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nihilism (n.)

1817, "the doctrine of negation" (in reference to religion or morals), from German Nihilismus, from Latin nihil "nothing at all" (see nil), coined by German philosopher Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi (1743-1819). In philosophy, an extreme form of skepticism (1836). The political sense, "rejection of fundamental social and political structures," was first used c. 1824 by German journalist Joseph von Görres (1776-1848). Turgenev used the Russian form of the word (nigilizm) in "Fathers and Children" (1862) and claimed to have invented it. With a capital N-, it refers to the Russian revolutionary anarchism of the period 1860-1917, supposedly so called because "nothing" that then existed found favor in their eyes.

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Definitions of nihilism from WordNet

nihilism (n.)
a revolutionary doctrine that advocates destruction of the social system for its own sake;
nihilism (n.)
the delusion that things (or everything, including the self) do not exist; a sense that everything is unreal;
Synonyms: nihilistic delusion
nihilism (n.)
complete denial of all established authority and institutions;
From wordnet.princeton.edu