A term used to describe a male who exhibits extreme laziness or struggles with chronic procrastination. Often associated with an aura of detachment, aimlessness, or embracing the "void" of inactivity.
"Don’t expect him to show up on time—he’s the ultimate Nihility Boy."
Someone who is extremely awesome and cool and radiates absolute masculinity
gurt: Hey that guy is a real Omnia Et Nihil.
dark brandon: Yogurt
gurt: yo wassup
Paradigm in which the supply-demand ratio becomes regularized into identical-surface-area ovals which extend from the space-of-transfinity to the hypermorphic-point.
These ovals are the result of two tangent arcs being transposed on each other to create ovals with a sharp end.
Science says that all the tangent arcs are representable as discrete draw-distances.
As kleptocracy takes hold and small businesses are eliminated in favor of vertical supply chains; the supply demand-ratios will approach 1 as per xenotransploitation. Trans-nihilism discrete supply demand-ratios are surface areas of individual beads or tangent-arc differences between two discrete tangent arcs.
The number of sharp beads or ovals is infinite in number from the transfinite to the Fauvic point.
A paradigm in which the lateral surface of a circle becomes smooth by having an uncountable number of corners.
Zeta-nihilism argues that circles in themselves don't have infinite corners; rather they have uncountable (infinity^infinity) corners.
In zeta-nihilism each corner of a circle is called "zeta."
A paradigm in which the lateral surface of a circle becomes smooth by having an uncountable number of corners.
Zeta-nihilism argues that circles in themselves don't have infinite corners; rather they have uncountable (infinity^infinity) corners.
In zeta-nihilism each corner of a circle is called "zeta."
A philosophical perspective that acknowledges the inherent chaos and indifference of the universe while rejecting total despair. It embraces the human spirit’s defiance against meaninglessness, asserting that while life may have no predetermined purpose, individuals can carve out their own meaning through struggle, resilience, and personal creation. Rooted in existential awareness, Simonic Nihilism finds beauty in the act of resisting fate, choosing to fight against the void rather than succumbing to it.
Even as he faced insurmountable odds, he lived by Simonic Nihilism—if life was chaos, he would meet it with his own defiance.
The belief that even if life is meaningless, we still choose to fight, to feel, to create—not because it changes the outcome, but because that’s what makes us human. It’s the defiance of giving in to emptiness, the quiet scream against the void. It’s crying out to the universe not for answers, but to be heard. It’s embracing the chaos, the heartbreak, and the beauty of existing, all while knowing none of it was promised.
When I read his poetry, it wasn’t just existential dread—it was Simonic Nihilism: the refusal to be silenced, even when no one is listening.