Wednesday, August 8, 2007

Common-sense nihilist manifesto

All we know that we know is that we know nothing. Everything we think we know is mediated through our senses and constructed in our brain. The evidence of our senses could be an illusion. We have no way of knowing whether the construct in our brain has any relationship to what actually exists.


In this situation all we can do is make certain assumptions. No matter the underlying reality, if we climb out of a high-storey window, we will appear to fall and appear to be in pain. Therefore we should behave as if what appears to be a material universe actually is a material universe.


We appear to occupy a tiny four-dimensional segment of the spacetime that makes up that universe. It appears to have begun in the big bang and appears as if it will end with eventual heat death – where all matter and energy is evenly distributed and unchanging. However, it also appears as if the big bang could have been caused by a white hole – the other end of a black hole in another completely separate spacetime, one that started with different initial conditions and so different universal constants than ours.


Everything-that-is appears as if it could comprise the set of all possible universal constants, expressed as separate spacetimes connected by black holes in a closed causal loop. What we call the universe appears to be that spacetime in which the arrangement of universal constants allows matter conducive to life like ours to form.

However, as Nietzsche reminds us, science only describes what appears to be there but does not explain it. We do not even pretend to know why anything exists. In addition, the visible universe – galaxies, stars, planets, and life – only accounts for 5% of its measurable mass. We only perceive four dimensions but there appears to be at least nine spatial and two temporal dimensions. Not only is the observable universe, assuming it exists, unknown but it could also be unknowable.


This observable, material universe that we appear to inhabit is hostile and contingent – the blind working out of physical processes. Life has evolved on this planet completely by chance. All life on Earth could be destroyed by a physical event, such as our being hit by a comet, at any time.


By its very nature, life requires suffering. Matter and energy that has organised itself into a living thing needs to consume other living things in order to maintain itself. As a side-effect of the way human beings evolved, we appear to be self-aware consciousnesses capable of abstract thought and of using what we think we know to manipulate the physical universe we appear to observe.


Therefore, even assuming the material world we observe does exist, life has no meaning or purpose other than existing – and the only purpose existing serves is to increase the amount of suffering in the world. You were arbitrarily born in a particular place at a particular time. Your life consists of all the spacetime events between that point and the point at which you die. It is exclusively up to you to make that sequence of events worthwhile.


We evolved as social beings – the entirety of human history and prehistory has involved the struggle to control human societies, the struggle to organise a society to suit the interests of the most powerful few. Before history began, we had killed off all our nearest relatives – all the relevant competitors – and had spread to every major habitable part of the planet. Societies developed civilisation at least five different times at different places around the world. In each case, it was because the rulers realised it would serve their interests better to adopt agriculture and settle in cities, and were able to impose their will, even though most people lived shorter and harder lives as a consequence. History began with the first writing, which, along with mathematics, was developed by priest-kings to keep accurate tax records.


Throughout humanity’s existence, this struggle for control has used both physical and mental means. Historically, the physical means involve such things as war and laws enforced by police to control access to resources and ensure the production of that which the powerful few need and value. The mental means involve such things as religion, nationalism, and consumerism – belief systems that provide a meaning and purpose to life that ensures the individuals believing those systems serve the purposes of control. We can assume the societies we have no record of took the same basic form as those that we do.


The free, authentic life – the human life – is that lived on its own terms and for its own ends.

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