophy goes hand in hand with a revival of  theological themes. Religion obviously satisfies deep-seated human  needs, but it has been a cognitive catastrophe that has continually  impeded epistemic progress\u2014contrary to the pernicious revisionism that  claims monotheism was always on the side of science and truth. Human  knowledge has progressed <em>in spite of<\/em> religion, never because of it. Philosophers should simply have no truck with it.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">KRONOS: Is your career as a noise musician an act of nihilism? Why  did you choose the noise genre? What are your noise music preferences?  Or maybe you don&#8217;t even listen to noise, just produce it? Should noise  music be perceived also as a political statement?<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">RB: I have no such career. But there is a connection between my  philosophical interests and my collaborations with musicians. I don\u2019t  set much store by labels, but if one is to be used, these collaborations  are better described as attempts at \u2018non-idiomatic improvisation\u2019 than  as \u2018noise\u2019. My musical preferences are irrelevant to these experiments.  There was a time when I listened to a lot of \u2018noise\u2019, but no longer. The  issues of \u2018noise\u2019\u2019s political and ideological ramifications are too  complicated to go into here, but an attempt at addressing them is made  in the texts \u2018Idioms and Idiots\u2019 and \u2018Metal Machine Theory\u2019 (available  at <a href=\"http:\/\/www.mattin.org\/essays\/essays.html\" target=\"_blank\">http:\/\/www.mattin.org\/essays\/essays.html<\/a>), produced in collaboration with Mattin, Jean-Luc Guionnet, and Seijiro Murayama.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">KRONOS: Does art have any epistemological value? Can it possibly have any?<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">RB: Yes. See above.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">KRONOS: How would you describe your &#8216;love-affair&#8217; with the<br \/>\nspeculative realists movement?<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">RB: The \u2018speculative realist movement\u2019 exists only in the  imaginations of a group of bloggers promoting an agenda for which I have  no sympathy whatsoever: actor-network theory spiced with pan-psychist  metaphysics and morsels of process philosophy. I don\u2019t believe the  internet is an appropriate medium for serious philosophical debate; nor  do I believe it is acceptable to try to concoct a philosophical movement  online by using blogs to exploit the misguided enthusiasm of  impressionable graduate students. I agree with Deleuze\u2019s remark that  ultimately the most basic task of philosophy is to impede stupidity, so I  see little philosophical merit in a \u2018movement\u2019 whose most signal  achievement thus far is to have generated an online orgy of stupidity.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">KRONOS: Is there still a need for metaphysics or will science alone do to describe reality?<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">RB: Science harbours metaphysical presuppositions whether it wants to  or not. Far better for it to be aware of them so that it is able to  tell which of its metaphysical assumptions are empirically fertile, and  which are obstructive and redundant. The only credible metaphysic is one  that is sensitive to the philosophical implications of the natural  sciences, as exemplified by the way in which physics has reconfigured  our intuitive notions of space, time, and causality; or biology has  forced us to revise (if not abandon) our intuitive understanding of  species and essence. The idea of a purely a priori, armchair  metaphysics, presuming to legislate about the structure of reality while  blithely ignoring the findings of our best sciences, strikes me as  indefensible. This is not to say that there is no room for a priori  argument and pure conceptual construction in metaphysics, but that it is  illegitimate to infer substantive conclusions about what exists from  arguments about relations between concepts. This is obviously a Kantian  injunction, but one that I believe remains valid today, however much one  might want to contest Kant\u2019s own transcendental idealism, as I do.<br \/>\nScience and metaphysics are indissociable: just as empirical science can  be impeded by unavowed metaphysical assumptions, metaphysics becomes  mired in anthropomorphic parochialism if it fails to attend to the way  in which speculative intuition is subtly constrained and influenced by  empirical and historical factors. Peter Wolfendale has provided the most  perspicuous account of the relation between metaphysics and the natural  sciences in his \u2018Essay on Transcendental realism\u2019, which I cannot  recommend too highly (available at <a href=\"http:\/\/deontologistics.files.wordpress.com\/2010\/05\/essay-on-transcendental-realism.pdf\" target=\"_blank\">http:\/\/deontologistics.files.wordpress.com\/2010\/05\/essay-on-transcendental-realism.pdf<\/a>.)<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">KRONOS: What is your attitude towards common-sense philosophy?<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Belief in a monolithic pre-philosophical \u2018common-sense\u2019 risks  becoming part of philosophers\u2019 own unquestioned common-sense.  Unquestioning deference to \u2018common-sense\u2019, of the kind exemplified by  1950s \u2018ordinary language\u2019 philosophy, is as debilitating for philosophy  as the cultivation of heterodox or counter-intuitive claims for their  own sake, which at its worst culminates in the attempt to turn a word  like \u2018weird\u2019 into a term of philosophical approbation\u2014a move as vacuous  as it is idiotic. No doubt, there is much blind prejudice and ignorant  doxa in \u2018common-sense\u2019, but there are also the sorts of hard-won,  empirically robust generalizations that provide the indispensable  starting point for scientific enquiry. The relation between common and  uncommon-sense is dialectical: empirical science sets out from a stock  of commonsensical assumptions but attains increasingly counter-intuitive  results that often challenge the manifest image of reality from which  it started. Conversely, idealist philosophers who make a great fuss  about the need to suspend \u2018the natural attitude\u2019 or set aside the  prejudices of common-sense often end up ratifying the inviolable  authority of a brand of a priori or speculative common-sense, usually  about the incorrigibility of \u2018originary intuitions\u2019 or the indubitable  reality of the qualities of lived experience. I find it significant that  empirical science has generated far greater imaginative challenges to  our \u2018manifest image\u2019 of reality than anything conjured through purely a  priori philosophical speculation. \u2018Common-sense\u2019 is more heterogeneous,  and ultimately stranger and more surprising than the caricature which  provides the convenient foil for the reveries of idealism. Where  empirical commonsense leads to the science whose counter-intuitive  results challenge the limits of human imagination, idealist disdain for  commonsense often ends up ratifying a more rarefied, more insidious  orthodoxy in which \u2018failures of imagination are mistaken for insights  into necessity\u2019 (Dennett).<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">KRONOS: Living in Lebanon how do you feel about the February 2011 Middle East situation?<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">RB: Like most people, I am very heartened by the revolts in Tunisia,  Egypt, Bahrain, Jordan, and Lybia, and have nothing but admiration for  the courage of the protestors who have risked life and limb in the  attempt to transform a situation that had become intolerable. I find the  attempt to characterize these revolts as manifestations of the desire  for Western-style capitalist democracy, and thereby enlist them as  ideological victories for neo-liberalism, rather preposterous, and I  hope that whatever mode of government comes to supplant those of the  toppled dictatorships, it will not simply be the brand of corrupt  oligarchic \u2018democracy\u2019 that the US and Europe so cynically promote.  But  it remains too early to tell what will ultimately come of these  rebellions, so I am wary of any overly optimistic prognoses: there are  too many powerful vested interests ready to do whatever it takes to  ensure the preservation of their privileges, amply assisted by their US  and European sponsors needless to say. There are no guarantees of  victory for genuine popular democracy\u2014indeed the remaining obstacles  stacked against the protestors are daunting, if not insuperable\u2014so I  remain skeptical of some the more sanguine forecasts about the future.  But overall, I welcome what I hope will prove to be the first but not  the last rebuke to US and European perfidy in the Middle-East. In  particular, I hope this signals the beginning of the end of Israel\u2019s  impunity in perpetrating its crimes against the Palestinian people.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">February 2011<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Ray Brassier interviewed by Marcin Rychter, linked from: kronos.org.pl KRONOS: &#8216;Nihilism&#8217; is one of the most ambiguous philosophical concepts. What is your idea of it? Would you consider yourself a nihilist? Does nihilism totally exclude religion? What about Meillassoux&#8217;s nihilistic faith fuelled by the inexistence of God? RB: Very simply, nihilism is a crisis of meaning. This crisis is historically conditioned, because what we understand by \u2018meaning\u2019 is historically conditioned. We\u2019ve moved from a situation in which the phenomenon of \u2018meaning\u2019 was self-evident to one in which it has become an enigma, and a primary focus of philosophical investigation. The attempt to explain what \u2018meaning\u2019 is entails a profound transformation in our understanding of it; one that I think will turn out to be as far-reaching as the changes in our understanding of space, time, causality, and life provoked by physics and biology. The pre-modern worldview that lasted several millennia [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"inline_featured_image":false,"ngg_post_thumbnail":0,"_jetpack_newsletter_access":"","_jetpack_dont_email_post_to_subs":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_tier_id":0,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paywalled_content":false,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":"","jetpack_publicize_message":"","jetpack_publicize_feature_enabled":true,"jetpack_social_post_already_shared":false,"jetpack_social_options":{"image_generator_settings":{"template":"highway","default_image_id":0,"font":"","enabled":false},"version":2},"jetpack_post_was_ever_published":false},"categories":[3],"tags":[372,373],"class_list":["post-3790","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-philosophy","tag-ray-brassier","tag-speculative-realism"],"aioseo_notices":[],"jetpack_publicize_connections":[],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"jetpack_shortlink":"https:\/\/wp.me\/pzkzw-Z8","jetpack_likes_enabled":true,"jetpack-related-posts":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/xylem.aegean.gr\/~modestos\/mo.blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3790","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/xylem.aegean.gr\/~modestos\/mo.blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/xylem.aegean.gr\/~modestos\/mo.blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/xylem.aegean.gr\/~modestos\/mo.blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/xylem.aegean.gr\/~modestos\/mo.blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=3790"}],"version-history":[{"count":8,"href":"https:\/\/xylem.aegean.gr\/~modestos\/mo.blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3790\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":5517,"href":"https:\/\/xylem.aegean.gr\/~modestos\/mo.blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3790\/revisions\/5517"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/xylem.aegean.gr\/~modestos\/mo.blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=3790"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/xylem.aegean.gr\/~modestos\/mo.blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=3790"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/xylem.aegean.gr\/~modestos\/mo.blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=3790"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}