[ 3 / biz / cgl / ck / diy / fa / ic / jp / lit / sci / vr / vt ] [ index / top / reports ] [ become a patron ] [ status ]
2023-11: Warosu is now out of extended maintenance.

/jp/ - Otaku Culture

Search:


View post   

>> No.22259664 [View]
File: 2.66 MB, 1920x1080, don't touch me.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
22259664

>>22259599
In general, there are four requirements to be nihilistic:

-a hatred of the metaphysics of reality (basically that reality is limited because A is A, etc)
-a hatred of the self through self-loathing (the internalized view you are incapable of doing anything, thereby you hate yourself for not being capable of accomplishing anything)
-a resentful hatred of others and values beyond mere envy for the previous two (others can accomplish something, and I hate that they can achieve excellence and that I can't)
-an inability or rejection to find any sense of joy in life (small pleasures such as drinking coffee, eating good food, seeking short term joy is bad)

You can still hate reality and yourself but still value something in life. So long as you some anything or something, you can anchor yourself and not fall into nihilism. Most people that become nihilistic are that way because they think values are impossible because nothing is intrinsic (an apple isn't valuable on its own, therefore it has no value, ignoring that you can only have objective value in relation to yourself with objective life-affirming values and requirements) while autistic people generally attach themselves to something they see as interesting or valuable. An autistic person that loves his dumb train toys or whatever can't become nihilistic, even if he hates reality or the fact that he's autistic because he still loves something. You only start resenting everything and become nihilistic when you truly lack love in every form. Even autistic people have at least one favorite food that they'll willingly eat and not give a damn about anything else.
I find it paradoxical that autism is a cognitive limitation that ends up embracing the metaphysical limitations of reality by proxy and lacking any self-awareness to actively hate others. The only possible conclusion is that autistic people are incapable of being nihilistic. I don't even think it's possible for any autistic person to not have a few small number of things things they focus all their mental energy on.

>> No.22259635 [DELETED]  [View]
File: 2.66 MB, 1920x1080, don't touch me.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
22259635

>>22259599
In general, there are four requirements to be nihilistic
:
-a hatred of the metaphysics of reality (basically that reality is limited because A is A, etc)
-a hatred of the self through self-loathing (the internalized view you are incapable of doing anything, thereby you hate yourself for not being capable of accomplishing anything)
-a resentful hatred of others and values beyond mere envy for the previous two (others can accomplish something, and I hate that they can achieve excellence and that I can't)
-an inability or rejection to find any sense of joy in life (small pleasures such as drinking coffee, eating good food, seeking short term joy is bad)

You can still hate reality and yourself but still value something in life. So long as you some anything or something, you can anchor yourself and not fall into nihilism. Most people that become nihilistic are that way because they think values are impossible because nothing is intrinsic (an apple isn't valuable on its own, therefore it has no value, ignoring that you can only have objective value in relation to yourself with objective life-affirming values and requirements) while autistic people generally attach themselves to something they see as interesting or valuable. An autistic person that loves his dumb train toys or whatever can't become nihilistic, even if he hates reality or the fact that he's autistic because he still loves something. You only start resenting everything and become nihilistic when you truly lack love in every form. Even autistic people have at least one favorite food that they'll willingly eat and not give a damn about anything else.
I find it paradoxical that autism is a cognitive limitation that ends up embracing the metaphysical limitations of reality by proxy and lacking any self-awareness to actively hate others. The only possible conclusion is that autistic people are incapable of being nihilistic. I don't even think it's possible for any autistic person to not have a few small number of things things they focus all their mental energy on.

>> No.22247861 [View]
File: 2.66 MB, 1920x1080, don't touch me.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
22247861

>>22247233
Her introduction is saying 'pls don't touch me'. If I remember correctly, autistic people don't like to be touched, right?

Navigation
View posts[+24][+48][+96]