Comments by "Brent Jacobs" (@br3nto) on "Unsolicited advice" channel.

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  11.  @PixlyPenguin  If that’s what you find meaning in, then yes. Let me reframe it a little. The veil is a metaphor for the unknown all around us, both physically at the most smallest scales and the largest. It also wraps around intangible and conceptual things like thought and understanding. That veil will always exist, so there will always be new things to explore and to pique our attention. At the same time things will always change because we are always interacting with and reacting to everything around us and to that veil that surrounds everything. This isn’t just true for conscious beings, but for everything that exists. This also means everything in the past contributes to the future. I don’t think there is inherent meaning in any of it, however, I think we can derive some meaning from it while we exist by understanding that we can take actions now to leave an impression on the future. Or we can sit back and just take in the beauty of it all… it really doesn’t matter… well kind of… it does matter in some sense. For example, you may want civilisation to persist, so that takes many people putting in effort to keep it going. But that civilisation only exists because of the things that happened in the past. Maybe if people in the past put their energies to different things, we would have something else either better or worse. We would probably want to put in effort to keep that around… it’s all contextual. But I’m rambling now… there is a lot to this.
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  17. I still find it odd that many of the famous philosophers consider Nihilism to be a state of mind or being rather than the foundation from which everything can be built up. If you consider Nihilism to be what is left when everything else is removed that we can see, touch, explore, and understand, then you can see that Nihilism is a vail or fog-of-war that always covers everything we don’t know. As we explore and expand, that vail shifts, but is always there and always hides more things. So science and religion can be considered the same. Looking behind the veil. So where Nietzsche hypothesises that religion can encourage Nihilism, and that is related to when religious authority stifles individual will, I think it’s all backwards. I see it more as religious authority (or any authority really) can convince individuals to not explore beyond the veil, and be happy with what is presented, rather than seeking evidence and the actual truths of the universe. Nihilism, to me, is always present because everything is built on A foundation of Nihilism. My interpretation of nihilism also means there’s isn’t a nihilistic problem that requires solving; religion provides hypothesis of what’s behind the veil, rather than providing a solution to nihilism. So, there is nothing to fight or overcome in my interpretation and understanding of Nihilism; you can choose to do nothing and just go with the flow, or you can take the wheel and drive; it really doesn’t matter one way or the other. You will be fine in both cases. There is no existential dilemma.
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