{"id":147100,"date":"2016-02-12T06:45:01","date_gmt":"2016-02-12T11:45:01","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.designerchildren.com\/catholic-encyclopedia-nihilism-new-advent\/"},"modified":"2016-02-12T06:45:01","modified_gmt":"2016-02-12T11:45:01","slug":"catholic-encyclopedia-nihilism-new-advent-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/nihilism\/catholic-encyclopedia-nihilism-new-advent-2\/","title":{"rendered":"CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Nihilism &#8211; New Advent"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>    Help support New Advent and get the full contents of this    website as an instant download. Includes the    Catholic Encyclopedia, Church Fathers, Summa, Bible and more     all for only $19.99...  <\/p>\n<p>    The term was first used by Turgeniev in his novel, \"Fathers and    Sons\" (in \"Russkij Vestnik\", Feb., 1862): a Nihilist    is one who bows to no authority and     accepts  no    doctrine, however    widespread, that is not supported by proof.   <\/p>\n<p>    The nihilist theory was formulated by Cernysevskij in    his novel \"Cto delat\" (What shall be done, 1862-64), which    forecasts a new social      order constructed on the ruins of the old.    But essentially,    Nihilism was a reaction against the abuses of     Russian    absolutism; it originated with the first secret political    society in Russia founded by     Pestel (1817),    and its first effort was the military revolt of the     Decembrists (14    Dec., 1825). Nicholas      I crushed the uprising, sent its leaders    to the scaffold and one hundred and sixteen participants to     Siberia. The    spread (1830) of certain        philosophical     doctrines    (Hegel,     Saint      Simon ,     Fourier )    brought numerous recruits to Nihilism, especially in    the universities; and, in    many of the cities, societies were organized to combat    absolutism and introduce constitutional government.       <\/p>\n<p>    Its apostles    were Alexander    Herzen (1812-70) and Michael      Bakunin      (1814-76), both of noble birth. The    former, arrested (1832) as a partisan of     liberal     ideas, was imprisoned for eight months,    deported, pardoned        (1840), resided in Moscow    till 1847 when he migrated      to London and there founded (1857) the    weekly periodical    , \"Kolokol\" (Bell), and later \"The Polar    Star\". The \"Kolokol\" published     Russian    political secrets and denunciations      of the Government; and, in spite of the    police, made its way into Russia to spread revolutionary    ideas. Herzen,     inspired by    Hegel and     Feurbach, proclaimed the destruction of the existing    order; but he did not advocate     violent    measures. Hence his younger followers wearied of him; and on    the other hand his defense of the     Poles  during    the insurrection of 1863 alienated many of his     Russian    sympathizers. The \"Kolokol\" went out of     existence in    1868 and Herzen died two years later.     Bakunin  was    extreme in his revolutionary theories. In the first number of    \"L'Alliance Internationale de la     Dmocratie     Socialiste\"    founded by him in 1869, he openly professed Atheism and called for the abolition    of marriage,    property, and of all     social and     religious    institutions. His advice, given in his \"Revolutionary    Catechism\", was: \"Be severe to yourself and severe to others.     Suppress the    sentiments of relationship     , friendship, love, and gratitude. Have only one    pleasure, one joy, one    reward  the triumph of the revolution. Night and day, have    only one thought, the destruction of everything without pity.    Be ready to die and ready to kill      any one who opposes the triumph of your    revolt.\" Bakunin    thus opened the way to nihilistic terrorism.       <\/p>\n<p>    It began with the formation (1861-62) of secret societies, the members of    which devoted    their lives and fortunes to the dissemination of revolutionary    ideas. Many of these    agitators, educated at    Zurich, Switzerland, returned to Russia and gave Nihilism    the support of trained intelligence     . Prominent among them were Sergius Necaev,    master of a parochial    school in     St. Petersburg,    who was in constant communication with nihilist    centers in various cities, and Sergius Kovalin who established    thirteen associations in Cernigor. These societies took their names from    their founders  the Malikovcy, Lavrists, Bakunists, etc. They    enrolled seminarists     , university students, and young    women. Among the working     men the    propaganda was conducted in part through free schools. The promoters engaged in    humble trades as weavers,    blacksmiths, and carpenters, and in their shops inculcated     nihilist doctrine.    The peasantry was reached by writings, speeches, schools, and personal     intercourse. Even the nobles shared    in this work, e.g., Prince      Peter      Krapotkin     , who, under the pseudonym of Borodin, held    conferences with workingmen. As secondary centres, taverns and    shops served as meeting places, depositories of prohibited    books, and, in case of need, as places of refuge. Though    without a central organization the movement spread throughout    Russia, notably in the    region of the Volga and in that of the Dnieper where it gained    adherents among the Cossacks. The women in particular displayed energy    and self sacrifice     in their zeal for the     cause. Many were    highly cultured and some belonged to the nobility or higher    classes, e.g., Natalia Armfeld, Barbara Batiukova, Sofia von     Herzfeld, Sofia    Perovakaja. They co-operated more especially through the    schools.           <\/p>\n<p>    The propaganda of the press was at first conducted from foreign    parts: London, Geneva,     Zurich. In this    latter city there were two printing offices, established in    1873, where the students published the works of     Lavrov and of     Bakunin. The    first secret printing office in Russia, founded at     St. Petersburg    in 1861, published four numbers of the Velikoruss. At the same    time there came to Russia,    from London, copies of the    \"Proclamation to the New Generation     \" (Kmolodomu pokolkniju) and \"Young Russia\"    (Molodaja Rosija), which was published in the following year.    In 1862, another secret printing office, established at    Moscow, published the    recital of the revolt of 14 December, 1825, written by Ogarev.    In 1862, another secret press at St.    Petersburg  published revolutionary     proclamations    for officers of the army; and in 1863, there were published in    the same city a few copies of the daily Papers, \"Svoboda\"    (Liberty) and \"Zemlja i Volja\" (The Earth and Liberty); the    latter continued to be published in 1878 and 1879, under the    editorship, at first, of Marco Natanson, and later of the    student, Alexander Mihailov, one of the ablest organizers of     Nihilism. In 1866, a student of Kazan, Elpidin,    published two numbers of the \"Podpolnoe Slovo\", which was    succeeded by the daily paper, the \"Sovremennost\" (The    Contemporary), and later, by the \"Narodnoe Delo\" (The National     Interest), which    was published (1868-70), to disseminate the ideas of     Bakunin. Two    numbers of the \"Narodnaja Rasprava\" (The Tribunal of     Reason) were    published in 1870, at St. Petersburg     and at Moscow. In 1873, appeared the    \"Vpred\" (Forward!), one of the most esteemed     periodicals of     Nihilism, having salient     socialistic    tendencies. A volume of it appeared each year. In 1875-76,    there was connected with the \"Vpred\", a small bi-monthly    supplement, which was under the direction of     Lavrov  until    1876, when it passed under the editorship of Smironv, and went    out of existence    in the same year. It attacked theological and     religious    ideas, proclaiming the    equality of rights, freedom    of association, and justice    for the proletariat. At Geneva    , in 1875 and 1876, the \"Rabotnik\" (The     Workman ) was    published, which was edited in the style of the people; the    \"Nabat\" (The Tocsin) appeared in 1875, directed by Thacev; the    \"Narodnaja Volja\" (The Will     of the People), in 1879, and the \"Cernyi    Peredel\", in 1880, were published in     St. Petersburg.    There was no fixed date      for any of these papers, and their    contents consisted, more especially, of     proclamations,    of letters from revolutionists, and at times, of     sentences of the    Executive Committees     . These printing offices also produced    books and pamphlets and Russian      translations of the works of     Las<br \/>\nsalle, Marx,     Proudhon, and     Bchner. A    government stenographer, Myskin     , in 1870, established a printing office,    through which several of Lassalle's      works were published; while many pamphlets    were published by the Zemlja      i Volja      Committee and by the Free     Russian Printing    Office. Some of    the pamphlets were published under titles like those of the    books for children, for example, \"Deduska Egor\" (Grandfather     Egor),    Mitiuska\", Stories for the     Workingmen , and    others, in which the exploitation of the people was deplored,    and the immunity      of capitalists assailed. Again, some    publications were printed in popular, as well as in cultured,    language; and, in order to allure the peasants these pamphlets    appeared at times, under such titles as \"The Satiate and the    Hungry\"; \"How Our Country Is No Longer Ours\". But all this    propaganda, which required considerable energy and     sacrifice, did    not produce satisfactory        results. Nihilism did not penetrate the masses; its    enthusiastic apostles      committed acts      of imprudence that drew upon them the    ferocious reprisals of the Government; the peasants had not    faith in the preachings of    those teachers, whom, at times, they regarded as government    spies, and whom, at times, they     denounced . The    books and pamphlets that were distributed among the country    people often fell into the hands of the cinovniki    (government employees), or of the popes. Very few of the peasants    knew how to read.    Accordingly, Nihilism had true adherents only among students    of the universities and    higher schools, and among    the middle classes. The peasants and workmen did not understand    its ideals of destruction and of     social     revolution.  <\/p>\n<p>    Propagation of ideas was    soon followed by violence: 4    April, 1866, Tsar Alexander        II narrowly escaped the shot fired by     Demetrius     Karakozov, and in consequence took severe measures    (rescript of 23 May, 1866) against the revolution, making the    universities and the press    objects of special vigilance. To avoid detection and spying,    the Nihilists formed a Central Executive Committee    whose sentences    of death were executed     by \"punishers\". Sub-committees of from    five to ten members were also organized and statutes (12 articles) drawn up. The    applicant for admission was required to consecrate his life to the     cause, sever    ties of family and    friendship, and observe absolute        secrecy. Disobedience      to the head of the association was    punishable with death. The Government, in turn, enacted    stringent laws against    secret societies and brought    hundreds before the tribunals. A notable instance was the    trial, at St. Petersburg     in October, 1877, of 193 persons: 94 went free, 36 were sent    to Siberia ; the    others received light sentences    . One of the accused,     Myskin    by name, who in addressing the     judges  had    characterized the procedure as \"an abominable comedy\", was    condemned to ten years of penal     servitude. Another sensational trial    (April, 1878) was that of Vera Sassulio, who had attempted to    murder General Frepov, chief    of police of St. Petersburg    . Her acquittal was frantically applauded    and she found a refuge in Switzerland. Among the     deeds of    violence committed by     Nihilists may be mentioned the     assassination of    General Mezencev (4 Aug., 1878) and     Prince     Krapotkin    (1879). These events were followed by new repressive measures    on the part of the Government and by numerous     executions. The     Nihilists, however, continued their work, held a    congress at Lipeck in 1879, and (26 Aug.) condemned     Alexander II to    death. An attempt to wreck the train on which the Tsar was    returning to St. Petersburg      proved     abortive.    Another attack on his life was made by Halturin, 5 Feb., 1880.    He was slain on    1 March 1881, by a bomb, thrown by Grineveckij. Six    conspirators, among them Sofia Perovskaja, were tried and     executed. On 14    March, the Zemlja     i Volja     society    issued a proclamation inciting the peasants to     rise , while the    Executive Committee wrote to Alexander III denouncing the abuses    of the bureaucracy and demanding political amnesty, national    representation, and civil liberty.  <\/p>\n<p>    The reign of Alexander III    was guided by the dictates of a reaction, due in great measure    to the counsels of Constantine Pobedonoscev, procurator general of the     Holy Synod. And     Nihilism, which seemed to reach its apogee in the    death of Alexander     II, saw its eclipse. Its theories were too    radical to gain proselytes    among the people. Its assaults were repeated; on 20 March,    1882, General Strelnikov was     assassinated at    Odessa; and Colonel Sudezkin on the 28th of December, 1883; in    1887, an attempt against the life      of the tsar was unsuccessful; in 1890, a    conspiracy against the tsar was discovered at Paris; but these crimes were the    work of the revolution in Russia, rather than of the     Nihilists. The crimes that reddened the soil of    Russia with blood in    constitutional times are due to the revolution of 1905-07. But    the Nihilism, that, as a doctrinal system, proclaimed the    destruction of the old Russia, to establish the foundations    of a new Russia, may be said    to have disappeared; it became fused with     Anarchism  and     Socialism , and    therefore, the history     of the crimes that were multiplied from    1905 on are a chapter     in the history     of political upheavals in Russia, and not in the     history of     Nihilism.       <\/p>\n<p>      APA citation. Palmieri,      A. (1911). Nihilism. In The      Catholic Encyclopedia. New      York: Robert Appleton Company.       <a href=\"http:\/\/www.newadvent.org\/cathen\/11074a.htm\" rel=\"nofollow\">http:\/\/www.newadvent.org\/cathen\/11074a.htm<\/a>    <\/p>\n<p>      MLA citation. Palmieri,      Aurelio. \"Nihilism.\"      The Catholic Encyclopedia.      Vol. 11. New York: Robert Appleton Company,      1911.  <<a href=\"http:\/\/www.newadvent.org\/cathen\/11074a.htm\" rel=\"nofollow\">http:\/\/www.newadvent.org\/cathen\/11074a.htm<\/a>>.    <\/p>\n<p>      Transcription. This      article was transcribed for New Advent by Bob      Mathewson.     <\/p>\n<p>      Ecclesiastical approbation. Nihil Obstat. February 1, 1911. Remy Lafort,      S.T.D., Censor. Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley,      Archbishop of New York.    <\/p>\n<p>      Contact information. The editor of New      Advent is Kevin Knight. My email address is webmaster      at newadvent.org. 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