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Everything-and-nothingness serves as the book's dominant motif.
Unless we have a faith we know everything ends with death and nothingness, oblivion.
Thus, he relegates not only privation of being but also subjective nothingness, in the sense of the "field of consciousness," to a type of "relative nothingness".[10] In 1934 Nishida writes: "Reality is being and at the same time nothingness; it is being-and-nothingness [u-soku-mu], nothingness-and-being; it is both subjective and objective, noetic and noematic.
The episode opens with a quote from French existentialist philosopher and writer Jean-Paul Sartre—"I am responsible for everything... except my very responsibility", which was taken from the 1943 treatise Being and Nothingness.
As he writes much later, "absolute nothingness at once transcends everything and is that by which everything is constituted" (NKZ IX, 6).
Finally there is just silence and nothingness.
The first glimpse of death and nothingness.
It is like a Tantric emblem of being and nothingness.
He is "getting further into 'nobody' ideology and nothingness.
It was all wham, bam, merci ma'am, sex and nothingness — and oodles of both.
After reading Satre's "Being and Nothingness" she found herself drawn back to philosophy.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com