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Übermensch

The Übermensch (German pronunciation: [ˈʔyːbɐmɛnʃ]; transl. "Overhuman") is a concept in the philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche. In his 1883 book, Thus Spoke Zarathustra (German: Also sprach Zarathustra), Nietzsche has his character Zarathustra posit the Übermensch as a goal for humanity to set for itself. The Übermensch represents a shift from otherworldly Christian values and manifests the grounded human ideal.

In English

In 1896, Alexander Tille made the first English translation of Thus Spoke Zarathustra, rendering Übermensch as "Beyond-Man". In 1909, Thomas Common translated it as "Superman", following the terminology of George Bernard Shaw's 1903 stage play Man and Superman. Walter Kaufmann lambasted this translation in the 1950s for two reasons: first, the failure of the English prefix "super" to capture the nuance of the German über (though in Latin, its meaning of "above" or "beyond" is closer to the German); and second, for promoting misidentification of Nietzsche's concept with the comic-book character Superman. Kaufmann and others preferred to translate Übermensch as "overman". A translation like "superior humans" might better fit the concept of Nietzsche as he unfolds his narrative. Scholars continue to employ both terms, some simply opting to reproduce the German word.[1][2]

The German prefix über can have connotations of superiority, transcendence, excessiveness, or intensity, depending on the words to which it is attached.[3] Mensch refers to a human being, not a male specifically as it is still sometimes erroneously believed. The adjective übermenschlich means super-human: beyond human strength or out of proportion to humanity.[4]

This-worldliness

Nietzsche introduces the concept of the Übermensch in contrast to his understanding of the other-worldliness of Christianity: Zarathustra proclaims the will of the Übermensch to give meaning to life on earth, and admonishes his audience to ignore those who promise other-worldly fulfillment to draw them away from the earth.[5][6] The turn away from the earth is prompted, he says, by a dissatisfaction with life that causes the sufferer to imagine another world which will fulfill his revenge. The Übermensch grasps the earthly world with relish and gratitude.

Zarathustra declares that the Christian escape from this world also required the invention of an immortal soul separate from the earthly body. This led to the abnegation and mortification of the body, or asceticism. Zarathustra further links the Übermensch to the body and to interpreting the soul as simply an aspect of the body.[7]

Death of God and the creation of new values

Zarathustra ties the Übermensch to the death of God. While the concept of God was the ultimate expression of other-worldly values and their underlying instincts, belief in God nevertheless did give meaning to life for a time. "God is dead" means that the idea of God can no longer provide values. Nietzsche refers to this crucial paradigm shift as a reevaluation of values.[8] According to Nietzsche, the moral doctrine of Catholicism had become outdated. With the sole source of values exhausted, the danger of nihilism looms.

Zarathustra presents the Übermensch as the creator of new values to banish nihilism. If the Übermensch acts to create new values within the moral vacuum of nihilism, there is nothing that this creative act would not justify. Alternatively, in the absence of this creation, there are no grounds upon which to criticize nor justify any action, including the particular values created and the means by which they are promulgated.

In order to avoid a relapse into Platonic idealism or asceticism, the creation of these new values cannot be motivated by the same instincts that gave birth to those tables of values. Instead, they must be motivated by a love of this world and of life. Whereas Nietzsche diagnosed the Christian value system as a reaction against life and hence destructive in a sense, the new values which the Übermensch will be responsible for will be life-affirming and creative (see Nietzschean affirmation). Through realizing this new set of values, the Übermensch is perfect because they have mastered all human obstacles.[8]

As a goal

Zarathustra first announces the Übermensch as a goal humanity can set for itself. All human life would be given meaning by how it advanced a new generation of human beings. The aspiration of a woman would be to give birth to an Übermensch, for example; her relationships with men would be judged by this standard.[9]

Zarathustra contrasts the Übermensch with the degenerate last man of egalitarian modernity, an alternative goal which humanity might set for itself. The last man appears only in Thus Spoke Zarathustra, and is presented as a smothering of aspiration antithetical to the spirit of the Übermensch.

According to Rüdiger Safranski, some commentators associate the Übermensch with a program of eugenics.[10] This is most pronounced when considered in the aspect of a goal that humanity sets for itself. The reduction of all psychology to physiology implies, to some, that human beings can be bred for cultural traits. This interpretation of Nietzsche's doctrine focuses more on the future of humanity than on a single cataclysmic individual. There is no consensus regarding how this aspect of the Übermensch relates to the creation of new values.

Re-embodiment of amoral aristocratic values

For Rüdiger Safranski, the Übermensch represents a higher biological type reached through artificial selection and at the same time is also an ideal for anyone who is creative and strong enough to master the whole spectrum of human potential, good and "evil", to become an "artist-tyrant". In Ecce Homo, Nietzsche vehemently denied any idealistic, democratic or humanitarian interpretation of the Übermensch: "The word Übermensch [designates] a type of supreme achievement, as opposed to 'modern' men, 'good' men, Christians, and other nihilists ... When I whispered into the ears of some people that they were better off looking for a Cesare Borgia than a Parsifal, they did not believe their ears."[11] Safranski argues that the combination of ruthless warrior pride and artistic brilliance that defined the Italian Renaissance embodied the sense of the Übermensch for Nietzsche. According to Safranski, Nietzsche intended the ultra-aristocratic figure of the Übermensch to serve as a Machiavellian bogeyman of the modern Western middle class and its pseudo-Christian egalitarian value system.[12]

Relation to the eternal recurrence

The Übermensch shares a place of prominence in Thus Spoke Zarathustra with another of Nietzsche's key concepts: the eternal recurrence of the same. Several interpretations for this fact have been offered.

Laurence Lampert suggests that the eternal recurrence replaces the Übermensch as the object of serious aspiration.[13] This is in part due to the fact that even the Übermensch can appear like an other-worldly hope. The Übermensch lies in the future – no historical figures have ever been Übermenschen – and so still represents a sort of eschatological redemption in some future time.

Stanley Rosen, on the other hand, suggests that the doctrine of eternal return is an esoteric ruse meant to save the concept of the Übermensch from the charge of Idealism.[14] Rather than positing an as-yet unexperienced perfection, Nietzsche would be the prophet of something that has occurred a countless number of times in the past.

Others[who?] maintain that willing the eternal recurrence of the same is a necessary step if the Übermensch is to create new values, untainted by the spirit of gravity or asceticism. Values involve a rank-ordering of things, and so are inseparable from approval and disapproval; yet it was dissatisfaction that prompted men to seek refuge in other-worldliness and embrace other-worldly values. Therefore, it could seem that the Übermensch, in being devoted to any values at all, would necessarily fail to create values that did not share some bit of asceticism. Willing the eternal recurrence is presented as accepting the existence of the low while still recognizing it as the low, and thus as overcoming the spirit of gravity or asceticism.[citation needed]

Still others[who?] suggest that one must have the strength of the Übermensch in order to will the eternal recurrence of the same; that is, only the Übermensch will have the strength to fully accept all of his past life, including his failures and misdeeds, and to truly will their eternal return. This action nearly kills Zarathustra, for example, and most human beings cannot avoid other-worldliness because they really are sick, not because of any choice they made.[citation needed]

Use by the Nazis

 
"Der Übermensch", a German propaganda poster from 1942.

The term Übermensch was used frequently by Hitler and the Nazi regime to describe their idea of a biologically superior Aryan or Germanic master race;[15] a racial version of Nietzsche's Übermensch became a philosophical foundation for Nazi ideas.[16][17] The Nazi notion of the master race also spawned the idea of "inferior humans" (Untermenschen) who should be dominated and enslaved; this term does not originate with Nietzsche, who was critical of both antisemitism and German nationalism. In his final years, Nietzsche began to believe that he was in fact Polish, not German, and was quoted as saying, "I am a pure-blooded Polish nobleman, without a single drop of bad blood, certainly not German blood".[18] In defiance of nationalist doctrines, he claimed that he and Germany were great only because of "Polish blood in their veins",[19] and that he would "[have] all anti-semites shot." Nietzsche died long before Hitler's reign, and it was partly Nietzsche's sister Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche who manipulated her brother's words to accommodate the worldview of herself and her husband, Bernhard Förster, a prominent German nationalist and antisemite.[20] Förster founded the Deutscher Volksverein (German People's League) in 1881 with Max Liebermann von Sonnenberg.[21]

Anarchism

The thought of Nietzsche had an important influence on anarchist authors. Spencer Sunshine writes:

There were many things that drew anarchists to Nietzsche: his hatred of the state; his disgust for the mindless social behavior of 'herds'; his anti-Christianity; his distrust of the effect of both the market and the State on cultural production; his desire for an 'overman' – that is, for a new human who was to be neither master nor slave; his praise of the ecstatic and creative self, with the artist as his prototype, who could say, 'Yes' to the self-creation of a new world on the basis of nothing; and his forwarding of the 'transvaluation of values' as source of change, as opposed to a Marxist conception of class struggle and the dialectic of a linear history.[22]

The influential American anarchist Emma Goldman, in the preface of her famous collection Anarchism and Other Essays, defends both Nietzsche and Max Stirner from attacks within anarchism when she says

The most disheartening tendency common among readers is to tear out one sentence from a work, as a criterion of the writer's ideas or personality. Friedrich Nietzsche, for instance, is decried as a hater of the weak because he believed in the Übermensch. It does not occur to the shallow interpreters of that giant mind that this vision of the Übermensch also called for a state of society which will not give birth to a race of weaklings and slaves.[23]

Sunshine says that the "Spanish anarchists also mixed their class politics with Nietzschean inspiration." Murray Bookchin, in The Spanish Anarchists, describes prominent Catalan CNT member Salvador Seguí as "an admirer of Nietzschean individualism, of the superhome to whom 'all is permitted'". Bookchin, in his 1973 introduction to Sam Dolgoff's The Anarchist Collectives, even describes the reconstruction of society by the workers as a Nietzschean project. Bookchin says that

workers must see themselves as human beings, not as class beings; as creative personalities, not as 'proletarians', as self-affirming individuals, not as 'masses' ... [the] economic component must be humanized precisely by bringing an 'affinity of friendship' to the work process, by diminishing the role of onerous work in the lives of producers, indeed by a total 'transvaluation of values' (to use Nietzsche's phrase) as it applies to production and consumption as well as social and personal life.[22]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ Lampert, Laurence (1986). Nietzsche's Teaching. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
  2. ^ Rosen, Stanley (1995). The Mask of Enlightenment. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  3. ^ Duden Deutsches Universal Wörterbuch A–Z, s.v. über-.
  4. ^ Übermenschlich. PONS.eu Online Dictionary. Retrieved from http://en.pons.eu/german-english/%C3%BCbermenschlich.
  5. ^ Hollingdale, R. J. (1961), page 44 – English translation of Zarathustra's prologue; "I love those who do not first seek beyond the stars for reasons to go down and to be sacrifices: but who sacrifice themselves to the earth, that the earth may one day belong to the Superman"
  6. ^ Nietzsche, F. (1885) – p. 4, Original publication – "Ich liebe die, welche nicht erst hinter den Sternen einen Grund suchen, unterzugehen und Opfer zu sein: sondern die sich der Erde opfern, dass die Erde einst des Übermenschen werde."
  7. ^ Nietzsche, Friedrich (2003). Thus Spoke Zarathustra. London: Penguin Books. p. 61. ISBN 978-0-140-44118-5.
  8. ^ a b Loeb, Paul. "Finding the Übermensch in Nietzsche's Genealogy of Morality". Journal of Nietzsche Studies. 42–4: 77 – via EBSCO Host.
  9. ^ Thus Spoke Zarathustra, I.18; Lampert, Nietzsche's; Rosen, Mask of Enlightenment, 118.
  10. ^ Safranski, Nietzsche, 262-64, 266–68.
  11. ^ Nietzsche, Ecce Homo, Why I Write Such Good Books, §1)
  12. ^ Safranski, Nietzsche, 365
  13. ^ Lampert, Nietzsche's Teaching.
  14. ^ Rosen, The Mask of Enlightenment.
  15. ^ Alexander, Jeffrey (2011). A Contemporary Introduction to Sociology (2nd ed.). Paradigm. ISBN 978-1-61205-029-4.
  16. ^ "Nietzsche inspired Hitler and other killers – Page 7", Court TV Crime Library
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on 2012-03-13. Retrieved 2010-04-19.
  18. ^ Friedrich Nietzsche, "Ecce Homo: How One Becomes What One Is" [1]
  19. ^ Henry Louis Mencken, "The Philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche", T. Fisher Unwin, 1908, reprinted by University of Michigan 2006, pg. 6, [2]
  20. ^ Hannu Salmi (1994). "Die Sucht nach dem germanischen Ideal" (in German).[dead link] Also published in Zeitschrift für Geschichtswissenschaft 6/1994, pp. 485–496
  21. ^ Karl Dietrich Bracher, The German Dictatorship, 1970, pp. 59–60
  22. ^ a b "Spencer Sunshine: "Nietzsche and the Anarchists" (2005)". radicalarchives.org. 18 May 2010.
  23. ^ Goldman, Emma (1911). Anarchism and Other Essays (Second Revised ed.). Mother Earth Publishing Association.

Bibliography

  • Bentley, Eric (1957). A Century of Hero-Worship: A study of the idea of heroism in Carlyle and Nietzsche, with notes on Wagner, Spengler, Stefan George, and D. H. Lawrence (Second, revised and reset ed.). Boston: Beacon Press.
  • Knoll, Manuel (2014) "The Übermensch as Social and Political Task: A Study in the Continuity of Nietzsche’s Political Thought", in: Knoll, Manual and Stocker, Barry (eds.) (2014) Nietzsche as Political Philosopher, Berlin/Boston, pp. 239–266.
  • Lampert, Laurence (1986) Nietzsche's Teaching: An Interpretation of Thus Spoke Zarathustra. New Haven: Yale University Press.
  • Nietzsche, Friedrich (1885) Thus Spoke Zarathustra
  • Nietzsche, Friedrich; Hollingdale, R. J. and Rieu, E.V. (eds.) (1961_ Thus Spoke Zarathustra Penguin Classics: Penguin Publishing (Originally published 1885)
  • Rosen, Stanley (1995) The Mask of Enlightenment: Nietzsche's Zarathustra. New York: Cambridge University Press.
  • Safranski, Rudiger (2002 Nietzsche: A Philosophical Biography. Translated by Shelley Frisch. New York: W.W. Norton & Co.
  • Wilson, Colin (1981) The Outsider. Los Angeles: J.P. Tarcher.

External links

  • Martin Heidegger and Nietzsche’s Overman: Aphorisms on the Attack
  • Human Superhuman Yahoo! Group dedicated to Nietzsche's Overman.
  • Searchable database of Nietzsche Quotes
  • An academic exchange concerning the relationship between Nietzsche and transhumanism

übermensch, german, pronunciation, ˈʔyːbɐmɛnʃ, transl, overhuman, concept, philosophy, friedrich, nietzsche, 1883, book, thus, spoke, zarathustra, german, also, sprach, zarathustra, nietzsche, character, zarathustra, posit, goal, humanity, itself, represents, . The Ubermensch German pronunciation ˈʔyːbɐmɛnʃ transl Overhuman is a concept in the philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche In his 1883 book Thus Spoke Zarathustra German Also sprach Zarathustra Nietzsche has his character Zarathustra posit the Ubermensch as a goal for humanity to set for itself The Ubermensch represents a shift from otherworldly Christian values and manifests the grounded human ideal Contents 1 In English 2 This worldliness 3 Death of God and the creation of new values 4 As a goal 5 Re embodiment of amoral aristocratic values 6 Relation to the eternal recurrence 7 Use by the Nazis 8 Anarchism 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksIn English EditIn 1896 Alexander Tille made the first English translation of Thus Spoke Zarathustra rendering Ubermensch as Beyond Man In 1909 Thomas Common translated it as Superman following the terminology of George Bernard Shaw s 1903 stage play Man and Superman Walter Kaufmann lambasted this translation in the 1950s for two reasons first the failure of the English prefix super to capture the nuance of the German uber though in Latin its meaning of above or beyond is closer to the German and second for promoting misidentification of Nietzsche s concept with the comic book character Superman Kaufmann and others preferred to translate Ubermensch as overman A translation like superior humans might better fit the concept of Nietzsche as he unfolds his narrative Scholars continue to employ both terms some simply opting to reproduce the German word 1 2 The German prefix uber can have connotations of superiority transcendence excessiveness or intensity depending on the words to which it is attached 3 Mensch refers to a human being not a male specifically as it is still sometimes erroneously believed The adjective ubermenschlich means super human beyond human strength or out of proportion to humanity 4 This worldliness EditMain article Faith in the Earth Nietzsche introduces the concept of the Ubermensch in contrast to his understanding of the other worldliness of Christianity Zarathustra proclaims the will of the Ubermensch to give meaning to life on earth and admonishes his audience to ignore those who promise other worldly fulfillment to draw them away from the earth 5 6 The turn away from the earth is prompted he says by a dissatisfaction with life that causes the sufferer to imagine another world which will fulfill his revenge The Ubermensch grasps the earthly world with relish and gratitude Zarathustra declares that the Christian escape from this world also required the invention of an immortal soul separate from the earthly body This led to the abnegation and mortification of the body or asceticism Zarathustra further links the Ubermensch to the body and to interpreting the soul as simply an aspect of the body 7 Death of God and the creation of new values EditFurther information Transvaluation of all values Zarathustra ties the Ubermensch to the death of God While the concept of God was the ultimate expression of other worldly values and their underlying instincts belief in God nevertheless did give meaning to life for a time God is dead means that the idea of God can no longer provide values Nietzsche refers to this crucial paradigm shift as a reevaluation of values 8 According to Nietzsche the moral doctrine of Catholicism had become outdated With the sole source of values exhausted the danger of nihilism looms Zarathustra presents the Ubermensch as the creator of new values to banish nihilism If the Ubermensch acts to create new values within the moral vacuum of nihilism there is nothing that this creative act would not justify Alternatively in the absence of this creation there are no grounds upon which to criticize nor justify any action including the particular values created and the means by which they are promulgated In order to avoid a relapse into Platonic idealism or asceticism the creation of these new values cannot be motivated by the same instincts that gave birth to those tables of values Instead they must be motivated by a love of this world and of life Whereas Nietzsche diagnosed the Christian value system as a reaction against life and hence destructive in a sense the new values which the Ubermensch will be responsible for will be life affirming and creative see Nietzschean affirmation Through realizing this new set of values the Ubermensch is perfect because they have mastered all human obstacles 8 As a goal EditZarathustra first announces the Ubermensch as a goal humanity can set for itself All human life would be given meaning by how it advanced a new generation of human beings The aspiration of a woman would be to give birth to an Ubermensch for example her relationships with men would be judged by this standard 9 Zarathustra contrasts the Ubermensch with the degenerate last man of egalitarian modernity an alternative goal which humanity might set for itself The last man appears only in Thus Spoke Zarathustra and is presented as a smothering of aspiration antithetical to the spirit of the Ubermensch According to Rudiger Safranski some commentators associate the Ubermensch with a program of eugenics 10 This is most pronounced when considered in the aspect of a goal that humanity sets for itself The reduction of all psychology to physiology implies to some that human beings can be bred for cultural traits This interpretation of Nietzsche s doctrine focuses more on the future of humanity than on a single cataclysmic individual There is no consensus regarding how this aspect of the Ubermensch relates to the creation of new values Re embodiment of amoral aristocratic values EditFor Rudiger Safranski the Ubermensch represents a higher biological type reached through artificial selection and at the same time is also an ideal for anyone who is creative and strong enough to master the whole spectrum of human potential good and evil to become an artist tyrant In Ecce Homo Nietzsche vehemently denied any idealistic democratic or humanitarian interpretation of the Ubermensch The word Ubermensch designates a type of supreme achievement as opposed to modern men good men Christians and other nihilists When I whispered into the ears of some people that they were better off looking for a Cesare Borgia than a Parsifal they did not believe their ears 11 Safranski argues that the combination of ruthless warrior pride and artistic brilliance that defined the Italian Renaissance embodied the sense of the Ubermensch for Nietzsche According to Safranski Nietzsche intended the ultra aristocratic figure of the Ubermensch to serve as a Machiavellian bogeyman of the modern Western middle class and its pseudo Christian egalitarian value system 12 Relation to the eternal recurrence EditThe Ubermensch shares a place of prominence in Thus Spoke Zarathustra with another of Nietzsche s key concepts the eternal recurrence of the same Several interpretations for this fact have been offered Laurence Lampert suggests that the eternal recurrence replaces the Ubermensch as the object of serious aspiration 13 This is in part due to the fact that even the Ubermensch can appear like an other worldly hope The Ubermensch lies in the future no historical figures have ever been Ubermenschen and so still represents a sort of eschatological redemption in some future time Stanley Rosen on the other hand suggests that the doctrine of eternal return is an esoteric ruse meant to save the concept of the Ubermensch from the charge of Idealism 14 Rather than positing an as yet unexperienced perfection Nietzsche would be the prophet of something that has occurred a countless number of times in the past Others who maintain that willing the eternal recurrence of the same is a necessary step if the Ubermensch is to create new values untainted by the spirit of gravity or asceticism Values involve a rank ordering of things and so are inseparable from approval and disapproval yet it was dissatisfaction that prompted men to seek refuge in other worldliness and embrace other worldly values Therefore it could seem that the Ubermensch in being devoted to any values at all would necessarily fail to create values that did not share some bit of asceticism Willing the eternal recurrence is presented as accepting the existence of the low while still recognizing it as the low and thus as overcoming the spirit of gravity or asceticism citation needed Still others who suggest that one must have the strength of the Ubermensch in order to will the eternal recurrence of the same that is only the Ubermensch will have the strength to fully accept all of his past life including his failures and misdeeds and to truly will their eternal return This action nearly kills Zarathustra for example and most human beings cannot avoid other worldliness because they really are sick not because of any choice they made citation needed Use by the Nazis Edit Der Ubermensch a German propaganda poster from 1942 The term Ubermensch was used frequently by Hitler and the Nazi regime to describe their idea of a biologically superior Aryan or Germanic master race 15 a racial version of Nietzsche s Ubermensch became a philosophical foundation for Nazi ideas 16 17 The Nazi notion of the master race also spawned the idea of inferior humans Untermenschen who should be dominated and enslaved this term does not originate with Nietzsche who was critical of both antisemitism and German nationalism In his final years Nietzsche began to believe that he was in fact Polish not German and was quoted as saying I am a pure blooded Polish nobleman without a single drop of bad blood certainly not German blood 18 In defiance of nationalist doctrines he claimed that he and Germany were great only because of Polish blood in their veins 19 and that he would have all anti semites shot Nietzsche died long before Hitler s reign and it was partly Nietzsche s sister Elisabeth Forster Nietzsche who manipulated her brother s words to accommodate the worldview of herself and her husband Bernhard Forster a prominent German nationalist and antisemite 20 Forster founded the Deutscher Volksverein German People s League in 1881 with Max Liebermann von Sonnenberg 21 Anarchism EditThe thought of Nietzsche had an important influence on anarchist authors Spencer Sunshine writes There were many things that drew anarchists to Nietzsche his hatred of the state his disgust for the mindless social behavior of herds his anti Christianity his distrust of the effect of both the market and the State on cultural production his desire for an overman that is for a new human who was to be neither master nor slave his praise of the ecstatic and creative self with the artist as his prototype who could say Yes to the self creation of a new world on the basis of nothing and his forwarding of the transvaluation of values as source of change as opposed to a Marxist conception of class struggle and the dialectic of a linear history 22 The influential American anarchist Emma Goldman in the preface of her famous collection Anarchism and Other Essays defends both Nietzsche and Max Stirner from attacks within anarchism when she says The most disheartening tendency common among readers is to tear out one sentence from a work as a criterion of the writer s ideas or personality Friedrich Nietzsche for instance is decried as a hater of the weak because he believed in the Ubermensch It does not occur to the shallow interpreters of that giant mind that this vision of the Ubermensch also called for a state of society which will not give birth to a race of weaklings and slaves 23 Sunshine says that the Spanish anarchists also mixed their class politics with Nietzschean inspiration Murray Bookchin in The Spanish Anarchists describes prominent Catalan CNT member Salvador Segui as an admirer of Nietzschean individualism of the superhome to whom all is permitted Bookchin in his 1973 introduction to Sam Dolgoff s The Anarchist Collectives even describes the reconstruction of society by the workers as a Nietzschean project Bookchin says that workers must see themselves as human beings not as class beings as creative personalities not as proletarians as self affirming individuals not as masses the economic component must be humanized precisely by bringing an affinity of friendship to the work process by diminishing the role of onerous work in the lives of producers indeed by a total transvaluation of values to use Nietzsche s phrase as it applies to production and consumption as well as social and personal life 22 See also EditGreat Man theory Junzi Knight of faith Last man New Man utopian concept New Soviet man Notes from Underground On Heroes Hero Worship amp the Heroic in History Philosopher King Posthuman Randian hero Strange Life of Ivan Osokin Superhuman Supermind integral yoga TranshumanismReferences EditNotes Lampert Laurence 1986 Nietzsche s Teaching New Haven CT Yale University Press Rosen Stanley 1995 The Mask of Enlightenment Cambridge Cambridge University Press Duden Deutsches Universal Worterbuch A Z s v uber Ubermenschlich PONS eu Online Dictionary Retrieved from http en pons eu german english C3 BCbermenschlich Hollingdale R J 1961 page 44 English translation of Zarathustra s prologue I love those who do not first seek beyond the stars for reasons to go down and to be sacrifices but who sacrifice themselves to the earth that the earth may one day belong to the Superman Nietzsche F 1885 p 4 Original publication Ich liebe die welche nicht erst hinter den Sternen einen Grund suchen unterzugehen und Opfer zu sein sondern die sich der Erde opfern dass die Erde einst des Ubermenschen werde Nietzsche Friedrich 2003 Thus Spoke Zarathustra London Penguin Books p 61 ISBN 978 0 140 44118 5 a b Loeb Paul Finding the Ubermensch in Nietzsche s Genealogy of Morality Journal of Nietzsche Studies 42 4 77 via EBSCO Host Thus Spoke Zarathustra I 18 Lampert Nietzsche s Rosen Mask of Enlightenment 118 Safranski Nietzsche 262 64 266 68 Nietzsche Ecce Homo Why I Write Such Good Books 1 Safranski Nietzsche 365 Lampert Nietzsche s Teaching Rosen The Mask of Enlightenment Alexander Jeffrey 2011 A Contemporary Introduction to Sociology 2nd ed Paradigm ISBN 978 1 61205 029 4 Nietzsche inspired Hitler and other killers Page 7 Court TV Crime Library Nietzsche and Hitler Archived from the original on 2012 03 13 Retrieved 2010 04 19 Friedrich Nietzsche Ecce Homo How One Becomes What One Is 1 Henry Louis Mencken The Philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche T Fisher Unwin 1908 reprinted by University of Michigan 2006 pg 6 2 Hannu Salmi 1994 Die Sucht nach dem germanischen Ideal in German dead link Also published in Zeitschrift fur Geschichtswissenschaft 6 1994 pp 485 496 Karl Dietrich Bracher The German Dictatorship 1970 pp 59 60 a b Spencer Sunshine Nietzsche and the Anarchists 2005 radicalarchives org 18 May 2010 Goldman Emma 1911 Anarchism and Other Essays Second Revised ed Mother Earth Publishing Association Bibliography Bentley Eric 1957 A Century of Hero Worship A study of the idea of heroism in Carlyle and Nietzsche with notes on Wagner Spengler Stefan George and D H Lawrence Second revised and reset ed Boston Beacon Press Knoll Manuel 2014 The Ubermensch as Social and Political Task A Study in the Continuity of Nietzsche s Political Thought in Knoll Manual and Stocker Barry eds 2014 Nietzsche as Political Philosopher Berlin Boston pp 239 266 Lampert Laurence 1986 Nietzsche s Teaching An Interpretation of Thus Spoke Zarathustra New Haven Yale University Press Nietzsche Friedrich 1885 Thus Spoke Zarathustra Nietzsche Friedrich Hollingdale R J and Rieu E V eds 1961 Thus Spoke Zarathustra Penguin Classics Penguin Publishing Originally published 1885 Rosen Stanley 1995 The Mask of Enlightenment Nietzsche s Zarathustra New York Cambridge University Press Safranski Rudiger 2002 Nietzsche A Philosophical Biography Translated by Shelley Frisch New York W W Norton amp Co Wilson Colin 1981 The Outsider Los Angeles J P Tarcher External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Ubermensch Look up ubermensch in Wiktionary the free dictionary Martin Heidegger and Nietzsche s Overman Aphorisms on the Attack Human Superhuman Yahoo Group dedicated to Nietzsche s Overman Searchable database of Nietzsche Quotes An academic exchange concerning the relationship between Nietzsche and transhumanism Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ubermensch amp oldid 1154786912, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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