nihilator
English
Etymology
nihilate + -or.
Noun
nihilator (plural nihilators)
- (philosophy) That which nihilates.
- 1980, in Darshana International, volumes 20–21, J. P. Atreya, page 80:
- Being alone can nihilate without itself being nihilated. In the act of nihilation the nihilator remains.
- 1988, Joseph C. McLelland, Prometheus Rebound: The Irony of Atheism, Wilfrid Laurier University Press, →ISBN, page 267:
- Every ego is engaged in “a desperate effort to be” - desperate because we are all nihilators defending our fragile project of being, which necessarily involves mutual destruction: […]
- 1994, John Passmore, A Hundred Years of Philosophy, Penguin Books, →ISBN, page 606:
- […] French Resistance left him with a feeling of human solidarity quite absent from his earlier works, in which other people are most characteristically represented as Heidegger’s ‘They’ -- obstacles to our discovery of ourselves, nihilators of our possibilities.
- 1980, in Darshana International, volumes 20–21, J. P. Atreya, page 80: