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Levelestic Nihilism

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A small work is dusted up in whatever library may find it, with the binding made of stiff leather, illuminated upon: "Enoch Magwyn." It is an old tome, and the paper is close to falling apart. It reads in aged ink, of bad make.
 
"Oin levelism, an' its varius extant
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It hath been mine continual observation throughout mine brief candle that a man is willing to put down his stik' f'r a god without meeting it. just so, a lord 'r a lady hests an army of people without care. i hast found these actions faulty, just so. it hath again been mine own continuous experiences in that  delve of the human psyche that i see that thinking begins with us, rather then them. with pretense of       god, and pretense of afterlife, men form shields. shields broken only by the embrace of death whit most would find pleasing.
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Continuous observations suggest that the human psyche finds ways to evade this in simplistic throes, stream by flote, 'tis simple to encave behind it. i propose that the very extant of soul begins with human 'r  eaelf kind alike. mayhaps we find ways to evade, but haply consciousness may be an end to an end, as so to speak. we wilt find that nothing is everything, and that with the sooth of void mayhap we simply go to ether itself as ashes wilt so. as is the adage "ashes to ashes, dust to dust ", and just     so     hath it been consider'd that all beings of life and of unlife shall return to that grand nothing. mayhap it be   the sooth, and moreso: perhap if this is, if thither is truly nothing at the end, what is the purpose? 
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  I find this a question we wilt evaluate moo and moo. 'tis the core to find the nothing of us all.  I coin it a form of nihlism in sharp unbemused degree. Whit this shall continu-"
 
The rest of the text is illegible.
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Harbinger Nihil is happy that his name is used.

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Harbinger Nihil is happy that his name is used.

Existentialist Nihilistic Philosophy in medieval context intensifies. 

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