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Nietzsche: Philosopher, Psychologist, Antichrist

Nietzsche: Philosopher, Psychologist, Antichrist (1950; second edition 1956; third edition 1968; fourth edition 1974; fifth edition 2013) is a book about the German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche by the philosopher Walter Kaufmann. The book, first published by Princeton University Press, was influential and is considered a classic study. Kaufmann has been credited with helping to transform Nietzsche's reputation after World War II by dissociating him from Nazism, and making it possible for Nietzsche to be taken seriously as a philosopher. However, Kaufmann has been criticized for presenting Nietzsche as an existentialist, and for other details of his interpretation.

Nietzsche: Philosopher, Psychologist, Antichrist
Cover of the second edition
AuthorWalter Kaufmann
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SubjectFriedrich Nietzsche
PublisherPrinceton University Press
Publication date
1950
Media typePrint (Hardcover and Paperback)
Pages532 (2013 edition)
ISBN978-0691160269

Summary edit

Kaufmann writes that he "aims at a comprehensive reconstruction of Nietzsche's thought". He attempts to discredit a "Nietzsche legend" consisting of a variety of false beliefs about Nietzsche, such as the idea that he was a "proto-Nazi". He argues that Nietzsche's sister Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche and the poet Stefan George are among those responsible for the legend, and that the rise of Nazism helped spread misconceptions about Nietzsche. He compares Nietzsche's ideas to those of existentialism, and discusses views of Nietzsche held by the philosophers Martin Heidegger and Karl Jaspers.[1]

Writing in a 1974 appendix, Kaufmann criticizes the philosopher Jürgen Habermas for poor scholarship in his treatment of Nietzsche in Knowledge and Human Interests (1968), noting that Habermas relied on the inadequate edition of Nietzsche's works prepared by Karl Schlechta. In a footnote, Kaufmann claims to have received a confession from minor author David George Plotkin that he had ghostwritten My Sister and I, which was published under Nietzsche's name in 1951.[2]

Publication history edit

Nietzsche: Philosopher, Psychologist, Antichrist was first published by Princeton University Press in 1950. A second edition was published in 1956, a third edition in 1968, and a fourth edition, which was the first paperback printing, in 1974.[3] In 2013 an edition with a new foreword by the philosopher Alexander Nehamas was published.[4]

Reception edit

Reviews edit

Nietzsche: Philosopher, Psychologist, Antichrist received positive reviews from Walter Watson in Ethics,[5] the philosopher Frederick Copleston in Philosophy,[6] and, in Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, from Walter Cerf and the anthropologist H. James Birx.[7][8] It was also reviewed by the historian of ideas Crane Brinton in The Germanic Review,[9] William A. Mueller in Review & Expositor,[10] Ernst Koch in The Modern Language Journal,[11] Chris Terry in Times Higher Education,[12] and by The Review of Metaphysics.[13][14]

Watson considered the book one of the most important works on Nietzsche, crediting Kaufmann with thoroughly developing an "interpretation of Nietzsche's philosophy sharply at variance with the usual ones." He suggested that Kaufmann's suggestion that Socrates was "Nietzsche's idol" to be perhaps his most "startling thesis".[5] Copleston described the book as "a most thoughtful, fair and scholarly treatment of Nietzsche's philosophy", welcoming the fact that it was free from both prejudice against and "sickening adulation" of Nietzsche. He praised Kaufmann for interpreting Nietzsche's statements in terms of both their context and the general development of Nietzsche's thought. However, he suggested that Kaufmann "plays down too much certain aspects of Nietzsche's thought".[6] Cerf described the book as brilliant, and wrote that it caused him to re-examine the generally accepted ideas about Nietzsche he formerly held. He credited Kaufmann with exposing numerous false characterizations of Nietzsche and his views, and saw great merit in Kaufmann's discussion of Nietzsche's relation to other writers and thinkers. However, he questioned Kaufmann's understanding of the will to power, and suggested that Kaufmann overstated the extent to which the prevailing view of Nietzsche was false.[7] Birx described the book as a "classic work", and credited Kaufmann with clearly presenting Nietzsche's life and thought, and carefully interpreting his ideas. Writing in 1977, he commented that it remained an "outstanding and indispensable contribution to Nietzschean scholarship."[8]

Other evaluations edit

The sociologist Philip Rieff called Nietzsche: Philosopher, Psychologist, Antichrist the best book in English on Nietzsche.[15] Kaufmann maintained that he had succeeded in dissociating Nietzsche from Nazism and showing that Nietzsche was a great philosopher.[16] The philosopher Richard Rorty described the book as "path-breaking", but wrote that it had been superseded by the philosopher Richard Schacht's Nietzsche (1983), which was more comprehensive, better organized and more helpful to readers who were new to Nietzsche and needed help in understanding the apparent contradictions in Nietzsche's views.[17] Schacht called the book important and useful,[18] and described it as a classic study through which many English-speaking readers became interested in and acquainted with Nietzsche after World War II. He wrote that it had little competition for nearly two decades and credited Kaufmann with offering "a readable interpretation of Nietzsche's thought along humanistic existentialist and pragmatist lines". However, he criticized Kaufmann's treatment of Human, All Too Human, Daybreak (1881), and The Gay Science (1887), maintaining that Kaufmann incorrectly saw them as part of a period in Nietzsche's thought that was of little intrinsic interest.[19] Schacht has also commented that the book was "enormously influential", but that it was oriented to "strategic considerations, relating to Nietzsche’s rehabilitation in the English-speaking world", and presented Nietzsche as an existentialist. He credited Kaufmann with correctly emphasizing that Nietzsche was a philosopher, in opposition to a once prevailing view that Nietzsche did not deserve to be so considered. He also considered Kaufmann's characterization of Nietzsche as a psychologist apt. However, he questioned Kaufmann's characterization of Nietzsche as an "Antichrist", writing that it reflected Kaufmann's personal loathing of Christianity.[20]

The historian Peter Gay called the book "epoch making". He credited Kaufmann with "correcting horrendous misreadings and pillorying appalling mistranslations", but noted that Kaufmann's conclusions have themselves been subjected to criticism and correction by later scholarship.[21] The historian Roy Porter described the book as "authoritative".[22] Michael Tanner described the book as an "ill-organized transformation of Nietzsche into a liberal humanist", but acknowledged that it "had its place in the history of Nietzsche reception".[23] The political scientist Gregory Bruce Smith credited Kaufmann with introducing Nietzsche to English-speaking audiences and exposing the inadequacy of the Nazi interpretation of the philosopher. He noted that Kaufmann's attempt to describe Nietzsche's philosophy in terms of Anglo-American philosophy helped prepare the way for many similar attempts. However, he criticized Kaufmann for ignoring political and moral aspects of Nietzsche's views and his treatment of the doctrine of the eternal recurrence.[24]

The intellectual historian Jennifer Ratner-Rosenhagen described the book as a "monumental study". She credited Kaufmann with transforming the interpretation of Nietzsche in the postwar United States and establishing him as "a canonical thinker in the Western tradition". She wrote that the book made Kaufmann himself a "dominant figure in transatlantic Nietzsche studies from 1950 until his death in 1980", and that while he has been typically credited by philosophers and historians with saving Nietzsche's reputation by disassociating him from Nazism, they argue that he did so by "denaturing Nietzsche's philosophy of power and narrowly transforming him into an existentialist." In her view, Kaufmann "took a much more dramatic step by extending the scope of Nietzsche's philosophy, demonstrating how his ideas resonated with but also transcended the dominant philosophies of the day."[25]

David Pickus argued that the book should be understood in relation to Jaspers's Nietzsche: An Introduction to the Understanding of His Philosophical Activity (1935), arguing that despite some differences, such as their views of the meaning of nihilism, they had much in common. He credited Kaufmann with helping make it possible to "identify irresponsible examples of Nietzsche scholarship" and initiating "a key debate about the possibility of using Nietzsche for moral “transfiguration,” particularly in historical, social, and artistic realms."[26] Mark Alfano wrote that Kaufmann popularized the idea that Nietzsche was a virtue theorist in ethics. He maintained that Kaufmann was mistaken to argue that Nietzsche's concept of the overman is related to the Aristotelian conception of megalopsychia or "great-souled man", following the philosopher Bernd Magnus's view that there is only a "superficial connection" between the two.[27] Nehamas described the book as a major turning point in Nietzsche's posthumous reputation. He credited Kaufmann with reversing the popular image of Nietzsche as a totalitarian anti-semite, making it possible for philosophers to take Nietzsche seriously, and ensuring that Nietzsche's works have a prominent place in the philosophy sections of modern bookstores. He observed that Kaufmann's view that Nietzsche was an heir to rationalism rather than a Romantic critic of the Enlightenment is the most controversial element of his interpretation. He concluded that there is some truth to the charge that Kaufmann, in trying to reverse the "legend" surrounding Nietzsche, went too far in the opposite direction, over-emphasizing the more acceptable aspects of Nietzsche and minimizing the problematic or disturbing aspects, but that this does not detract from Kaufmann's accomplishment. In his view, Kaufmann's selective reinterpretation of Nietzsche may have been necessary to make it possible for Nietzsche to be read seriously by both philosophers and the general public, and the book repays careful study.[28]

The philosopher Robert B. Pippin wrote that despite the "relative success" of the book, "the reception of Nietzsche in the Anglo-American philosophical community was still in its initial, hesitant stages" even as late as 1985.[29]

References edit

  1. ^ Kaufmann 2013, pp. xxi, 4, 8–9, 74–75, 89–93, 420.
  2. ^ Kaufmann 2013, pp. 452–453, 503.
  3. ^ Kaufmann 2013, p. iv.
  4. ^ Nehamas 2013, pp. v–xxiv.
  5. ^ a b Watson 1951, pp. 231–232.
  6. ^ a b Copleston 1952, pp. 367–368.
  7. ^ a b Cerf 1951, pp. 287–291.
  8. ^ a b Birx 1977, pp. 432–433.
  9. ^ Brinton 1951, pp. 239–240.
  10. ^ Mueller 1952, pp. 219–221.
  11. ^ Koch 1953, pp. 59–60.
  12. ^ Terry 2010, p. 49.
  13. ^ J. 1957, pp. 721–722.
  14. ^ S. 1970, p. 557.
  15. ^ Rieff 1961, p. 413.
  16. ^ Kaufmann 2013, p. xi.
  17. ^ Rorty 1983, p. 619.
  18. ^ Schacht 1985, p. xvi.
  19. ^ Schacht 1996, pp. xiii–xiv, xxix.
  20. ^ Schacht 2012, pp. 69–70.
  21. ^ Gay 1986, p. 430.
  22. ^ Porter 1989, p. 246.
  23. ^ Tanner 1994, p. 82.
  24. ^ Smith 1996, p. 69.
  25. ^ Ratner-Rosenhagen 2006, pp. 239–269.
  26. ^ Pickus 2007, pp. 5–24.
  27. ^ Alfano 2013, pp. 767–790.
  28. ^ Nehamas 2013, pp. v–ix.
  29. ^ Pippin 2014, pp. 118–133.

Bibliography edit

Books
Journals
  • Alfano, Mark (2013). "The Most Agreeable of All Vices: Nietzsche as Virtue Epistemologist". British Journal for the History of Philosophy. 21 (4): 767–790. doi:10.1080/09608788.2012.733308. S2CID 170732758.  – via EBSCO's Academic Search Complete (subscription required)
  • Birx, H. James (1977). "Nietzsche: Philosopher, Psychologist, Antichrist. Fourth Edition". Philosophy and Phenomenological Research. 37 (3). doi:10.2307/2106678. JSTOR 2106678.
  • Brinton, Crane (1951). "W. A. Kaufmann, Nietzsche: Philosopher, Psychologist, Antichrist". The Germanic Review: Literature, Culture, Theory. 26 (3): 239–240. doi:10.1080/19306962.1951.11786562.
  • Cerf, Walter (1951). "Kaufmann's Nietzsche: Philosopher, Psychologist, Antichrist [Book Review]". Philosophy and Phenomenological Research. 12 (2). doi:10.2307/2103485. JSTOR 2103485.
  • Copleston, Frederick C. (1952). "Nietzsche: Philosopher, Psychologist, Antichrist. By Walter A. Kaufmann. (Princeton University Press: London, Geoffrey Cumberlege. 1950. Pp. xi + 409. Price 40s.)". Philosophy. 27 (103): 367–368. doi:10.1017/S0031819100034380.
  • J., F. D. (1957). "Nietzsche: Philosopher, Psychologist, Anti-Christ [Book Review]". The Review of Metaphysics. 10 (4).
  • Koch, Ernst (1953). "Nietzsche (Book)". The Modern Language Journal. 37 (1).  – via EBSCO's Academic Search Complete (subscription required)
  • Mueller, William A. (1952). "Book Review: Nietzsche: Philosopher, Psychologist, Antichrist". Review & Expositor. 49 (2).
  • Pickus, David (2007). "Wishes of the Heart: Walter Kaufmann, Karl Jaspers, and Disposition in Nietzsche Scholarship". The Journal of Nietzsche Studies. 33: 5–24. doi:10.1353/nie.2007.0010. S2CID 170804362.  – via EBSCO's Academic Search Complete (subscription required)
  • Pippin, Robert (2014). "Self-Interpreting Selves: Comments on Alexander Nehamas's Nietzsche: Life as Literature". Journal of Nietzsche Studies. 45 (2).
  • Ratner-Rosenhagen, Jennifer (2006). "Dionysian Enlightenment: Kaufmann's 'Nietzsche' in historical perspective". Modern Intellectual Curiosity. 3 (2).  – via EBSCO's Academic Search Complete (subscription required)
  • Rorty, Richard (1983). "Nietzsche (Book Review)". The Times Literary Supplement (4185).  – via EBSCO's Academic Search Complete (subscription required)
  • S., O. H. (1970). "Nietzsche: Philosopher, Psychologist, Antichrist [Book Review]". The Review of Metaphysics. 23 (3).
  • Schacht, Richard (2012). "Translating Nietzsche: The Case of Kaufmann". The Journal of Nietzsche Studies. 43.  – via EBSCO's Academic Search Complete (subscription required)
  • Terry, Chris (2010). "Nietzsche: Philosopher, Psychologist, Antichrist". Times Higher Education (1930).  – via EBSCO's Academic Search Complete (subscription required)
  • Watson, Walter (1951). "Nietzsche: Philosopher, Psychologist, Antichrist". Ethics. 61 (231). doi:10.1086/290780.  – via EBSCO's Academic Search Complete (subscription required)

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Nietzsche Philosopher Psychologist Antichrist 1950 second edition 1956 third edition 1968 fourth edition 1974 fifth edition 2013 is a book about the German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche by the philosopher Walter Kaufmann The book first published by Princeton University Press was influential and is considered a classic study Kaufmann has been credited with helping to transform Nietzsche s reputation after World War II by dissociating him from Nazism and making it possible for Nietzsche to be taken seriously as a philosopher However Kaufmann has been criticized for presenting Nietzsche as an existentialist and for other details of his interpretation Nietzsche Philosopher Psychologist AntichristCover of the second editionAuthorWalter KaufmannCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishSubjectFriedrich NietzschePublisherPrinceton University PressPublication date1950Media typePrint Hardcover and Paperback Pages532 2013 edition ISBN978 0691160269 Contents 1 Summary 2 Publication history 3 Reception 3 1 Reviews 3 2 Other evaluations 4 References 4 1 BibliographySummary editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it March 2019 Kaufmann writes that he aims at a comprehensive reconstruction of Nietzsche s thought He attempts to discredit a Nietzsche legend consisting of a variety of false beliefs about Nietzsche such as the idea that he was a proto Nazi He argues that Nietzsche s sister Elisabeth Forster Nietzsche and the poet Stefan George are among those responsible for the legend and that the rise of Nazism helped spread misconceptions about Nietzsche He compares Nietzsche s ideas to those of existentialism and discusses views of Nietzsche held by the philosophers Martin Heidegger and Karl Jaspers 1 Writing in a 1974 appendix Kaufmann criticizes the philosopher Jurgen Habermas for poor scholarship in his treatment of Nietzsche in Knowledge and Human Interests 1968 noting that Habermas relied on the inadequate edition of Nietzsche s works prepared by Karl Schlechta In a footnote Kaufmann claims to have received a confession from minor author David George Plotkin that he had ghostwritten My Sister and I which was published under Nietzsche s name in 1951 2 Publication history editNietzsche Philosopher Psychologist Antichrist was first published by Princeton University Press in 1950 A second edition was published in 1956 a third edition in 1968 and a fourth edition which was the first paperback printing in 1974 3 In 2013 an edition with a new foreword by the philosopher Alexander Nehamas was published 4 Reception editReviews edit Nietzsche Philosopher Psychologist Antichrist received positive reviews from Walter Watson in Ethics 5 the philosopher Frederick Copleston in Philosophy 6 and in Philosophy and Phenomenological Research from Walter Cerf and the anthropologist H James Birx 7 8 It was also reviewed by the historian of ideas Crane Brinton in The Germanic Review 9 William A Mueller in Review amp Expositor 10 Ernst Koch in The Modern Language Journal 11 Chris Terry in Times Higher Education 12 and by The Review of Metaphysics 13 14 Watson considered the book one of the most important works on Nietzsche crediting Kaufmann with thoroughly developing an interpretation of Nietzsche s philosophy sharply at variance with the usual ones He suggested that Kaufmann s suggestion that Socrates was Nietzsche s idol to be perhaps his most startling thesis 5 Copleston described the book as a most thoughtful fair and scholarly treatment of Nietzsche s philosophy welcoming the fact that it was free from both prejudice against and sickening adulation of Nietzsche He praised Kaufmann for interpreting Nietzsche s statements in terms of both their context and the general development of Nietzsche s thought However he suggested that Kaufmann plays down too much certain aspects of Nietzsche s thought 6 Cerf described the book as brilliant and wrote that it caused him to re examine the generally accepted ideas about Nietzsche he formerly held He credited Kaufmann with exposing numerous false characterizations of Nietzsche and his views and saw great merit in Kaufmann s discussion of Nietzsche s relation to other writers and thinkers However he questioned Kaufmann s understanding of the will to power and suggested that Kaufmann overstated the extent to which the prevailing view of Nietzsche was false 7 Birx described the book as a classic work and credited Kaufmann with clearly presenting Nietzsche s life and thought and carefully interpreting his ideas Writing in 1977 he commented that it remained an outstanding and indispensable contribution to Nietzschean scholarship 8 Other evaluations edit The sociologist Philip Rieff called Nietzsche Philosopher Psychologist Antichrist the best book in English on Nietzsche 15 Kaufmann maintained that he had succeeded in dissociating Nietzsche from Nazism and showing that Nietzsche was a great philosopher 16 The philosopher Richard Rorty described the book as path breaking but wrote that it had been superseded by the philosopher Richard Schacht s Nietzsche 1983 which was more comprehensive better organized and more helpful to readers who were new to Nietzsche and needed help in understanding the apparent contradictions in Nietzsche s views 17 Schacht called the book important and useful 18 and described it as a classic study through which many English speaking readers became interested in and acquainted with Nietzsche after World War II He wrote that it had little competition for nearly two decades and credited Kaufmann with offering a readable interpretation of Nietzsche s thought along humanistic existentialist and pragmatist lines However he criticized Kaufmann s treatment of Human All Too Human Daybreak 1881 and The Gay Science 1887 maintaining that Kaufmann incorrectly saw them as part of a period in Nietzsche s thought that was of little intrinsic interest 19 Schacht has also commented that the book was enormously influential but that it was oriented to strategic considerations relating to Nietzsche s rehabilitation in the English speaking world and presented Nietzsche as an existentialist He credited Kaufmann with correctly emphasizing that Nietzsche was a philosopher in opposition to a once prevailing view that Nietzsche did not deserve to be so considered He also considered Kaufmann s characterization of Nietzsche as a psychologist apt However he questioned Kaufmann s characterization of Nietzsche as an Antichrist writing that it reflected Kaufmann s personal loathing of Christianity 20 The historian Peter Gay called the book epoch making He credited Kaufmann with correcting horrendous misreadings and pillorying appalling mistranslations but noted that Kaufmann s conclusions have themselves been subjected to criticism and correction by later scholarship 21 The historian Roy Porter described the book as authoritative 22 Michael Tanner described the book as an ill organized transformation of Nietzsche into a liberal humanist but acknowledged that it had its place in the history of Nietzsche reception 23 The political scientist Gregory Bruce Smith credited Kaufmann with introducing Nietzsche to English speaking audiences and exposing the inadequacy of the Nazi interpretation of the philosopher He noted that Kaufmann s attempt to describe Nietzsche s philosophy in terms of Anglo American philosophy helped prepare the way for many similar attempts However he criticized Kaufmann for ignoring political and moral aspects of Nietzsche s views and his treatment of the doctrine of the eternal recurrence 24 The intellectual historian Jennifer Ratner Rosenhagen described the book as a monumental study She credited Kaufmann with transforming the interpretation of Nietzsche in the postwar United States and establishing him as a canonical thinker in the Western tradition She wrote that the book made Kaufmann himself a dominant figure in transatlantic Nietzsche studies from 1950 until his death in 1980 and that while he has been typically credited by philosophers and historians with saving Nietzsche s reputation by disassociating him from Nazism they argue that he did so by denaturing Nietzsche s philosophy of power and narrowly transforming him into an existentialist In her view Kaufmann took a much more dramatic step by extending the scope of Nietzsche s philosophy demonstrating how his ideas resonated with but also transcended the dominant philosophies of the day 25 David Pickus argued that the book should be understood in relation to Jaspers s Nietzsche An Introduction to the Understanding of His Philosophical Activity 1935 arguing that despite some differences such as their views of the meaning of nihilism they had much in common He credited Kaufmann with helping make it possible to identify irresponsible examples of Nietzsche scholarship and initiating a key debate about the possibility of using Nietzsche for moral transfiguration particularly in historical social and artistic realms 26 Mark Alfano wrote that Kaufmann popularized the idea that Nietzsche was a virtue theorist in ethics He maintained that Kaufmann was mistaken to argue that Nietzsche s concept of the overman is related to the Aristotelian conception of megalopsychia or great souled man following the philosopher Bernd Magnus s view that there is only a superficial connection between the two 27 Nehamas described the book as a major turning point in Nietzsche s posthumous reputation He credited Kaufmann with reversing the popular image of Nietzsche as a totalitarian anti semite making it possible for philosophers to take Nietzsche seriously and ensuring that Nietzsche s works have a prominent place in the philosophy sections of modern bookstores He observed that Kaufmann s view that Nietzsche was an heir to rationalism rather than a Romantic critic of the Enlightenment is the most controversial element of his interpretation He concluded that there is some truth to the charge that Kaufmann in trying to reverse the legend surrounding Nietzsche went too far in the opposite direction over emphasizing the more acceptable aspects of Nietzsche and minimizing the problematic or disturbing aspects but that this does not detract from Kaufmann s accomplishment In his view Kaufmann s selective reinterpretation of Nietzsche may have been necessary to make it possible for Nietzsche to be read seriously by both philosophers and the general public and the book repays careful study 28 The philosopher Robert B Pippin wrote that despite the relative success of the book the reception of Nietzsche in the Anglo American philosophical community was still in its initial hesitant stages even as late as 1985 29 References edit Kaufmann 2013 pp xxi 4 8 9 74 75 89 93 420 Kaufmann 2013 pp 452 453 503 Kaufmann 2013 p iv Nehamas 2013 pp v xxiv a b Watson 1951 pp 231 232 a b Copleston 1952 pp 367 368 a b Cerf 1951 pp 287 291 a b Birx 1977 pp 432 433 Brinton 1951 pp 239 240 Mueller 1952 pp 219 221 Koch 1953 pp 59 60 Terry 2010 p 49 J 1957 pp 721 722 S 1970 p 557 Rieff 1961 p 413 Kaufmann 2013 p xi Rorty 1983 p 619 Schacht 1985 p xvi Schacht 1996 pp xiii xiv xxix Schacht 2012 pp 69 70 Gay 1986 p 430 Porter 1989 p 246 Tanner 1994 p 82 Smith 1996 p 69 Ratner Rosenhagen 2006 pp 239 269 Pickus 2007 pp 5 24 Alfano 2013 pp 767 790 Nehamas 2013 pp v ix Pippin 2014 pp 118 133 Bibliography edit BooksGay Peter 1986 The Bourgeois Experience Victoria to Freud Volume II The Tender Passion New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 503741 3 Kaufmann Walter 2013 Nietzsche Philosopher Psychologist Antichrist Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 16026 9 Nehamas Alexander 2013 Foreword Nietzsche Philosopher Psychologist Antichrist Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 16026 9 Porter Roy 1989 A Social History of Madness Stories of the Insane London Weidenfeld and Nicolson ISBN 0 297 79571 6 Rieff Philip 1961 Freud The Mind of the Moralist Garden City New York Anchor Books Schacht Richard 1996 Introduction Human All Too Human A Book for Free Spirits Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 56704 1 Schacht Richard 1985 Nietzsche New York Routledge ISBN 978 0415090711 Smith Gregory Bruce 1996 Nietzsche Heidegger and the Transition to Postmodernity Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 76340 8 Tanner Michael 1994 Nietzsche New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 287680 5 JournalsAlfano Mark 2013 The Most Agreeable of All Vices Nietzsche as Virtue Epistemologist British Journal for the History of Philosophy 21 4 767 790 doi 10 1080 09608788 2012 733308 S2CID 170732758 via EBSCO s Academic Search Complete subscription required Birx H James 1977 Nietzsche Philosopher Psychologist Antichrist Fourth Edition Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 37 3 doi 10 2307 2106678 JSTOR 2106678 Brinton Crane 1951 W A Kaufmann Nietzsche Philosopher Psychologist Antichrist The Germanic Review Literature Culture Theory 26 3 239 240 doi 10 1080 19306962 1951 11786562 Cerf Walter 1951 Kaufmann s Nietzsche Philosopher Psychologist Antichrist Book Review Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 12 2 doi 10 2307 2103485 JSTOR 2103485 Copleston Frederick C 1952 Nietzsche Philosopher Psychologist Antichrist By Walter A Kaufmann Princeton University Press London Geoffrey Cumberlege 1950 Pp xi 409 Price 40s Philosophy 27 103 367 368 doi 10 1017 S0031819100034380 J F D 1957 Nietzsche Philosopher Psychologist Anti Christ Book Review The Review of Metaphysics 10 4 Koch Ernst 1953 Nietzsche Book The Modern Language Journal 37 1 via EBSCO s Academic Search Complete subscription required Mueller William A 1952 Book Review Nietzsche Philosopher Psychologist Antichrist Review amp Expositor 49 2 Pickus David 2007 Wishes of the Heart Walter Kaufmann Karl Jaspers and Disposition in Nietzsche Scholarship The Journal of Nietzsche Studies 33 5 24 doi 10 1353 nie 2007 0010 S2CID 170804362 via EBSCO s Academic Search Complete subscription required Pippin Robert 2014 Self Interpreting Selves Comments on Alexander Nehamas s Nietzsche Life as Literature Journal of Nietzsche Studies 45 2 Ratner Rosenhagen Jennifer 2006 Dionysian Enlightenment Kaufmann s Nietzsche in historical perspective Modern Intellectual Curiosity 3 2 via EBSCO s Academic Search Complete subscription required Rorty Richard 1983 Nietzsche Book Review The Times Literary Supplement 4185 via EBSCO s Academic Search Complete subscription required S O H 1970 Nietzsche Philosopher Psychologist Antichrist Book Review The Review of Metaphysics 23 3 Schacht Richard 2012 Translating Nietzsche The Case of Kaufmann The Journal of Nietzsche Studies 43 via EBSCO s Academic Search Complete subscription required Terry Chris 2010 Nietzsche Philosopher Psychologist Antichrist Times Higher Education 1930 via EBSCO s Academic Search Complete subscription required Watson Walter 1951 Nietzsche Philosopher Psychologist Antichrist Ethics 61 231 doi 10 1086 290780 via EBSCO s Academic Search Complete 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