Cult nihilism (ideology): Difference between revisions

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Introduction and sectioning
(Created page with "{{about|the political ideology of Kæra'zna since 1853|the underlying philosophy also occasionally referred to as Cult Nihilism|Ritual Nihilism}} '''Cult nihilism''', known in formal contexts as '''Kæra nihilism''' or '''Azraic nihilism''', is the extremist ideology and associated doctrine produced from the implementation of Ritual nihilist philosophy in Kæra'zna. In Kæra'zna proper, the term is associated with extremist interpretation...")
 
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{{WIP}}{{about|the political ideology of [[Kæra'zna]] since 1853|the underlying philosophy also occasionally referred to as Cult Nihilism|Ritual Nihilism}}
 
'''Cult nihilism''', known in formal contexts as '''Kæra nihilism''' or '''Azraic nihilism''', is the extremist ideology and associated doctrine produced from the implementation of [[Ritual Nihilism|Ritual nihilist]] philosophy in [[Kæra'zna]]. In [[Kæra'zna]] proper, the term is associated with extremist interpretations of the state ideology - most prevalently expressed by the [[Cult of Absolute Purity|Purity faction]]. Due to its ideological roots as a political expression of [[W:Moral nihilism|Moral nihilism]] through the lens of furthering a [[W:Collective|collective]] [[W:In-group favoritism|in-group]] based upon an [[W:Ethnic nationalism|ethnonationalist]] framework of inclusion, the ideology has a complex relationship with [[W:Fascism|fascism]], with debates on the exact nature of the ideology in relation to that of fascism a common facet of the political analysis of [[Kæra'zna]].
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As an expression of such a convergence of beliefs, Cult nihilism has been described as promoting a semi-[[W:Consequentialism|consequentialist]] model of the state, in which the overarching goals of the state are taken as absolute justification for any action taken by it that may cause harm to its population. This model naturally promotes a system to which the populace are [[W:Disfranchisement|disfranchised]] and taken out of the decision-making process in order to establish a meritocratic hierarchy for the advancement of the state as a whole, comparable to a [[W:Technocracy|technocracy]]. Despite this, the system's rejection of morality diverges it from traditional [[W:Consequentialism|consequentialism]], with adherents of Cult nihilism describe themselves as advancing the power of the state not for moral means, but as an adherence to a "natural state of belief" in which a group must seek to empower itself at the expense of others. In this, the ideology adopts an extreme and radical interpretation of the [[Ritual Nihilism|Ritual nihilist]] acceptance of pointlessness as a quality of the universe providing its beauty, advocating actions which can be internally described as without true purpose, while justifying them as expressing intrinsic aspects of sentience.
 
In its utilization of this model, the ideology has been described as in opposition to the prioritization of the [[W:Individual|individual]], [[W:Democracy|democracy]], [[W:Pluralism (political philosophy)|pluralism]] and the [[W:Marxism|Marxist]] idea of class conflict, while maintaining some compatibility with [[W:Ultranationalism|ultranationalist]] and [[W:Eugenics|eugenicist]] rhetoric, causing scholarly sources to place the ideology broadly on the political spectrum's [[W:Far-right politics|far-right]].
 
== Origins and inspiration ==
 
=== Azraic collectivism ===
 
=== Ritual nihilism ===
 
== Ideology and doctrine ==
 
=== Nationalism and supremacism ===
 
==== Azraic exceptionalism ====
 
=== Policy towards death ===
 
==== Influence on eugenics ====
 
=== Class structure ===
 
=== Social policy ===
 
=== Religion ===
 
=== Economics ===
 
=== System of governance ===
 
== Relation to fascism ==
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