In philosophical counseling the “nihilistic moment” is a very important
moment.
Therefore, I often ask my guests to read Albert Camus´ two small novels The Stranger, and The Fall, as ways of getting the counseling practice started.
The nihilistic moment is a so-called Bardo state, a possibility for
spiritual practice, a possibility for opening yourself in towards the Source.
It namely also implies the question of, whether there can be a complete
philosophical freedom, wherein the human mind is facing something, which not is
of time, not is pieced together by thoughts, and which still not is an escape
from the facts of the daily existence: the timeless, the absolute, truth or reality.
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