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Philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche

Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900) developed his philosophy during the late 19th century. He owed the awakening of his philosophical interest to reading Arthur Schopenhauer's Die Welt als Wille und Vorstellung (The World as Will and Representation, 1819, revised 1844) and said that Schopenhauer was one of the few thinkers that he respected, dedicating to him his essay Schopenhauer als Erzieher (Schopenhauer as Educator), published in 1874 as one of his Untimely Meditations.

Friedrich Nietzsche, in circa 1875

Since the dawn of the 20th century, the philosophy of Nietzsche has had great intellectual and political influence around the world. Nietzsche applied himself to such topics as morality, religion, epistemology, poetry, ontology, and social criticism. Because of Nietzsche's evocative style and his often outrageous claims, his philosophy generates passionate reactions running from love to disgust. Nietzsche noted in his autobiographical Ecce Homo that his philosophy developed and evolved over time, so interpreters have found it difficult to relate concepts central to one work to those central to another, for example, the thought of the eternal recurrence features heavily in Also sprach Zarathustra (Thus Spoke Zarathustra), but is almost entirely absent from his next book, Beyond Good and Evil. Added to this challenge is the fact that Nietzsche did not seem concerned to develop his thought into a system, even going so far as to disparage the attempt in Beyond Good and Evil.

Common themes in his thought can, however, be identified and discussed. His earliest work emphasized the opposition of Apollonian and Dionysian impulses in art, and the figure of Dionysus continued to play a role in his subsequent thought. Other major currents include the will to power, the claim that God is dead, the distinction between master and slave moralities, and radical perspectivism. Other concepts appear rarely, or are confined to one or two major works, yet are considered centerpieces of Nietzschean philosophy, such as the Übermensch and the thought of eternal recurrence. His later works involved a sustained attack on Christianity and Christian morality, and he seemed to be working toward what he called the transvaluation of all values (Umwertung aller Werte). While Nietzsche is often associated in the public mind with fatalism and nihilism, Nietzsche himself viewed his project as the attempt to overcome the pessimism of Arthur Schopenhauer.

Nihilism and God is dead Edit

Nietzsche conceptualizes his diagnostic with the statement "God is dead", which first appeared in his work in section 108 of The Gay Science, again in section 125 with the parable of "The Madman", and even more famously in Thus Spoke Zarathustra. The statement, typically placed in quotation marks,[1] accentuated the crisis that Nietzsche argued that Western culture must face and transcend in the wake of the irreparable dissolution of its traditional foundations, moored largely in classical Greek philosophy and Christianity.[2]

In aphorisms 55 and 56 of Beyond Good and Evil, Nietzsche talks about the ladder of religious cruelty that suggests how Nihilism emerged from the intellectual conscience of Christianity. Nihilism is sacrificing the meaning "God" brings into our lives; in aphorism 56, Nietzsche explains how to emerge from the utter meaninglessness of life by reaffirming it through his idea of Eternal Return.

Master morality and slave morality Edit

The Wille zur Macht and the thought of eternal recurrence Edit

Since Martin Heidegger at least, the concepts of the will to power (Wille zur Macht), of Übermensch and of the thought of Eternal Recurrence have been inextricably linked. According to Heidegger's interpretation, one can not be thought without the others. During Nazi Germany, Alfred Baeumler attempted to separate the concepts, claiming that the Eternal Recurrence was only an "existential experience" that, if taken seriously, would endanger the possibility of a "will to power"— deliberately misinterpreted, by the Nazis, as a "will for domination".[3] Baeumler attempted to interpret the "will to power" along Social Darwinist lines, an interpretation refuted by Heidegger in his 1930s courses on Nietzsche.

While Heidegger's reading has become predominant among commentators, some have criticized it: Mazzino Montinari by declaring that it was forging the figure of a "macroscopical Nietzsche", alien to all of his nuances.[4]

The will to power Edit

"Will to power" (Wille zur Macht) is the name of a concept created by Nietzsche; the title of a projected book which he finally decided not to write; and the title of a book compiled from his notebooks and published posthumously and under suspicious circumstances by his sister and Peter Gast.

The work consists of four separate books, entitled "European Nihilism", "Critique of the Highest Values Hitherto", "Principles of a New Evaluation", and "Discipline and Breeding". Within these books there are some 1067 small sections, usually the shape of a circle, and sometimes just a key phrase—such as his opening comments in the 1st monstrosity of the preface: "Of what is great one must either be silent or speak with greatness. With greatness—that means cynically and with innocence."[5]

Despite Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche's falsifications (highlighted in 1937 by Georges Bataille[3] and proved in the 1960s by the complete edition of Nietzsche's posthumous fragments by Mazzino Montinari and Giorgio Colli), his notes, even in the form given by his sister, remain a key insight into the philosophy of Nietzsche, and his unfinished transvaluation of all values. An English edition of Montinari & Colli's work is forthcoming (it has existed for decades in Italian, German and French).

The “Will to power” also contains the provisional outline to Nietzsche’s aesthetics as a whole. This has been described as his attempt at a physiology of art where he established the concept of artistic rapture (Rausch).[6] This phenomenon, which is considered a countermovement to nihilism, is for the Nietzsche the force that brings forth not only the form but the fundamental condition for the enhancement of life.[6]

Übermensch Edit

 
Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche

Throughout his works, Nietzsche writes about possible great human beings or "higher types" who serve as an example of people who would follow his philosophical ideas. These ideal human beings Nietzsche calls by terms such as "the philosopher of the future", "the free spirit", "the tragic artist" and "the Übermensch". They are often described by Nietzsche as being highly creative, courageous, powerful and extremely rare individuals. He compares such individuals with certain historical figures which have been very rare and often have not been considered geniuses, such as Napoleon, Goethe and Beethoven. His main example of a genius exemplary culture is Archaic Greece.

In Thus Spoke Zarathustra, Nietzsche posits the Übermensch (often translated as "overman" or "superman") as a goal that humanity can set for itself. While interpretations of Nietzsche's overman vary wildly, here are a few of his quotes from Thus Spoke Zarathustra:[citation needed]

I teach you the Übermensch. Man is something that shall be overcome. What have you done to overcome him? ... All beings so far have created something beyond themselves; and do you want to be the ebb of this great flood, and even go back to the beasts rather than overcome man? What is the ape to man? A laughingstock or established embarrassment. And man shall be that to Übermensch: a laughingstock or painful embarrassment. You have made your way from worm to man, and much in you is still worm. Once you were apes, and even now, too, man is more ape than any ape...The Übermensch is the meaning of the earth. Let your will say: the Übermensch shall be the meaning of the earth ... Man is a rope, tied between beast and Übermensch—a rope over an abyss ... what is great in man is that he is a bridge and not an end...

Amor fati and the eternal recurrence Edit

 
Rock on Lake Silvaplana where Nietzsche conceived of the idea of Eternal return.

Nietzsche may have encountered the idea of the Eternal Recurrence in the works of Heinrich Heine, who speculated that one day a person would be born with the same thought-processes as himself, and that the same applied to every other individual. Although he admired Heine he never mentions him in connection with this idea.[7] Nietzsche put forth his theory in The Gay Science and developed in Thus Spoke Zarathustra. Schopenhauer directly influenced this theory.[8]

Nietzsche's view on eternal return is similar to that of Hume: "the idea that an eternal recurrence of blind, meaningless variation—chaotic, pointless shuffling of matter and law—would inevitably spew up worlds whose evolution through time would yield the apparently meaningful stories of our lives. This idea of eternal recurrence became a cornerstone of his nihilism, and thus part of the foundation of what became existentialism."[9] It is unclear whether Nietzsche viewed his idea as a scientific hypothesis or just a thought experiment whose purpose is to test individual's affirmation of life. He had an interest in natural sciences and read about related topics in cosmology and thermodynamics, but most of his scientific arguments remained unpublished. According to Lou Salome, who is considered an unreliable source, Nietzsche had plans to study natural sciences in Vienna or Paris in order to prove his idea.[10] "Nietzsche viewed his argument for eternal recurrence as a proof of the absurdity or meaninglessness of life, a proof that no meaning was given to the universe from on high."[11]

What if a demon were to creep after you one day or night, in your loneliest loneness, and say: "This life which you live and have lived, must be lived again by you, and innumerable times more. And mere will be nothing new in it, but every pain and every joy and every thought and every sigh—everything unspeakably small and great in your life—must come again to you, and in the same sequence and series ... The eternal hourglass will again and again be turned—and you with it, dust of dust!" Would you not throw yourself down and curse the demon who spoke to you thus? Or have you once experienced a tremendous moment, in which you would answer him: "Thou art a god, and never have I heard anything more divine!" [The Gay Science (1882), p. 341 (passage translated in Danto 1965, p. 210).]

Social and political views Edit

Nietzsche's political ideas were variously interpreted as aristocratic radicalism,[12] Bonapartism,[13] individualist anarchism, and more controversially as proto-fascism[14][15] (see: Nietzsche and fascism) with some authors describing him as apolitical, anti-political or political sceptic.[16] Today two positions have dominated the literature: one attributes to Nietzsche a commitment to aristocratic forms of social ordering, while the other denies that Nietzsche has any political philosophy at all.[16] Walter Kaufmann put forward the view that the powerful individualism expressed in his writings would be disastrous if introduced to the public realm of politics. Georges Bataille argued in 1937, in the Acéphale review, that Nietzsche's thoughts were too free to be instrumentalized by any political movement. In "Nietzsche and Fascists," he argued against such instrumentalization, by the left or the right, declaring that Nietzsche's aim was to by-pass the short timespan of modern politics, and its inherent lies and simplifications, for a greater historical timespan.[3]

Much of Nietzsche's contempt of politics is directed towards modern democratic, parliamentarian, party politics and especially mass movements such as socialism and antisemitic populism. He contrasted such mundane, petty politics with his idea of "great politics", and often praised individual politicians such as Napoleon. He interpreted Napoleon as an autocratic genius who stood above conventional morality, invalidated the French revolution, restored colonial slavery,[17] and tried to revive the aristocratic spirit of Roman Empire, paganism and Renaissance, and not as a progressive revolutionary leader like some of his contemporaries.[18][19][13] Despite his proclaimed contempt for daily politics and culture of newspaper reading, which was a common attitude of conservatives who saw the mass publishing as subversive,[20] Nietzsche did comment on contemporary political events in his letters and notes. He was deeply disturbed by the Paris Commune,[21] he initially supported Bismarck but became disappointed by his later social policies and détente toward socialists and Catholics,[22] he was worried about the rise of Adolf Stoecker, and after death of Emperor Friedrich III he became worried about the future of free speech in Germany.[23]

He was against equality of rights[24][25][26][27] and defended slavery, believing that it is a necessary condition for supporting an upper class which could devote itself to more sophisticated activities.[28][26][29] In his letters and personal notes he ridiculed American abolitionists such as Harriet Beecher Stowe,[30] and wrote disparagingly of German attempts, led by the Kaiser and Christian activists, to end slavery in colonial Africa (leading to Brussels Conference Act of 1890).[31] Nietzsche claimed that the upper classes are overreacting and projecting their own sensitivity to the suffering of slaves and poor industrial workers who are supposedly toughened by hardship, less sensitive to pain and contended with their life.[32] However, while he wrote positively about ancient and colonial slavery, he did not leave any clear comments suggesting that he actually advocated reintroduction of slavery in modern Europe.[33] In fact, he proposed that the rebellious European workers could be pacified by shifting some of their burden to Asian and African populations.[34] He saw the contemporary revolutionary and emancipatory movements as the most recent part of the long-term social and cultural decay as he noted:

Continuation of Christianity by the French Revolution. Rousseau is the seducer: he again removes the chains of woman, who from then on is represented in an ever more interesting way, as suffering. Then the slaves and Mistress Beecher-Stowe. Then the poor and the workers. Then the vicious and the sick — all that is brought to the fore.[35]

Nietzsche extoled aristocratic societies and military elites claiming that they create higher quality of culture. He often linked noble classes with ancient barbarian conquerors.[36] His thoughts were usually oriented to the future aristocracy, not so much to the preservation of existing monarchical order, which he saw as exhausted and thing of the past.[37] He saw the last expression of noble values, French seventeenth and eighteenth century, lost after the fall of Napoleon.[38] Much of his thoughts on the subject are unsystematic and he did not leave specific instructions about how this new aristocratic class should be selected and elevated to the ruling positions in society. However, he was quite clear that he used the term "aristocracy" in the traditional sense, meaning noble birth and hereditary hierarchy; he ridiculed the idea of "aristocracy of the spirit" popular among intellectuals as a democratic subversion.[39][40] The term "aristocratic radicalism" was first used by Georg Brandes to which Nietzsche responded:

The expression Aristocratic Radicalism, which you employ, is very good. It is... the cleverest thing I have yet read about myself. How far this mode of thought has carried me already, how far it will carry me yet – I am almost afraid to imagine.[41]

In the context of his criticism of morality and Christianity, expressed, among others works, in On the Genealogy of Morals and in The Antichrist, Nietzsche often criticized humanitarian feelings, detesting how pity and altruism were ways for the "weak" to take power over the "strong". To the "ethics of compassion" (Mitleid, "shared suffering") exposed by Schopenhauer,[42] Nietzsche opposed an "ethics of friendship" or of "shared joy" (Mitfreude).[43]

Individualism and liberalism Edit

Nietzsche often referred to the common people who participated in mass movements and shared a common mass psychology as "the rabble", or "the herd". Although he valued individualism his general political views included many hierarchical and authoritarian ideas which are usually incompatible with modern individualistic ideologies. He often used the term "individualism" to describe a certain set of personality traits - such as originality, nonconformism and egoism - not to describe the political system based on institutions that guarantee wide individual rights and freedoms. According to Nietzsche, who often held pre-Socratic Greece and ancient Rome as the social model, individualism and freedom should be reserved only for the aristocratic minority, while discouraged among the subjugated masses who don’t have the natural capacity for it. Such freedom is not given to all people as a natural right but is earned by the strong individual through struggle, and is closely connected to the power that he can exercise over others.[44] Arguably, such elitist individualism can be interpreted as similar to early liberalism since many authors and politicians at the time supported stratified society with low social mobility, racial exclusion, colonial conquests and even slavery.[45] It is also comparable with conservative, aristocratic liberalism of Alexis de Tocqueville, Hippolyte Taine, Jacob Burckhardt (Nietzsche corresponded with the latter two) although his overall philosophy is much more radical.[46]

In his opposition to Christian tradition and modern philosophy Nietzsche also criticized the concepts of soul, subject and atomism (that is, the existence of an atomic subject at the foundation of everything, found for example in social contract theories). He considered the individual subject as a complex of instincts and wills-to-power, just as any other organization. He claimed that idea of subject, whether in metaphysical or scientific sense, leads to the belief in essential equality of people and is politically used to justify notion of human rights, therefore calling René Descartes the "grandfather of French revolution".[47]

Beginning in the 1890s some scholars have attempted to link his philosophy with Max Stirner's radical individualism of The Ego and Its Own (1844). The question remained pendent. Recently there was unearthed further, still circumstantial, evidence clarifying his relationship with Stirner.[48] In any case, few philosophers really consider Nietzsche an "individualist" thinker. Against the strictly "egoist" perspective adopted by Stirner, Nietzsche concerned himself with the "problem of the civilization" and the necessity to give humanity a goal and a direction to its history, making him, in this sense, a very political thinker.[49][50] In The Will to Power he described individualism as a part of the process that leads to the ultimate goal of establishing the order of rank:

Individualism is a modest and still unconscious form of will to power; with it a single human unit seems to think it sufficient to free himself from the preponderating power of society (or of the State or Church). He does not set himself up in opposition as a personality, but merely as a unit; he represents the rights of all other individuals as against the whole. That is to say, he instinctively places himself on a level with every other unit: what he combats he does not combat as a person, but as a representative of units against a mass. (...) When one has reached a certain degree of independence, one always longs for more: separation in proportion to the degree of force; the individual is no longer content to regard himself as equal to everybody, he actually seeks for his peer—he makes himself stand out from others. Individualism is followed by a development in groups and organs; correlative tendencies join up together and become powerfully active: now there arise between these centres of power, friction, war, a reconnoitring of the forces on either side, reciprocity, understandings, and the regulation of mutual services. Finally, there appears an order of rank.[51]

While Nietzsche shared some of the liberal ideas and values such as individualism, private property,[52][53] economic inequality,[52][53] suspicion of state power,[54] and dismissed political criticisms of exploitation[55] his philosophy does not have much in common with classical liberalism and capitalism. He wrote that liberalism is synonymous with mediocrity and believed also that it leads to cultural decay.[56][57] He also decried "liberal optimism" of political economy, the idea that economic development and technological innovation should solve social problems; even though it was more attainable and moderate than socialist utopianism, he still saw the goal of mass happiness and comfort as unworthy and philistine.[58] He dismissed captains of the industry as vulgar and even blamed them for the rise of socialism,[59] claiming that rise of the capitalist class disrupted the order of rank and that workers would not rebel if they were able to serve the true, natural aristocrats instead of capitalists whom they do not see as superiors but just as ordinary people who got lucky with money.[59] Bourgeoisie, with its love of practical work and educational, intellectual specialization, is unable to create aristocratic culture of leisure and sophistication.[60] He praised Napoleon for reviving the warlike, aristocratic spirit which triumphed over the "modern ideas", over "the businessman and the philistine".[18] His attitudes were particularly negative in his earlier works. He claimed that luxurious goods should be heavily taxed[61] and that economy should be regulated so that people cannot get rich quickly by means of financial speculation.[52] In Human, All Too Human, the work of his middle period, he wrote that "youthful Jew of the stock exchange is the most repugnant invention of the whole human race".[62] However, he later significantly changed his attitude and noted that Jewish financiers should play a prominent role in the new united Europe.[63] In his later writings he even particularly praised Jewish capitalists as powerful, natural allies against Christianity, socialism and nationalism.[64] In December 1888, his last month of sanity he wrote in a notebook:

It will be a good idea to found societies everywhere so as to deliver into my hands at the right time a million disciples. It is particularly important to recruit first of all officers and Jewish bankers. Both together represent the will to power. If I ask who my natural allies are I see that above all they are officers. With military instincts in the body one cannot be a Christian... In the same way, Jewish bankers are my natural allies, as the only international power which, by origin and instinct, binds nations together after accursed interest-politics has made the arrogance and egoism of nations into a duty.[65]

According to Domenico Losurdo, in his later works Nietzsche concluded that the industrial society which he disliked is here to stay and the return to warlike, landed aristocracy is unrealistic. He also developed some sympathies to the diligent, competent bourgeoisie, seeing the wealthy capitalist class as necessary allies in the struggle against both Adolf Stoecker's Christian movement and social democracy which were gaining influence in Germany. To solve the conflict he hesitantly accepted the idea that aristocracy should absorb the emerging capitalist class while retaining the cultural supremacy. Even the vulgar commercial activities could be transformed by the aristocracy in a similar way that hunting was raised from practical subsistence into a ceremonial, luxurious activity.[66] Don Dombowsky argues that Nietzsche’s criticisms of capitalism are mostly cultural and moderate; compared with the usual ideological points of political economy and views on class conflict, he is still consistently aligned with the capital against the worker movement which he saw as a fundamental threat to his hierarchical vision of society.[67] William Altman also interprets Nietzsche’s criticism of capitalist class as the advice to cultivate better public image and thus legitimize the social hierarchy.[68]

Criticism of socialism and labour movement Edit

Negative attitude towards socialism and proletarian movement was one of the most consistent themes in Nietzsche's philosophy. He wrote negatively of socialism as early as 1862[69] and his criticisms of socialism are often harsher than those of other doctrines.[70] He was critical of French revolution and was deeply disturbed by the Paris Commune which he saw as a destructive insurrection of the vulgar lower classes that made him feel "annihilated for several days".[21] In his later writings he especially praised contemporary French authors, most of whom were right-wing thinkers whose works expressed strongly negative response to the Commune and its political heritage.[71] As opposed to the urban working class, Nietzsche praised the peasantry as an example of health and natural nobility.[72][73] Beyond only abstract, cultural opposition, he regularly wrote against specific social policies of the German Empire that aimed to improve the position and welfare of the workers.[74][75] He was particularly against democratic, universal education, calling it "barbarism" and "a prelude to communism" because it pointlessly arouses the masses who are "born to serve and obey".[76]

He called socialism "the tyranny of the meanest and the dumbest"[53] and claimed that it attracts inferior people who are motivated by ressentiment. A lot of his criticism is linked to his view of Christianity; he called socialism "residue of Christianity and of Rousseau in the de-Christianised world".[77] He described Rousseau as "moral tarantula", his ideas as "idiocies and half-truths" that were born out of self-contempt and inflamed vanity, claimed that he held a grudge against the ruling classes and by moralizing he tried to blame them for his own misery.[78][79][80] He named him together with Savonarola, Martin Luther, Robespierre and Saint-Simon as fanatics, "sick intellects" who influence masses and stand in opposition to strong spirits.[81] He similarly called Eugen Dühring an "apostle of revenge", "moral braggart" and his ideas "indecent and revolting moralistic gibberish".[82] He saw egalitarian and peaceful socialist community as essentially antagonistic to life; in On the Genealogy of Morality he wrote:

A legal system conceived of as sovereign and universal, not as a means in the struggle of power complexes, but as a means against all struggles in general, something along the lines of Dühring's communist cliché in which each will must be considered as equal to every will, that would be a principle hostile to life, a destroyer and dissolver of human beings, an assassination attempt on the future of human beings, a sign of exhaustion, a secret path to nothingness.[83]

Nietzsche believed that if socialist goals are achieved society would be leveled down and conditions for superior individuals and higher culture would disappear.[84] In Twilight of the Idols he wrote:

‘Equality’, a certain definite process of making everybody uniform, which only finds its expression in the theory of equal rights, is essentially bound up with a declining culture: the chasm between man and man, class and class, the multiplicity of types, the will to be one’s self and to distinguish one’s self – that, in fact, which I call the pathos of distance is proper to all strong ages.[85]

Unlike many conservative and liberal authors of the era Nietzsche didn’t justify the dismal conditions of the working class purely as an unfortunate price that had to be paid for the leisured, cultured lifestyle of the upper-class minority, but saw them as an expression of natural, caste order which is necessary for both the rich and the poor. He claimed that even if reduction of work and granting more leisure to the masses were economically feasible they would have a negative social, cultural effect because people of common nature are incapable of enjoying aristocratic idleness.[86] Highest society imagined by socialists would be lowest according to his order of rank.[87] In The Antichrist he wrote:

Whom do I hate most heartily among the rabbles of today? The rabble of Socialists, the apostles to the Chandala, who undermine the workingman's instincts, his pleasure, his feeling of contentment with his petty existence—who make him envious and teach him revenge.... Wrong never lies in unequal rights; it lies in the assertion of "equal" rights.... What is bad? But I have already answered: all that proceeds from weakness, from envy, from revenge. — The anarchist and the Christian have the same ancestry....[88]

In The Will to Power he further elaborated similarity between Christianity and socialism:

The Gospel is the announcement that the road to happiness lies open for the lowly and the poor—that all one has to do is to emancipate one's self from all institutions, traditions, and the tutelage of the higher classes. Thus Christianity is no more than the typical teaching of Socialists. Property, acquisitions, mother-country, status and rank, tribunals, the police, the State, the Church, Education, Art, militarism: all these are so many obstacles in the way of happiness, so many mistakes, snares, and devil's artifices, on which the Gospel passes sentence—all this is typical of socialistic doctrines. Behind all this there is the outburst, the explosion, of a concentrated loathing of the "masters,"—the instinct which discerns the happiness of freedom after such long oppression.... (Mostly a symptom of the fact that the inferior classes have been treated too humanely, that their tongues already taste a joy which is forbidden them.... It is not hunger that provokes revolutions, but the fact that the mob have contracted an appetite en mangeant....) [89]

Nietzsche never mentioned Karl Marx or Friedrich Engels by name, and it is unclear whether he was acquainted with their ideas. However, they are more or less extensively quoted and discussed in eleven books that Nietzsche owned in his personal library and in one of them he underlined Marx's name.[90] In socialist countries Nietzsche was usually considered a disreputable reactionary, burgeois, imperialist or fascist philosopher. His books were unavailable to the public in the Soviet Union since 1923. They were placed on the list of forbidden books and were kept in libraries only for restricted, authorized use. Until 1988 they were not translated or reprinted, and in the years between 1938 and 1988 only ten dissertations on Nietzsche were defended.[91] Western Leftist writers, led by French postwar intellectuals, largely rehabilitated Nietzsche on the Left and have proposed ways of using Nietzschean theory in what has become known as the "politics of difference" — particularly in formulating theories of political resistance and sexual and moral difference.

Race, class and eugenics Edit

Nietzsche often made racist, classist remarks and used racialist explanations of cultural and political phenomena.[92] Some of his later admirers often tried to reinterpret, downplay or ignore this part of his thought, but because of preponderance of explicit comments in Nietzsche's work, such approach remains controversial.[93] There are also controversies about some newer translations of Nietzsche which seem to be misleadingly euphemistic when dealing with more loaded terms that Nietzsche used.[93] Nietzsche used the term race in two different meanings, for ethnic groups and social classes.

He believed that race and class are identical[94] in the sense that nations are composed of different races and that upper classes are usually of superior nature to the lower.[95] He was fascinated by the restrictive caste system of India and Laws of Manu which he saw as promoting eugenics.[96][97] Such ideas about aristocracy and race were especially popularized in 19th century by Arthur de Gobineau. It is unclear whether Nietzsche was directly influenced by Gobineau but he was probably aware of his work because of numerous similarities and because Richard Wagner was an admirer who wrote an introductory essay on his work.[98] Excerpts from Gobineau were frequently published in the Wagnerian journal Bayreuther Blätter which Nietzsche read.[99]

Despite his opposition to Darwinism, he was very interested in the works of Francis Galton, although he had only partial knowledge of his works since they were not translated.[93] Like Nietzsche, Galton also praised ancient Greeks claiming that their customs, partially unconsciously, promoted eugenic outcomes and population control.[100] Nietzsche admired the Megaran poet Theognis who rallied against marriages between the aristocracy and common people.[101] He proposed numerous eugenic policies such as medical examinations before marriage, discouragement of celibacy among successful and healthy individuals, tax breaks, and also castration of criminals and mentally ill.[102] Along with his opposition to Darwinism, he also disagreed with Social Darwinism, especially Herbert Spencer’s ideas of progress, but Nietzsche’s views on welfare policies, social conflict and inequality are not much different from the ones usually held by Social Darwinists.[103] He didn't share the evolutionary optimism of the Darwinists, believing that current trends in European society point to degeneration of the species rather than to survival of the fittest. Some of his views were influenced by the works of Charles Féré and Théodule-Armand Ribot.[104]

One of the themes that Nietzsche often used to explain social phenomena was mixing of the races. He believed that mixed race persons were usually inferior because of the conflicting, incompatible instincts that exist in them, and advocated racial purification.[105][106] He used Socrates as a negative example of miscegenation,[107][108] although he claimed that it can also occasionally create energetic individuals such as Alcibiades and Caesar.[106] He blamed the mixing of the races on the decay of the European society and culture,[94] but also credited it with the creation of modern men of the "historical sense."[109]

He also used the term race in the ethnic meaning and in this sense he supported the idea of mixing specific races which he considered to be of high quality (for example he proposed that Germans should mix with Slavs[63]). Despite occasional reverence for ancient Germanic conquests and his identification of upper class with blond, dolichocephalic type,[95] Nietzsche's ideas do not have much in common with Nordicism. He occasionally also praised non-European cultures, such as Moors, Incas and Aztecs, claiming that they were superior to their European conquerors.[110][111] In The Dawn of Day he also proposed mass immigration of Chinese to Europe claiming that they would bring "modes of living and thinking, which would be found very suitable for industrious ants" and help "imbue this fretful and restless Europe with some of their Asiatic calmness and contemplation, and—what is perhaps most needful of all—their Asiatic stability."[112] While Nietzsche’s thoughts on the subject are often vague, he did occasionally use very harsh language, calling for "the annihilation of the decadent races" and "millions of deformed".[113]

Jews, nationalism and European identity Edit

"The whole problem of the Jews exists only in nation states, for here their energy and higher intelligence, their accumulated capital of spirit and will, gathered from generation to generation through a long schooling in suffering, must become so preponderant as to arouse mass envy and hatred. In almost all contemporary nations, therefore – in direct proportion to the degree to which they act up nationalistically – the literary obscenity of leading the Jews to slaughter as scapegoats of every conceivable public and internal misfortune is spreading."
Friedrich Nietzsche, 1886, [MA 1 475][114]

Nietzsche made numerous comments on Jews and Judaism, both positive and negative, and his attitudes changed significantly during his life, from fairly common criticism of Jews to more complex and specific perspective. There are also controversies about translations of his work which sometimes try to tone down his more inflammatory remarks or disguise some of the attitudes he expresses.[115]

He blamed Judaism for spreading the idea of monotheism which puts a perfect God so high above humans that they all seem small before him and essentially equal among themselves.[116] But he also praised parts of the Old Testament and early Jewish history. He claimed that Judaism went through a negative, moralistic-pessimistic transformation during the Babylonian captivity. By losing their native aristocratic class, subjugated Jews, now composed only of the priestly caste and the Chandala, became resentful toward their foreign masters and generalized such feelings into a religious ressentiment of any type of aristocracy, thus inventing the Master–slave morality.[117][118] Christianity was further, even more radical development of the same idea that went to undermine the aristocratic Roman Empire - and was later followed by Protestant Reformation and French revolution. Although Nietzsche didn’t put blame on cultural decay exclusively on Jews, like some biological anti-Semites, he did note their decisive historical influence. Nietzsche even claimed that anti-Semites are also the product of Jewish spirit, since with their Christian, populist and socialist ideas, they exhibit the same slave morality and ressentiment that were historically pioneered by the Jews.[119] In that sense his negative attitude towards the Jews goes even further than the usual anti-Semitism of his era. He also held many common stereotypes about Jews being physically inferior, shrewd, egotistical, exploitative, dishonest and manipulative, although he didn’t necessarily consider all these characteristics negative.[120]

He also often praised Jewish intelligence and achievements.[121] He had a very negative attitude toward contemporary anti-Semitic movements, which were usually based on Christian, nationalist and economic animosity towards Jews. In Germany the anti-Semitic movement at the time was closely connected to the Christian socialism of Adolf Stoecker. His biographers, Domenico Losurdo and Julian Young, describe Nietzsche as being primarily against such populist, economic antisemitism, seeing it as motivated purely by resentment of Jewish success and money.[122][123] In a letter he wrote that "anti-Semitism appears to be exactly like the struggle against the rich and the means previously employed to become rich".[124] He praised old, wealthy Jewish families as a sort of refined Jewish aristocracy, seeing them as allies in the fight against socialism, while remaining scornful towards the masses of Jewish workers, artisans and merchants, who were often poor immigrants from Eastern Europe, perceived as uncouth and politically subversive.[125] His most negative comments are directed against Jewish prophets and priests due to their historical influence on the West; he saw the leftist intellectuals as their modern version.[126] Regarding the wealthy Jewish financiers he even proposed assimilationist policy of eugenic marriages with Prussian nobility.[127]

Nietzsche broke with his publisher in 1886 because of his opposition to his anti-Semitic stances; he was already dissatisfied because Schmeitzner's political engagement in Anti-Jewish Alliance was the reason for delayed publication of Zarathustra.[128] His rupture with Richard Wagner, expressed in The Case of Wagner and Nietzsche contra Wagner, both of which he wrote in 1888, had much to do with Wagner's endorsement of pan-Germanism and anti-Semitism — and also of his rallying to Christianity. In a March 29, 1887 letter to Theodor Fritsch, Nietzsche mocked anti-Semites, Fritsch, Eugen Dühring, Wagner, Ebrard, Wahrmund, and the leading advocate of pan-Germanism, Paul de Lagarde, who would become, along with Wagner and Houston Chamberlain, the main official influences of Nazism.[3] This 1887 letter to Fritsch ended by: "And finally, how do you think I feel when the name Zarathustra is mouthed by anti-Semites?"[129] He admitted that his Thus Spoke Zarathustra was read and positively reviewed almost only by Wagnerians and anti-Semites who also unsuccessfully tried to win him to their cause.[130] However, his philosophy actually started to attract a significant number of Jewish admirers and he established correspondence with some of them.[131]

 
Peter Gast would "correct" Nietzsche's writings even after the philosopher's breakdown, and hence without his approval.

Nietzsche heavily criticized his sister and her husband, Bernhard Förster, speaking harshly against the "anti-Semitic canaille":

I've seen proof, black on white, that Herr Dr. Förster has not yet severed his connection with the anti-Semitic movement ... Since then I've had difficulty coming up with any of the tenderness and protectiveness I've so long felt toward you. The separation between us is thereby decided in really the most absurd way. Have you grasped nothing of the reason why I am in the world? ... Now it has gone so far that I have to defend myself hand and foot against people who confuse me with these anti-Semitic canaille; after my own sister, my former sister, and after Widemann more recently have given the impetus to this most dire of all confusions. After I read the name Zarathustra in the anti-Semitic Correspondence my forbearance came to an end. I am now in a position of emergency defense against your spouse's Party. These accursed anti-Semite deformities shall not sully my ideal!!

to his sister Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche (December 1887)

Nietzsche became very critical of pan-Germanism and nationalism after the Prussian victory over France. Although he participated in the war as a volunteer, he soon became disillusioned by the new German Empire, seeing the subsequent development in German culture as vulgar and triumphalist.[132] Instead he praised European identity and integration,[62] predicting that developments in trade, industry and internal migrations will weaken the nations and result in a mixed European race and a unified continent that will play a more dominant role in the world politics.[133] He deeply disliked Hohenzollern dynasty, especially due to their social policies accommodative toward the working class.[134] In Ecce Homo (1888), Nietzsche criticized the "German nation" and its "will to power (to Empire, to Reich)", thus underscoring an easy misinterpretation of the Wille zur Macht, the conception of Germans as a "race", and the "anti-Semitic way of writing history", or of making "history conform to the German Empire", and stigmatized "nationalism, this national neurosis from which Europe is sick", this "small politics".[135] Later in his life he even started to identify as Polish, believing that his ancestors were Polish noblemen who migrated to Germany[136] (both his Polish and aristocratic ancestry claims are usually rejected by biographers; see: Citizenship, nationality and ethnicity). Nietzsche's cosmopolitan proclamations are not without its detractors who point out that he retained a lifelong focus on German society and culture, with his last writings before insanity being about German politics.[137] His hostile and mocking attitude towards Germany is sometimes also traced to his personal frustrations, the break-up of his friendship with Wagner and the very poor reception of his work in Germany.[138]

Nietzsche had a positive view of Slavic people, but expressed mixed attitudes towards Russian Empire, describing it in his earlier works as a hostile Asian power, while later praising the Tsarist autocracy, the opposition towards the modernity, and the positive reception of his works in the aristocratic circles in Saint Petersburg.[139] In Ecce Homo he particularly praised French culture as superior to all others, especially German.[140] However, his negative attitudes and national criticisms were not reserved only for Germany. In his last years he made negative comments on cultural trends in French society and denounced many leading intellectuals of the era such as Hugo, Sand, Zola, Goncourt brothers, Sainte-Beuve, Baudelaire, Comte and Renan.[141] His most consistently negative attitudes were towards England, which he described as nation of shopkeepers, philistines, moral hypocrites and puritanical Christians. Disregarding the British colonial pre-eminence and the ability to escape revolutionary upheavals of the Continent, which were often admired among reactionary aristocratic authors of the era, Nietzsche’s ire was mostly driven by British philosophical traditions which he denounced as utilitarian, altruistic, focused on lowly, plebeian goals of comfort and happiness. He held the same negative attitude toward the United States.[142]

Nietzsche was an advocate of European colonialism, seeing it as a way to solve the overpopulation problem, pacify the rebellious working class, and rejuvenate the decadent European culture. European expansion and global domination were part of his great politics. He noted that in colonies Europeans often act as ruthless conquerors, unconstrained by the Christian morality and democratic values, which he saw as a liberated, healthy instinct.[143] He had even shown some initial interest for his brother-in-law’s colonial project in Paraguay, Nueva Germania, despite the huge political differences between them, and for a while in mid 1880s also considered migrating to a Swiss colony in Oaxaca, Mexico.[144] He was especially interested in climate differences, believing that Northern Europe is an unhealthy habitat which stunts cultural development; similar ideas, often very radical and unrealistic, were also held by Wagner and many of his followers.[145]

Nietzsche titled aphorism 377 in the fifth book of The Gay Science (published in 1887) "We who are homeless" (Wir Heimatlosen),[146] in which he criticized pan-Germanism and patriotism and called himself a "good European". In the second part of this aphorism, which according to Georges Bataille contained the most important parts of Nietzsche's political thought, the thinker of the Eternal Return stated:

No, we do not love humanity; but on the other hand we are not nearly "German" enough, in the sense in which the word "German" is constantly being used nowadays, to advocate nationalism and race hatred and to be able to take pleasure in the national scabies of the heart and blood poisoning that now leads the nations of Europe to delimit and barricade themselves against each other as if it were a matter of quarantine. For that we are too open-minded, too malicious, too spoiled, also too well-informed, too "traveled": we far prefer to live on mountains, apart, "untimely", in past or future centuries, merely in order to keep ourselves from experiencing the silent rage to which we know we should be condemned as eyewitnesses of politics that are desolating the German spirit by making it vain and that is, moreover, petty politics:—to keep its own creation from immediately falling apart again, is it not finding it necessary to plant it between two deadly hatreds? must it not desire the eternalization of the European system of a lot of petty states? ... We who are homeless are too manifold and mixed racially and in our descent, being "modern men", and consequently do not feel tempted to participate in the mendacious racial self-admiration and racial indecency that parades in Germany today as a sign of a German way of thinking and that is doubly false and obscene among the people of the "historical sense". We are, in one word—and let this be our word of honor!— good Europeans, the heirs of Europe, the rich, oversupplied, but also overly obligated heirs of thousands of years of European spirit: as such, we have also outgrown Christianity and are averse to it, and precisely because we have grown out of it, because our ancestors were Christians who in their Christianity were uncompromisingly upright; for their faith they willingly sacrificed possessions and position, blood and fatherland. We—do the same. For what? For our unbelief? For every kind of unbelief? No, you know better than that, my friends! The hidden Yes in you is stronger than all Nos and Maybes that afflict you and your age like a disease; and when you have to embark on the sea, you emigrants, you, too, are compelled to this by— a faith! ...[147]

Bataille was one of the first to denounce the deliberate misinterpretation of Nietzsche carried out by Nazis, among them Alfred Baeumler. In January 1937 he dedicated an issue of Acéphale, titled "Reparations to Nietzsche", to the theme "Nietzsche and the Fascists.[3]" There, he called Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche "Elisabeth Judas-Förster," recalling Nietzsche's declaration: "To never frequent anyone who is involved in this bare-faced fraud concerning races."[3] Domenico Losurdo ridicules the idea that an "intellectually rather mediocre woman" managed to manipulate and derail interpretations of Nietzsche for decades and inspire political movements encompassing millions of people. He dismisses such idea as unsustainable conspiracy theory noting that "there is no shortage of unsettling and horrific passages in Nietzsche’s writings".[148] Due to his complex views and occasionally contradictory comments on these matters, the idea of Nietzsche as a predecessor to Nazism and fascism remains controversial and debated among scholars (see: Nietzsche and fascism). Owing largely to the writings of Walter Kaufmann and French postwar philosophers, Nietzsche's reputation improved and today he usually is not linked to Nazism as he was in the past. Detractors note that authors such as Houston Stewart Chamberlain and Arthur de Gobineau also had complex views on matters of politics, nation and race that were incompatible with Nazi ideology on numerous points, but their influence on the Third Reich is still not dismissed as a misunderstanding.[149]

War and military values Edit

Nietzsche made numerous comments in which he denounces pacifism, praises war, military values and conquests. Some of them could be read as metaphoric, but in others he quite explicitly refers to specific policies or military actions and commanders. Although he volunteered for the Franco-Prussian war, he soon became critical of Prussian militarism, mostly because of his disillusionment in German culture and national politics, but didn't renounce militarism in general.[150] He praised Napoleon for reviving the military spirit which he saw as defense against the decadent rule of "modern ideas", "businessmen and philistines".[18] In The Will to Power he further elaborated:

When the instincts of a society ultimately make it give up war and renounce conquest, it is decadent: it is ripe for democracy and the rule of shopkeepers. In the majority of cases, it is true, assurances of peace are merely stupefying draughts.[151]

He opposed the "rule of mandarins", solving conflicts by arbitration instead of war,[152] and encouraged the military development of Europe.[153] He proposed conscription, polytechnic military education and the idea that all men of higher classes should be reserve officers in addition to their civilian jobs.[154] In The Will to Power he wrote:

The maintenance of the military State is the last means of adhering to the great tradition of the past; or, where it has been lost, to revive it. By means of it the superior or strong type of man is preserved, and all institutions and ideas which perpetuate enmity and order of rank in States, such as national feeling, protective tariffs, etc., may on that account seem justified.[155]

However, most of his praise is reserved for aristocratic "warriors" rather than common, plebeian "soldiers". He expressed some doubts about arming and training the conscripted proletarian masses, seeing them as a potential revolutionary threat.[156] He also worried that modern wars among European nations might have dysgenic effect by sacrificing too many strong, brave individuals.[157]

Views on women Edit

Nietzsche's views on women have served as a magnet for controversy, beginning during his life and continuing to the present. He frequently made remarks in his writing that some view as misogynistic. He stated in Twilight of the Idols (1888) "Women are considered profound. Why? Because we never fathom their depths. But women aren't even shallow."[158][non-primary source needed]

Relation to Schopenhauer Edit

According to Santayana, Nietzsche considered his philosophy to be a correction of Schopenhauer's philosophy. In his Egotism in German Philosophy,[159] Santayana listed Nietzsche's antithetical reactions to Schopenhauer:

The will to live would become the will to dominate; pessimism founded on reflection would become optimism founded on courage; the suspense of the will in contemplation would yield to a more biological account of intelligence and taste; finally in the place of pity and asceticism (Schopenhauer's two principles of morals) Nietzsche would set up the duty of asserting the will at all costs and being cruelly but beautifully strong. These points of difference from Schopenhauer cover the whole philosophy of Nietzsche.

These emendations show how Schopenhauer's philosophy was not a mere initial stimulus for Nietzsche, but formed the basis for much of Nietzsche's thinking.

Von Hartmann suggested that Schopenhauer was the only philosopher who has been systematically studied by Nietzsche.[160]

Relation to Philipp Mainländer Edit

 
Philipp Mainländer

The work of Philipp Mainländer had an important impact on Nietzsche's intellectual development and made him distance himself from the philosophy of Schopenhauer.[161][162] In Mainländer's 200 pages long criticism of Schopenhauer's philosophy, Mainländer argues against a metaphysical will behind the world, and argues instead for a real multiplicity of wills that struggle with each other.

Mainländer is perhaps best understood as a negative influence on Nietzsche.[163] Mainländer took the pessimism of Schopenhauer to its ultimate conclusion and ended his own life. However, he did never recommend or argue for suicide – this is a common misconception – and aims to motivate those who abhor the world back to an active life with self-chosen goals.[164] Mainländer is a hedonist[165] and the goal of his ethics to indicate how man can reach the highest happiness.[166] If life is worthless, then this must be used to attain a state of complete fearlessness.[167]

Both Nietzsche and Mainländer owed their philosophical awakening to The World as Will and Representation, they disliked the popular successor of Schopenhauer, Eduard von Hartmann, both championed the individual and rejected traditional values, both proclaimed that God is dead (Mainländer had popularized the theme before Nietzsche[168]). Their mental collapse has also drawn comparisons.[169]

Relation to Søren Kierkegaard Edit

Nietzsche knew little of the 19th-century philosopher Søren Kierkegaard.[170][171] Georg Brandes, a Danish philosopher, wrote to Nietzsche in 1888 asking him to study the works of Kierkegaard, to which Nietzsche replied that he would.[172][nb 1]

Recent research, however, suggests that Nietzsche was exposed to the works of Kierkegaard through secondary literature. Aside from Brandes, Nietzsche owned and read a copy of Hans Lassen Martensen's Christliche Ethik (1873) in which Martensen extensively quoted and wrote about Kierkegaard's individualism in ethics and religion. Nietzsche also read Harald Høffding's Psychologie in Umrissen auf Grundlage der Erfahrung (ed. 1887) which expounded and critiqued Kierkegaard's psychology. Thomas Brobjer believes one of the works Nietzsche wrote about Kierkegaard is in Morgenröthe, which was partly written in response to Martensen's work. In one of the passages, Nietzsche wrote: "Those moralists, on the other hand, who, following in the footsteps of Socrates, offer the individual a morality of self-control and temperance as a means to his own advantage, as his personal key to happiness, are the exceptions." Brobjer believes Kierkegaard is one of "those moralists".[173]

The first philosophical study comparing Kierkegaard and Nietzsche was published even before Nietzsche's death.[174] More than 60 articles and 15 full-length studies have been published devoted entirely in comparing these two thinkers.[174]

Legacy Edit

Perhaps Nietzsche's greatest philosophical legacy lies in his 20th century interpreters, among them Pierre Klossowski, Martin Heidegger, Georges Bataille, Leo Strauss, Alexandre Kojève, Michel Foucault, Gilles Deleuze (and Félix Guattari), Jacques Derrida and Albert Camus. Foucault's later writings, for example, adopt Nietzsche's genealogical method to develop anti-foundationalist theories of power that divide and fragment rather than unite politics (as evinced in the liberal tradition of political theory). The systematic institutionalisation of criminal delinquency, sexual identity and practice, and the mentally ill (to name but a few) are examples used by Foucault to demonstrate how knowledge or truth is inseparable from the institutions that formulate notions of legitimacy from "immoralities" such as homosexuality and the like (captured in the famous power-knowledge equation). Deleuze, arguably the foremost of Nietzsche's interpreters, used the much-maligned "will to power" thesis in tandem with Marxian notions of commodity surplus and Freudian ideas of desire to articulate concepts such the rhizome and other "outsides" to state power as traditionally conceived.

Certain recent Nietzschean interpretations have emphasized the more untimely and politically controversial aspects of Nietzsche's philosophy. Nietzschean commentator Keith Ansell Pearson has pointed out the absurdity of modern egalitarian liberals, socialists, communists and anarchists claiming Nietzsche as a herald of their own left-wing politics: "The values Nietzsche wishes to subject to a revaluation are largely altruistic and egalitarian values such as pity, self-sacrifice, and equal rights. For Nietzsche, modern politics rests largely on a secular inheritance of Christian values (he interprets the socialist doctrine of equality in terms of a secularization of the Christian belief in the equality of all souls before God").[175] Works such as Bruce Detwiler's Nietzsche and the Politics of Aristocratic Radicalism,[176] Fredrick Appel's Nietzsche contra Democracy,[177] and Domenico Losurdo's Nietzsche, il ribelle aristocratico[178] challenge the prevalent liberal interpretive consensus on Nietzsche and assert that Nietzsche's elitism was not merely an aesthetic pose but an ideological attack on the widely held belief in equal rights of the modern West, locating Nietzsche in the conservative-revolutionary tradition.

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Brandes and Nietzsche wrote letters back and forth between 1886–1888. In 1886 Nietzsche sent Brandes copies of Beyond Good and Evil (written in 1885) and later Genealogy of Morals and Human, All Too Human. (p. 314). Brandes sent Nietzsche a copy of Main Currents in 1888. (pp. 331–331) Nietzsche wrote in May of 1888 that "Dr. George Brandes is now delivering an important course of lectures at the University of Copenhagen on the German philosopher Freidrich Nietzsche! According to the papers these lectures are having the most brilliant success. The hall is full to overflowing each time; more than three hundred people present." (p. 227). "They were ready for my theory of 'master morality' owing to the thorough general knowledge they possess of the Icelandic sagas which provide very rich material for the theory. I am glad to hear that the Danish philologists approve and accept my derivation of bonus: in itself it seems rather a tall order to trace the concept 'good' back to the concept 'warrior'." (p. 229) On January 11, 1888 Brandes wrote the following to Nietzsche, "There is a Northern writer whose works would interest you, if they were but translated, Soren Kierkegaard. He lived from 1813 to 1855, and is in my opinion one of the profoundest psychologists to be met with anywhere. A little book which I have written about him (the translation published at Leipzig in 1879) gives me exhaustive idea of his genius, for the book is a kind of polemical tract written with the purpose of checking his influence. It is, nevertheless, from a psychological point of view, the finest work I have published." (p. 325) Nietzsche wrote back that he would "tackle Kierkegaard's psychological problems" (p. 327) and then Brandes asked if he could get a copy of everything Nietzsche had published. (p. 343) so he could spread his "propaganda". (p. 348, 360–361) Selected Letters of Friedrich Nietzsche 1st ed. edited, with a preface, by Oscar Levy ; authorized translation by Anthony M. Ludovici Published 1921 by Doubleday, Page & Co

References Edit

  1. ^ The Gay Science, Section 108, provides an exception.
  2. ^ See Beyond Good and Evil.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Georges Bataille, "Nietzsche and Fascists", in the January 1937 issue of Acéphale (available on-line)
  4. ^ Mazzino Montinari, Friedrich Nietzsche (1974; transl. in German in 1991, Friedrich Nietzsche. Eine Einführung., Berlin-New York, De Gruyter; and in French, Friedrich Nietzsche, PUF, 2001, p.121 chapter "Nietzsche and the consequences"
  5. ^ Book 1 of Wille zur Macht
  6. ^ a b Kockelmans, J. J. (2012). Heidegger on Art and Art Works. Dordrecht: Springer Science & Business Media. p. 53. ISBN 978-90-247-3144-2.
  7. ^ Holub, R. C. (2018) Nietzsche in the Nineteenth Century: Social Questions and Philosophical Interventions. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2018. p. 369
  8. ^ see Steven Luper's introduction on Nietzsche in Existing for a detailed analysis of these efforts
  9. ^ Dennett, D. C. (1995), Darwin's Dangerous Idea: Evolution and the Meanings of Life, Simon & Schuster
  10. ^ Holub, R. C. (2018) Nietzsche in the Nineteenth Century: Social Questions and Philosophical Interventions. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2018. p. 385
  11. ^ "For a clear reconstruction of Nietzsche's uncharacteristically careful deduction of what he once described as 'the most scientific of hypotheses,' see Danto 1965, pp. 201-9- For a discussion and survey of this and other interpretations of Nietzsche's notorious idea of eternal recurrence, see Nehamas 1980, which argues that by 'scientific' Nietzsche meant specifically 'not-teleological.' A recurring—but, so far, not eternally recurring—problem with the appreciation of Nietzsche's version of the eternal recurrence is that, unlike Wheeler, Nietzsche seems to think that this life will happen again not because it and all possible variations on it will happen over and over, but because there is only one possible variation—this one—and it will happen over and over." Dennett, D. C. (1995), Darwin's Dangerous Idea: Evolution and the Meanings of Life, Simon & Schuster
  12. ^ Detwiler, B. (1990) Nietzsche and the Politics of Aristocratic Radicalism. University Of Chicago Press, 1990.
  13. ^ a b Dombowsky, D. (2014) Nietzsche and Napoleon: The Dionysian Conspiracy. University of Wales Press 2014.
  14. ^ Keith Ansell-Pearson, An Introduction to Nietzsche as Political Thinker: The Perfect Nihilist, Cambridge University Press, 1994, pp 33–34
  15. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 711-745
  16. ^ a b Leiter, Brian (2021), "Nietzsche's Moral and Political Philosophy", in Zalta, Edward N. (ed.), The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Summer 2021 ed.), Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University, retrieved 2022-03-09
  17. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 524
  18. ^ a b c The Gay Science, §362
  19. ^ Twilight of the Idols, Skirmishes of an Untimely Man, §44
  20. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 452-455
  21. ^ a b Dombowsky, D., Cameron, F. (2008) Political Writings of Friedrich Nietzsche: An Edited Anthology. Palgrave Macmillan, 2008. p. 11
  22. ^ Dombowsky, D., Cameron, F. (2008) Political Writings of Friedrich Nietzsche: An Edited Anthology. Palgrave Macmillan, 2008. p. 22
  23. ^ Dombowsky, D., Cameron, F. (2008) Political Writings of Friedrich Nietzsche: An Edited Anthology. Palgrave Macmillan, 2008. p. 240
  24. ^ Twilight of the Idols, Skirmishes of an Untimely Man, §37
  25. ^ The Will to Power (manuscript), §753
  26. ^ a b The Gay Science, §377
  27. ^ Dombowsky, D., Cameron, F. (2008) Political Writings of Friedrich Nietzsche: An Edited Anthology. Palgrave Macmillan, 2008. p. 118
  28. ^ Beyond Good and Evil, §257
  29. ^ Dombowsky, D., Cameron, F. (2008) Political Writings of Friedrich Nietzsche: An Edited Anthology. Palgrave Macmillan, 2008. p. 172
  30. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 386
  31. ^ Dombowsky, D., Cameron, F. (2008) Political Writings of Friedrich Nietzsche: An Edited Anthology. Palgrave Macmillan, 2008. p. 17
  32. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 391
  33. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 392-396
  34. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 395
  35. ^ from Nachlass, quoted and translated in Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 919
  36. ^ On the Genealogy of Morality, Second Essay, §17
  37. ^ Dombowsky, D. (2014) Nietzsche and Napoleon: The Dionysian Conspiracy. University of Wales Press 2014. p. 94
  38. ^ Dombowsky, D. (2004) Nietzsche’s Machiavellian Politics, Palgrave Macmillan, 2004. p. 19
  39. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 364
  40. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 564
  41. ^ Nietzsche, Letter to Georg Brandes – December 2nd 1887.
  42. ^ Arthur Schopenhauer, The World as Will and Representation, §68 (available on-line)
  43. ^ Olivier Ponton, ""Mitfreude". Le projet nietzschéen d'une "éthique de l'amitié" dans "Choses humaines, trop humaines"", HyperNietzsche, 2003-12-09 (on-line 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine) (in French)
  44. ^ Dombowsky, D. (2004) Nietzsche’s Machiavellian Politics, Palgrave Macmillan, 2004. p. 125
  45. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 973-977
  46. ^ Dombowsky, D. (2004) Nietzsche’s Machiavellian Politics, Palgrave Macmillan, 2004.
  47. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 663-671
  48. ^ Bernd A. Laska: Nietzsche's Initial Crisis. In: Germanic Notes and Reviews, vol. 33, n. 2, fall/Herbst 2002, pp. 109-133.
  49. ^ Conclusion of Stirner et Nietzsche by Albert Lévy, op.cit.
  50. ^ Patrick Wotling, Nietzsche et le problème de la civilisation, PUF, 1995 (2nd ed. 1999)
  51. ^ The Will to Power (manuscript), translated by Anthony Ludovici, 1914. §784
  52. ^ a b c The Wanderer and His Shadow, §285
  53. ^ a b c The Will to Power (manuscript), §125
  54. ^ Thus Spoke Zarathustra, On the new idol
  55. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 641-642
  56. ^ The Will to Power (manuscript), §864
  57. ^ Twilight of the Idols, Skirmishes of an Untimely Man, §38
  58. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 638-639
  59. ^ a b The Gay Science, §40
  60. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 931
  61. ^ Miscellaneous Maxims and Opinions, §304
  62. ^ a b Human, All Too Human, §475
  63. ^ a b Dombowsky, D., Cameron, F. (2008) Political Writings of Friedrich Nietzsche: An Edited Anthology. Palgrave Macmillan, 2008. p. 163
  64. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 543-546
  65. ^ Quoted in Young, Julian (2010). Friedrich Nietzsche: A Philosophical Biography. Cambridge University Press. p. 525
  66. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 362-363
  67. ^ Dombowsky, D. (2004) Nietzsche’s Machiavellian Politics, Palgrave Macmillan, 2004. p. 29-32
  68. ^ Altman, W. H. F. (2012) Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche: The Philosopher of the Second Reich. Lexington Books, 2012. p. 66
  69. ^ Dombowsky, D., Cameron, F. (2008) Political Writings of Friedrich Nietzsche: An Edited Anthology. Palgrave Macmillan, 2008. p. 15
  70. ^ Buccola, N. (2009) "The Tyranny of the Least and the Dumbest": Nietzsche's Critique of Socialism. Quarterly Journal of Ideology, Volume 31.
  71. ^ Dombowsky, D. (2014) Nietzsche and Napoleon: The Dionysian Conspiracy. University of Wales Press 2014. p. 111
  72. ^ Thus Spoke Zarathustra, Conversation with the kings
  73. ^ Dombowsky, D., Cameron, F. (2008) Political Writings of Friedrich Nietzsche: An Edited Anthology. Palgrave Macmillan, 2008. p. 161
  74. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 330
  75. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 581
  76. ^ Holub, R. C. (2018) Nietzsche in the Nineteenth Century: Social Questions and Philosophical Interventions. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2018. p. 37-38
  77. ^ The Will to Power (manuscript), §1017
  78. ^ The Dawn of Day, §3
  79. ^ Human, All Too Human, §463
  80. ^ The Will to Power (manuscript), §98
  81. ^ The Antichrist (book), §54
  82. ^ On the Genealogy of Morality, Third Essay, §14
  83. ^ Nietzsche, F. (1887) On the Genealogy of Morality, translated by Horace B. Samuel. Boni and Liverlight, Second Essay §11
  84. ^ Human, All Too Human, §235
  85. ^ Twilight of the Idols, Skirmishes of an Untimely Man, translated by Anthony Ludovici, 1911. §37
  86. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 929
  87. ^ The Will to Power (manuscript), §51
  88. ^ Nietzsche, F. (1895) The Antichrist (2nd ed.), translated by H. L. Mencken. Alfred A. Knopf, 1918. §57
  89. ^ The Will to Power (manuscript), translated by Anthony Ludovici, 1914. §209
  90. ^ Brobjer, T.H. (2008) Nietzsche's Philosophical Context: An Intellectual Biography. University of Illinois Press, 2008. p. 70
  91. ^ Sineokaya, Y. (2018) The prohibited Nietzsche: anti‑Nitzscheanism in Soviet Russia. Studies in East European Thought. Springer Nature B.V. 2018.
  92. ^ Moore, G. (2002) Nietzsche, Biology and Metaphor. Cambridge University Press, 2002.
  93. ^ a b c Bernasconi, R. (2017) Nietzsche as a philosopher of racialized breeding. In: Zack, N. ed. The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Race. Oxford University Press, 2017.
  94. ^ a b Beyond Good and Evil, §208
  95. ^ a b On the Genealogy of Morality, First Essay, §5
  96. ^ Twilight of Idols, The 'Improvers' of Mankind, §3
  97. ^ The Antichrist (book), §57
  98. ^ Moore, G. (2002) Nietzsche, Biology and Metaphor. Cambridge University Press, 2002. p. 124
  99. ^ Holub, R. C. (2018) Nietzsche in the Nineteenth Century: Social Questions and Philosophical Interventions. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2018. p. 289
  100. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 591
  101. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 1010
  102. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 590-591
  103. ^ Dombowsky, D. (2004) Nietzsche’s Machiavellian Politics, Palgrave Macmillan, 2004. p. 97
  104. ^ Holub, R. C. (2018) Nietzsche in the Nineteenth Century: Social Questions and Philosophical Interventions. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2018.
  105. ^ The Dawn of Day, §272
  106. ^ a b Beyond Good and Evil, §200
  107. ^ Twilight of Idols, The Problem of Socrates, §3
  108. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 582
  109. ^ Beyond Good and Evil, §224
  110. ^ The Antichrist (book), §60
  111. ^ The Dawn of Day, §204
  112. ^ The Dawn of Day, §206
  113. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 1009
  114. ^ Nietzsche der Philosoph und Politiker, 8, 63, et passim. Ed. Alfred Baeumler, Reclam 1931
  115. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 994-999
  116. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 954
  117. ^ On the Genealogy of Morality, First Essay, §16
  118. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 795-796
  119. ^ Holub, R. C. (2018) Nietzsche in the Nineteenth Century: Social Questions and Philosophical Interventions. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2018. p. 306
  120. ^ Holub, R. C. (2018) Nietzsche in the Nineteenth Century: Social Questions and Philosophical Interventions. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2018. p. 310
  121. ^ Beyond Good and Evil, §251
  122. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 578
  123. ^ Young, Julian (2010). Friedrich Nietzsche: A Philosophical Biography. Cambridge University Press. p. 358-359
  124. ^ Holub, R. C. (2018) Nietzsche in the Nineteenth Century: Social Questions and Philosophical Interventions. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2018. p. 291
  125. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 561-562
  126. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 574
  127. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 545
  128. ^ Young, Julian (2010). Friedrich Nietzsche: A Philosophical Biography. Cambridge University Press. p. 358
  129. ^ March 29, 1887 letter to Theodor Fritsch (in English)
  130. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 566
  131. ^ Young, Julian (2010). Friedrich Nietzsche: A Philosophical Biography. Cambridge University Press.
  132. ^ Untimely Meditations, David Strauss: the Confessor and the Writer, §1
  133. ^ Holub, R. C. (2018) Nietzsche in the Nineteenth Century: Social Questions and Philosophical Interventions. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2018. p. 245-252
  134. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 533-534
  135. ^ Ecce Homo, "Why I Write Such Good Books," The Case of Wagner, §1 and 2.
  136. ^ Ecce Homo, Why I Write Such Good Books , §3
  137. ^ Altman, W. H. F. (2012) Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche: The Philosopher of the Second Reich. Lexington Books, 2012.
  138. ^ Holub, R. C. (2018) Nietzsche in the Nineteenth Century: Social Questions and Philosophical Interventions. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2018.
  139. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 560
  140. ^ Ecce Homo (book), Why Am I So Clever , §3
  141. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 750
  142. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 746-750
  143. ^ Holub, R. C. (2018) Nietzsche in the Nineteenth Century: Social Questions and Philosophical Interventions. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2018. p. 249
  144. ^ Holub, R. C. (2018) Nietzsche in the Nineteenth Century: Social Questions and Philosophical Interventions. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2018. p. 236
  145. ^ Holub, R. C. (2018) Nietzsche in the Nineteenth Century: Social Questions and Philosophical Interventions. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2018. p. 121, 227
  146. ^ "Wir Heimatlosen". Die fröhliche Wissenschaft (in German). Nietzsche Source. Retrieved 2015-08-21.
  147. ^ The Gay Science, aphorism 377, transl. by "We who are homeless" ("We who are without Fatherlands"), read here[dead link]
  148. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 711
  149. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 816
  150. ^ Dombowsky, D., Cameron, F. (2008) Political Writings of Friedrich Nietzsche: An Edited Anthology. Palgrave Macmillan, 2008. p. 33
  151. ^ The Will to Power (manuscript), translated by Anthony Ludovici, 1914. §728
  152. ^ On the Genealogy of Morality, Third Essay, §25
  153. ^ The Will to Power (manuscript), §127
  154. ^ The Will to Power (manuscript), §793
  155. ^ The Will to Power (manuscript), translated by Anthony Ludovici, 1914. §729
  156. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 689
  157. ^ Losurdo, D. (2002) Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet. Brill, 2020. p. 693-694
  158. ^ Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900) Twilight of the Idols (1888) http://www.handprint.com/SC/NIE/GotDamer.html#sect1
  159. ^ Chapter XI, "Nietzsche and Schopenhauer"
  160. ^ von Hartmann, Eduard (1898). Ethische Studien. Leipzig: Hermann Haacke. p. 35.
  161. ^ Brobjer, Thomas H. (2008). Nietzsche's Philosophical Context: An Intellectual Biography. University Of Illinois Press. p. 149. ISBN 9780252032455. It was in a letter to Cosima Wagner, December 19, 1876, that is, while reading Mainländer, that Nietzsche for the first time explicitly claimed to have parted ways with Schopenhauer. It may be worth mentioning that Mainländer's book ends with a long section (more than two hundred pages) consisting mainly of a critique of Schopenhauer's metaphysics. Decher emphasizes the importance of the fact that Mainländer reinterpreted Schopenhauer's metaphysical and single will to a multiplicity of wills (always in struggle) and the importance of this for Nietzsche's will to power.
  162. ^ Marta Kopji, Wojciech Kunicki (2006). Nietzsche und Schopenhauer: Rezeptionsphänomene der Wendezeiten. Leipzig: Leipziger Universitätsverlag. p. 340. ISBN 3865831214. Bekanntlich war es Philipp Mainländer, der als Scharnierstelle zwischen den metaphyisischen Willensbegriffen Schopenhauers und Nietzsches fungierte. // Famously, it was Philipp Mainländer, who functioned as the interface between the metaphysical will-concept of Schopenhauer and Nietzsche.
  163. ^ Brobjer, Thomas H. (2008). Nietzsche's Philosophical Context: An Intellectual Biography. University Of Illinois Press. p. 95. ISBN 9780252032455.
  164. ^ Mainländer, Philipp (1876). Die Philosophie der Erlösung. Vol. 1. Berlin. p. 349.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  165. ^ Wolf, Jean-Claude (2007). Egoismus und Moral. p. 21.
  166. ^ Mainländer, Philipp (1876). Die Philosophie der Erlösung. Vol. 1. Berlin. p. 169.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  167. ^ Mainländer, Philipp (1886). Die Philosophie der Erlösung. Vol. 2. Berlin. p. 251.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  168. ^ Beiser, Frederick C. (2008). Weltschmerz, Pessimism in German Philosophy, 1860-1900. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 202. ISBN 978-0198768715. Batz introduces a very modern and redolent theme: the death of God. He popularized the theme before Nietzsche.
  169. ^ Ulrich Horstmann: Mainländers Mahlstrom. Über eine philosophische Flaschenpost und ihren Absender. In Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, No. 508, 1989.
  170. ^ Angier, Tom P. Either Kierkegaard/or Nietzsche: Moral Philosophy in a New Key. ISBN 0-7546-5474-5
  171. ^ Hubben, William. Dostoevsky, Kierkegaard, Nietzsche and Kafka. ISBN 0-684-82589-9
  172. ^ Nietzsche Chronicle: 1888
  173. ^ Journal of the History of Philosophy
  174. ^ a b Miles, Thomas. Rival Visions of the Best Way of Life in Kierkegaard and Existentialism, Jon Stewart, ed. p.263.
  175. ^ Ansell-Pearson, Keith, ed. (1994). Nietzsche: On the Genealogy of Morality and Other Writings. Translated by Diethe, Carol. Cambridge University Press. p. 9.
  176. ^ Detwiler, Bruce (1990). Nietzsche and the Politics of Aristocratic Radicalism. University of Chicago Press.
  177. ^ Appel, Frederick (1998). Nietzsche contra Democracy. Cornell University Press. ISBN 9780801434242. JSTOR 10.7591/j.ctvv4162f.
  178. ^ Losurdo, Domenico (2002). Nietzsche, il ribelle aristocratico. Biografia intellettuale e bilancio critico [Nietzsche, the rebel aristocrat. Intellectual biography and critical balance] (in Italian). Turin: Bollati Boringhieri. ISBN 9788833914312.

Further reading Edit

External links Edit

  • Nietzsche Source: Digital version of the German critical edition of the complete works / Digital facsimile edition of the entire Nietzsche estate
  • The Nietzsche Channel (include letters, section on Nietzsche's library, etc.)

philosophy, friedrich, nietzsche, this, article, about, nietzsche, philosophy, book, mencken, friedrich, nietzsche, 1844, 1900, developed, philosophy, during, late, 19th, century, owed, awakening, philosophical, interest, reading, arthur, schopenhauer, welt, w. This article is about Nietzsche s philosophy For the book by H L Mencken see The Philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche Friedrich Nietzsche 1844 1900 developed his philosophy during the late 19th century He owed the awakening of his philosophical interest to reading Arthur Schopenhauer s Die Welt als Wille und Vorstellung The World as Will and Representation 1819 revised 1844 and said that Schopenhauer was one of the few thinkers that he respected dedicating to him his essay Schopenhauer als Erzieher Schopenhauer as Educator published in 1874 as one of his Untimely Meditations Friedrich Nietzsche in circa 1875Since the dawn of the 20th century the philosophy of Nietzsche has had great intellectual and political influence around the world Nietzsche applied himself to such topics as morality religion epistemology poetry ontology and social criticism Because of Nietzsche s evocative style and his often outrageous claims his philosophy generates passionate reactions running from love to disgust Nietzsche noted in his autobiographical Ecce Homo that his philosophy developed and evolved over time so interpreters have found it difficult to relate concepts central to one work to those central to another for example the thought of the eternal recurrence features heavily in Also sprach Zarathustra Thus Spoke Zarathustra but is almost entirely absent from his next book Beyond Good and Evil Added to this challenge is the fact that Nietzsche did not seem concerned to develop his thought into a system even going so far as to disparage the attempt in Beyond Good and Evil Common themes in his thought can however be identified and discussed His earliest work emphasized the opposition of Apollonian and Dionysian impulses in art and the figure of Dionysus continued to play a role in his subsequent thought Other major currents include the will to power the claim that God is dead the distinction between master and slave moralities and radical perspectivism Other concepts appear rarely or are confined to one or two major works yet are considered centerpieces of Nietzschean philosophy such as the Ubermensch and the thought of eternal recurrence His later works involved a sustained attack on Christianity and Christian morality and he seemed to be working toward what he called the transvaluation of all values Umwertung aller Werte While Nietzsche is often associated in the public mind with fatalism and nihilism Nietzsche himself viewed his project as the attempt to overcome the pessimism of Arthur Schopenhauer Contents 1 Nihilism and God is dead 2 Master morality and slave morality 3 The Wille zur Macht and the thought of eternal recurrence 3 1 The will to power 3 2 Ubermensch 3 3 Amor fati and the eternal recurrence 4 Social and political views 4 1 Individualism and liberalism 4 2 Criticism of socialism and labour movement 4 3 Race class and eugenics 4 4 Jews nationalism and European identity 4 5 War and military values 4 6 Views on women 5 Relation to Schopenhauer 6 Relation to Philipp Mainlander 7 Relation to Soren Kierkegaard 8 Legacy 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksNihilism and God is dead EditMain article God is dead Nietzsche conceptualizes his diagnostic with the statement God is dead which first appeared in his work in section 108 of The Gay Science again in section 125 with the parable of The Madman and even more famously in Thus Spoke Zarathustra The statement typically placed in quotation marks 1 accentuated the crisis that Nietzsche argued that Western culture must face and transcend in the wake of the irreparable dissolution of its traditional foundations moored largely in classical Greek philosophy and Christianity 2 In aphorisms 55 and 56 of Beyond Good and Evil Nietzsche talks about the ladder of religious cruelty that suggests how Nihilism emerged from the intellectual conscience of Christianity Nihilism is sacrificing the meaning God brings into our lives in aphorism 56 Nietzsche explains how to emerge from the utter meaninglessness of life by reaffirming it through his idea of Eternal Return Master morality and slave morality EditMain article Master slave moralityThe Wille zur Macht and the thought of eternal recurrence EditSince Martin Heidegger at least the concepts of the will to power Wille zur Macht of Ubermensch and of the thought of Eternal Recurrence have been inextricably linked According to Heidegger s interpretation one can not be thought without the others During Nazi Germany Alfred Baeumler attempted to separate the concepts claiming that the Eternal Recurrence was only an existential experience that if taken seriously would endanger the possibility of a will to power deliberately misinterpreted by the Nazis as a will for domination 3 Baeumler attempted to interpret the will to power along Social Darwinist lines an interpretation refuted by Heidegger in his 1930s courses on Nietzsche While Heidegger s reading has become predominant among commentators some have criticized it Mazzino Montinari by declaring that it was forging the figure of a macroscopical Nietzsche alien to all of his nuances 4 The will to power Edit Main article Will to power Will to power Wille zur Macht is the name of a concept created by Nietzsche the title of a projected book which he finally decided not to write and the title of a book compiled from his notebooks and published posthumously and under suspicious circumstances by his sister and Peter Gast The work consists of four separate books entitled European Nihilism Critique of the Highest Values Hitherto Principles of a New Evaluation and Discipline and Breeding Within these books there are some 1067 small sections usually the shape of a circle and sometimes just a key phrase such as his opening comments in the 1st monstrosity of the preface Of what is great one must either be silent or speak with greatness With greatness that means cynically and with innocence 5 Despite Elisabeth Forster Nietzsche s falsifications highlighted in 1937 by Georges Bataille 3 and proved in the 1960s by the complete edition of Nietzsche s posthumous fragments by Mazzino Montinari and Giorgio Colli his notes even in the form given by his sister remain a key insight into the philosophy of Nietzsche and his unfinished transvaluation of all values An English edition of Montinari amp Colli s work is forthcoming it has existed for decades in Italian German and French The Will to power also contains the provisional outline to Nietzsche s aesthetics as a whole This has been described as his attempt at a physiology of art where he established the concept of artistic rapture Rausch 6 This phenomenon which is considered a countermovement to nihilism is for the Nietzsche the force that brings forth not only the form but the fundamental condition for the enhancement of life 6 Ubermensch Edit Main article Ubermensch nbsp Friedrich Wilhelm NietzscheThroughout his works Nietzsche writes about possible great human beings or higher types who serve as an example of people who would follow his philosophical ideas These ideal human beings Nietzsche calls by terms such as the philosopher of the future the free spirit the tragic artist and the Ubermensch They are often described by Nietzsche as being highly creative courageous powerful and extremely rare individuals He compares such individuals with certain historical figures which have been very rare and often have not been considered geniuses such as Napoleon Goethe and Beethoven His main example of a genius exemplary culture is Archaic Greece In Thus Spoke Zarathustra Nietzsche posits the Ubermensch often translated as overman or superman as a goal that humanity can set for itself While interpretations of Nietzsche s overman vary wildly here are a few of his quotes from Thus Spoke Zarathustra citation needed I teach you the Ubermensch Man is something that shall be overcome What have you done to overcome him All beings so far have created something beyond themselves and do you want to be the ebb of this great flood and even go back to the beasts rather than overcome man What is the ape to man A laughingstock or established embarrassment And man shall be that to Ubermensch a laughingstock or painful embarrassment You have made your way from worm to man and much in you is still worm Once you were apes and even now too man is more ape than any ape The Ubermensch is the meaning of the earth Let your will say the Ubermensch shall be the meaning of the earth Man is a rope tied between beast and Ubermensch a rope over an abyss what is great in man is that he is a bridge and not an end Amor fati and the eternal recurrence Edit nbsp Rock on Lake Silvaplana where Nietzsche conceived of the idea of Eternal return Nietzsche may have encountered the idea of the Eternal Recurrence in the works of Heinrich Heine who speculated that one day a person would be born with the same thought processes as himself and that the same applied to every other individual Although he admired Heine he never mentions him in connection with this idea 7 Nietzsche put forth his theory in The Gay Science and developed in Thus Spoke Zarathustra Schopenhauer directly influenced this theory 8 Nietzsche s view on eternal return is similar to that of Hume the idea that an eternal recurrence of blind meaningless variation chaotic pointless shuffling of matter and law would inevitably spew up worlds whose evolution through time would yield the apparently meaningful stories of our lives This idea of eternal recurrence became a cornerstone of his nihilism and thus part of the foundation of what became existentialism 9 It is unclear whether Nietzsche viewed his idea as a scientific hypothesis or just a thought experiment whose purpose is to test individual s affirmation of life He had an interest in natural sciences and read about related topics in cosmology and thermodynamics but most of his scientific arguments remained unpublished According to Lou Salome who is considered an unreliable source Nietzsche had plans to study natural sciences in Vienna or Paris in order to prove his idea 10 Nietzsche viewed his argument for eternal recurrence as a proof of the absurdity or meaninglessness of life a proof that no meaning was given to the universe from on high 11 What if a demon were to creep after you one day or night in your loneliest loneness and say This life which you live and have lived must be lived again by you and innumerable times more And mere will be nothing new in it but every pain and every joy and every thought and every sigh everything unspeakably small and great in your life must come again to you and in the same sequence and series The eternal hourglass will again and again be turned and you with it dust of dust Would you not throw yourself down and curse the demon who spoke to you thus Or have you once experienced a tremendous moment in which you would answer him Thou art a god and never have I heard anything more divine The Gay Science 1882 p 341 passage translated in Danto 1965 p 210 Social and political views EditNietzsche s political ideas were variously interpreted as aristocratic radicalism 12 Bonapartism 13 individualist anarchism and more controversially as proto fascism 14 15 see Nietzsche and fascism with some authors describing him as apolitical anti political or political sceptic 16 Today two positions have dominated the literature one attributes to Nietzsche a commitment to aristocratic forms of social ordering while the other denies that Nietzsche has any political philosophy at all 16 Walter Kaufmann put forward the view that the powerful individualism expressed in his writings would be disastrous if introduced to the public realm of politics Georges Bataille argued in 1937 in the Acephale review that Nietzsche s thoughts were too free to be instrumentalized by any political movement In Nietzsche and Fascists he argued against such instrumentalization by the left or the right declaring that Nietzsche s aim was to by pass the short timespan of modern politics and its inherent lies and simplifications for a greater historical timespan 3 Much of Nietzsche s contempt of politics is directed towards modern democratic parliamentarian party politics and especially mass movements such as socialism and antisemitic populism He contrasted such mundane petty politics with his idea of great politics and often praised individual politicians such as Napoleon He interpreted Napoleon as an autocratic genius who stood above conventional morality invalidated the French revolution restored colonial slavery 17 and tried to revive the aristocratic spirit of Roman Empire paganism and Renaissance and not as a progressive revolutionary leader like some of his contemporaries 18 19 13 Despite his proclaimed contempt for daily politics and culture of newspaper reading which was a common attitude of conservatives who saw the mass publishing as subversive 20 Nietzsche did comment on contemporary political events in his letters and notes He was deeply disturbed by the Paris Commune 21 he initially supported Bismarck but became disappointed by his later social policies and detente toward socialists and Catholics 22 he was worried about the rise of Adolf Stoecker and after death of Emperor Friedrich III he became worried about the future of free speech in Germany 23 He was against equality of rights 24 25 26 27 and defended slavery believing that it is a necessary condition for supporting an upper class which could devote itself to more sophisticated activities 28 26 29 In his letters and personal notes he ridiculed American abolitionists such as Harriet Beecher Stowe 30 and wrote disparagingly of German attempts led by the Kaiser and Christian activists to end slavery in colonial Africa leading to Brussels Conference Act of 1890 31 Nietzsche claimed that the upper classes are overreacting and projecting their own sensitivity to the suffering of slaves and poor industrial workers who are supposedly toughened by hardship less sensitive to pain and contended with their life 32 However while he wrote positively about ancient and colonial slavery he did not leave any clear comments suggesting that he actually advocated reintroduction of slavery in modern Europe 33 In fact he proposed that the rebellious European workers could be pacified by shifting some of their burden to Asian and African populations 34 He saw the contemporary revolutionary and emancipatory movements as the most recent part of the long term social and cultural decay as he noted Continuation of Christianity by the French Revolution Rousseau is the seducer he again removes the chains of woman who from then on is represented in an ever more interesting way as suffering Then the slaves and Mistress Beecher Stowe Then the poor and the workers Then the vicious and the sick all that is brought to the fore 35 Nietzsche extoled aristocratic societies and military elites claiming that they create higher quality of culture He often linked noble classes with ancient barbarian conquerors 36 His thoughts were usually oriented to the future aristocracy not so much to the preservation of existing monarchical order which he saw as exhausted and thing of the past 37 He saw the last expression of noble values French seventeenth and eighteenth century lost after the fall of Napoleon 38 Much of his thoughts on the subject are unsystematic and he did not leave specific instructions about how this new aristocratic class should be selected and elevated to the ruling positions in society However he was quite clear that he used the term aristocracy in the traditional sense meaning noble birth and hereditary hierarchy he ridiculed the idea of aristocracy of the spirit popular among intellectuals as a democratic subversion 39 40 The term aristocratic radicalism was first used by Georg Brandes to which Nietzsche responded The expression Aristocratic Radicalism which you employ is very good It is the cleverest thing I have yet read about myself How far this mode of thought has carried me already how far it will carry me yet I am almost afraid to imagine 41 In the context of his criticism of morality and Christianity expressed among others works in On the Genealogy of Morals and in The Antichrist Nietzsche often criticized humanitarian feelings detesting how pity and altruism were ways for the weak to take power over the strong To the ethics of compassion Mitleid shared suffering exposed by Schopenhauer 42 Nietzsche opposed an ethics of friendship or of shared joy Mitfreude 43 Individualism and liberalism Edit Nietzsche often referred to the common people who participated in mass movements and shared a common mass psychology as the rabble or the herd Although he valued individualism his general political views included many hierarchical and authoritarian ideas which are usually incompatible with modern individualistic ideologies He often used the term individualism to describe a certain set of personality traits such as originality nonconformism and egoism not to describe the political system based on institutions that guarantee wide individual rights and freedoms According to Nietzsche who often held pre Socratic Greece and ancient Rome as the social model individualism and freedom should be reserved only for the aristocratic minority while discouraged among the subjugated masses who don t have the natural capacity for it Such freedom is not given to all people as a natural right but is earned by the strong individual through struggle and is closely connected to the power that he can exercise over others 44 Arguably such elitist individualism can be interpreted as similar to early liberalism since many authors and politicians at the time supported stratified society with low social mobility racial exclusion colonial conquests and even slavery 45 It is also comparable with conservative aristocratic liberalism of Alexis de Tocqueville Hippolyte Taine Jacob Burckhardt Nietzsche corresponded with the latter two although his overall philosophy is much more radical 46 In his opposition to Christian tradition and modern philosophy Nietzsche also criticized the concepts of soul subject and atomism that is the existence of an atomic subject at the foundation of everything found for example in social contract theories He considered the individual subject as a complex of instincts and wills to power just as any other organization He claimed that idea of subject whether in metaphysical or scientific sense leads to the belief in essential equality of people and is politically used to justify notion of human rights therefore calling Rene Descartes the grandfather of French revolution 47 Beginning in the 1890s some scholars have attempted to link his philosophy with Max Stirner s radical individualism of The Ego and Its Own 1844 The question remained pendent Recently there was unearthed further still circumstantial evidence clarifying his relationship with Stirner 48 In any case few philosophers really consider Nietzsche an individualist thinker Against the strictly egoist perspective adopted by Stirner Nietzsche concerned himself with the problem of the civilization and the necessity to give humanity a goal and a direction to its history making him in this sense a very political thinker 49 50 In The Will to Power he described individualism as a part of the process that leads to the ultimate goal of establishing the order of rank Individualism is a modest and still unconscious form of will to power with it a single human unit seems to think it sufficient to free himself from the preponderating power of society or of the State or Church He does not set himself up in opposition as a personality but merely as a unit he represents the rights of all other individuals as against the whole That is to say he instinctively places himself on a level with every other unit what he combats he does not combat as a person but as a representative of units against a mass When one has reached a certain degree of independence one always longs for more separation in proportion to the degree of force the individual is no longer content to regard himself as equal to everybody he actually seeks for his peer he makes himself stand out from others Individualism is followed by a development in groups and organs correlative tendencies join up together and become powerfully active now there arise between these centres of power friction war a reconnoitring of the forces on either side reciprocity understandings and the regulation of mutual services Finally there appears an order of rank 51 While Nietzsche shared some of the liberal ideas and values such as individualism private property 52 53 economic inequality 52 53 suspicion of state power 54 and dismissed political criticisms of exploitation 55 his philosophy does not have much in common with classical liberalism and capitalism He wrote that liberalism is synonymous with mediocrity and believed also that it leads to cultural decay 56 57 He also decried liberal optimism of political economy the idea that economic development and technological innovation should solve social problems even though it was more attainable and moderate than socialist utopianism he still saw the goal of mass happiness and comfort as unworthy and philistine 58 He dismissed captains of the industry as vulgar and even blamed them for the rise of socialism 59 claiming that rise of the capitalist class disrupted the order of rank and that workers would not rebel if they were able to serve the true natural aristocrats instead of capitalists whom they do not see as superiors but just as ordinary people who got lucky with money 59 Bourgeoisie with its love of practical work and educational intellectual specialization is unable to create aristocratic culture of leisure and sophistication 60 He praised Napoleon for reviving the warlike aristocratic spirit which triumphed over the modern ideas over the businessman and the philistine 18 His attitudes were particularly negative in his earlier works He claimed that luxurious goods should be heavily taxed 61 and that economy should be regulated so that people cannot get rich quickly by means of financial speculation 52 In Human All Too Human the work of his middle period he wrote that youthful Jew of the stock exchange is the most repugnant invention of the whole human race 62 However he later significantly changed his attitude and noted that Jewish financiers should play a prominent role in the new united Europe 63 In his later writings he even particularly praised Jewish capitalists as powerful natural allies against Christianity socialism and nationalism 64 In December 1888 his last month of sanity he wrote in a notebook It will be a good idea to found societies everywhere so as to deliver into my hands at the right time a million disciples It is particularly important to recruit first of all officers and Jewish bankers Both together represent the will to power If I ask who my natural allies are I see that above all they are officers With military instincts in the body one cannot be a Christian In the same way Jewish bankers are my natural allies as the only international power which by origin and instinct binds nations together after accursed interest politics has made the arrogance and egoism of nations into a duty 65 According to Domenico Losurdo in his later works Nietzsche concluded that the industrial society which he disliked is here to stay and the return to warlike landed aristocracy is unrealistic He also developed some sympathies to the diligent competent bourgeoisie seeing the wealthy capitalist class as necessary allies in the struggle against both Adolf Stoecker s Christian movement and social democracy which were gaining influence in Germany To solve the conflict he hesitantly accepted the idea that aristocracy should absorb the emerging capitalist class while retaining the cultural supremacy Even the vulgar commercial activities could be transformed by the aristocracy in a similar way that hunting was raised from practical subsistence into a ceremonial luxurious activity 66 Don Dombowsky argues that Nietzsche s criticisms of capitalism are mostly cultural and moderate compared with the usual ideological points of political economy and views on class conflict he is still consistently aligned with the capital against the worker movement which he saw as a fundamental threat to his hierarchical vision of society 67 William Altman also interprets Nietzsche s criticism of capitalist class as the advice to cultivate better public image and thus legitimize the social hierarchy 68 Criticism of socialism and labour movement Edit Negative attitude towards socialism and proletarian movement was one of the most consistent themes in Nietzsche s philosophy He wrote negatively of socialism as early as 1862 69 and his criticisms of socialism are often harsher than those of other doctrines 70 He was critical of French revolution and was deeply disturbed by the Paris Commune which he saw as a destructive insurrection of the vulgar lower classes that made him feel annihilated for several days 21 In his later writings he especially praised contemporary French authors most of whom were right wing thinkers whose works expressed strongly negative response to the Commune and its political heritage 71 As opposed to the urban working class Nietzsche praised the peasantry as an example of health and natural nobility 72 73 Beyond only abstract cultural opposition he regularly wrote against specific social policies of the German Empire that aimed to improve the position and welfare of the workers 74 75 He was particularly against democratic universal education calling it barbarism and a prelude to communism because it pointlessly arouses the masses who are born to serve and obey 76 He called socialism the tyranny of the meanest and the dumbest 53 and claimed that it attracts inferior people who are motivated by ressentiment A lot of his criticism is linked to his view of Christianity he called socialism residue of Christianity and of Rousseau in the de Christianised world 77 He described Rousseau as moral tarantula his ideas as idiocies and half truths that were born out of self contempt and inflamed vanity claimed that he held a grudge against the ruling classes and by moralizing he tried to blame them for his own misery 78 79 80 He named him together with Savonarola Martin Luther Robespierre and Saint Simon as fanatics sick intellects who influence masses and stand in opposition to strong spirits 81 He similarly called Eugen Duhring an apostle of revenge moral braggart and his ideas indecent and revolting moralistic gibberish 82 He saw egalitarian and peaceful socialist community as essentially antagonistic to life in On the Genealogy of Morality he wrote A legal system conceived of as sovereign and universal not as a means in the struggle of power complexes but as a means against all struggles in general something along the lines of Duhring s communist cliche in which each will must be considered as equal to every will that would be a principle hostile to life a destroyer and dissolver of human beings an assassination attempt on the future of human beings a sign of exhaustion a secret path to nothingness 83 Nietzsche believed that if socialist goals are achieved society would be leveled down and conditions for superior individuals and higher culture would disappear 84 In Twilight of the Idols he wrote Equality a certain definite process of making everybody uniform which only finds its expression in the theory of equal rights is essentially bound up with a declining culture the chasm between man and man class and class the multiplicity of types the will to be one s self and to distinguish one s self that in fact which I call the pathos of distance is proper to all strong ages 85 Unlike many conservative and liberal authors of the era Nietzsche didn t justify the dismal conditions of the working class purely as an unfortunate price that had to be paid for the leisured cultured lifestyle of the upper class minority but saw them as an expression of natural caste order which is necessary for both the rich and the poor He claimed that even if reduction of work and granting more leisure to the masses were economically feasible they would have a negative social cultural effect because people of common nature are incapable of enjoying aristocratic idleness 86 Highest society imagined by socialists would be lowest according to his order of rank 87 In The Antichrist he wrote Whom do I hate most heartily among the rabbles of today The rabble of Socialists the apostles to the Chandala who undermine the workingman s instincts his pleasure his feeling of contentment with his petty existence who make him envious and teach him revenge Wrong never lies in unequal rights it lies in the assertion of equal rights What is bad But I have already answered all that proceeds from weakness from envy from revenge The anarchist and the Christian have the same ancestry 88 In The Will to Power he further elaborated similarity between Christianity and socialism The Gospel is the announcement that the road to happiness lies open for the lowly and the poor that all one has to do is to emancipate one s self from all institutions traditions and the tutelage of the higher classes Thus Christianity is no more than the typical teaching of Socialists Property acquisitions mother country status and rank tribunals the police the State the Church Education Art militarism all these are so many obstacles in the way of happiness so many mistakes snares and devil s artifices on which the Gospel passes sentence all this is typical of socialistic doctrines Behind all this there is the outburst the explosion of a concentrated loathing of the masters the instinct which discerns the happiness of freedom after such long oppression Mostly a symptom of the fact that the inferior classes have been treated too humanely that their tongues already taste a joy which is forbidden them It is not hunger that provokes revolutions but the fact that the mob have contracted an appetite en mangeant 89 Nietzsche never mentioned Karl Marx or Friedrich Engels by name and it is unclear whether he was acquainted with their ideas However they are more or less extensively quoted and discussed in eleven books that Nietzsche owned in his personal library and in one of them he underlined Marx s name 90 In socialist countries Nietzsche was usually considered a disreputable reactionary burgeois imperialist or fascist philosopher His books were unavailable to the public in the Soviet Union since 1923 They were placed on the list of forbidden books and were kept in libraries only for restricted authorized use Until 1988 they were not translated or reprinted and in the years between 1938 and 1988 only ten dissertations on Nietzsche were defended 91 Western Leftist writers led by French postwar intellectuals largely rehabilitated Nietzsche on the Left and have proposed ways of using Nietzschean theory in what has become known as the politics of difference particularly in formulating theories of political resistance and sexual and moral difference Race class and eugenics Edit Nietzsche often made racist classist remarks and used racialist explanations of cultural and political phenomena 92 Some of his later admirers often tried to reinterpret downplay or ignore this part of his thought but because of preponderance of explicit comments in Nietzsche s work such approach remains controversial 93 There are also controversies about some newer translations of Nietzsche which seem to be misleadingly euphemistic when dealing with more loaded terms that Nietzsche used 93 Nietzsche used the term race in two different meanings for ethnic groups and social classes He believed that race and class are identical 94 in the sense that nations are composed of different races and that upper classes are usually of superior nature to the lower 95 He was fascinated by the restrictive caste system of India and Laws of Manu which he saw as promoting eugenics 96 97 Such ideas about aristocracy and race were especially popularized in 19th century by Arthur de Gobineau It is unclear whether Nietzsche was directly influenced by Gobineau but he was probably aware of his work because of numerous similarities and because Richard Wagner was an admirer who wrote an introductory essay on his work 98 Excerpts from Gobineau were frequently published in the Wagnerian journal Bayreuther Blatter which Nietzsche read 99 Despite his opposition to Darwinism he was very interested in the works of Francis Galton although he had only partial knowledge of his works since they were not translated 93 Like Nietzsche Galton also praised ancient Greeks claiming that their customs partially unconsciously promoted eugenic outcomes and population control 100 Nietzsche admired the Megaran poet Theognis who rallied against marriages between the aristocracy and common people 101 He proposed numerous eugenic policies such as medical examinations before marriage discouragement of celibacy among successful and healthy individuals tax breaks and also castration of criminals and mentally ill 102 Along with his opposition to Darwinism he also disagreed with Social Darwinism especially Herbert Spencer s ideas of progress but Nietzsche s views on welfare policies social conflict and inequality are not much different from the ones usually held by Social Darwinists 103 He didn t share the evolutionary optimism of the Darwinists believing that current trends in European society point to degeneration of the species rather than to survival of the fittest Some of his views were influenced by the works of Charles Fere and Theodule Armand Ribot 104 One of the themes that Nietzsche often used to explain social phenomena was mixing of the races He believed that mixed race persons were usually inferior because of the conflicting incompatible instincts that exist in them and advocated racial purification 105 106 He used Socrates as a negative example of miscegenation 107 108 although he claimed that it can also occasionally create energetic individuals such as Alcibiades and Caesar 106 He blamed the mixing of the races on the decay of the European society and culture 94 but also credited it with the creation of modern men of the historical sense 109 He also used the term race in the ethnic meaning and in this sense he supported the idea of mixing specific races which he considered to be of high quality for example he proposed that Germans should mix with Slavs 63 Despite occasional reverence for ancient Germanic conquests and his identification of upper class with blond dolichocephalic type 95 Nietzsche s ideas do not have much in common with Nordicism He occasionally also praised non European cultures such as Moors Incas and Aztecs claiming that they were superior to their European conquerors 110 111 In The Dawn of Day he also proposed mass immigration of Chinese to Europe claiming that they would bring modes of living and thinking which would be found very suitable for industrious ants and help imbue this fretful and restless Europe with some of their Asiatic calmness and contemplation and what is perhaps most needful of all their Asiatic stability 112 While Nietzsche s thoughts on the subject are often vague he did occasionally use very harsh language calling for the annihilation of the decadent races and millions of deformed 113 Jews nationalism and European identity Edit Further information Nietzschean Zionism The whole problem of the Jews exists only in nation states for here their energy and higher intelligence their accumulated capital of spirit and will gathered from generation to generation through a long schooling in suffering must become so preponderant as to arouse mass envy and hatred In almost all contemporary nations therefore in direct proportion to the degree to which they act up nationalistically the literary obscenity of leading the Jews to slaughter as scapegoats of every conceivable public and internal misfortune is spreading Friedrich Nietzsche 1886 MA 1 475 114 Nietzsche made numerous comments on Jews and Judaism both positive and negative and his attitudes changed significantly during his life from fairly common criticism of Jews to more complex and specific perspective There are also controversies about translations of his work which sometimes try to tone down his more inflammatory remarks or disguise some of the attitudes he expresses 115 He blamed Judaism for spreading the idea of monotheism which puts a perfect God so high above humans that they all seem small before him and essentially equal among themselves 116 But he also praised parts of the Old Testament and early Jewish history He claimed that Judaism went through a negative moralistic pessimistic transformation during the Babylonian captivity By losing their native aristocratic class subjugated Jews now composed only of the priestly caste and the Chandala became resentful toward their foreign masters and generalized such feelings into a religious ressentiment of any type of aristocracy thus inventing the Master slave morality 117 118 Christianity was further even more radical development of the same idea that went to undermine the aristocratic Roman Empire and was later followed by Protestant Reformation and French revolution Although Nietzsche didn t put blame on cultural decay exclusively on Jews like some biological anti Semites he did note their decisive historical influence Nietzsche even claimed that anti Semites are also the product of Jewish spirit since with their Christian populist and socialist ideas they exhibit the same slave morality and ressentiment that were historically pioneered by the Jews 119 In that sense his negative attitude towards the Jews goes even further than the usual anti Semitism of his era He also held many common stereotypes about Jews being physically inferior shrewd egotistical exploitative dishonest and manipulative although he didn t necessarily consider all these characteristics negative 120 He also often praised Jewish intelligence and achievements 121 He had a very negative attitude toward contemporary anti Semitic movements which were usually based on Christian nationalist and economic animosity towards Jews In Germany the anti Semitic movement at the time was closely connected to the Christian socialism of Adolf Stoecker His biographers Domenico Losurdo and Julian Young describe Nietzsche as being primarily against such populist economic antisemitism seeing it as motivated purely by resentment of Jewish success and money 122 123 In a letter he wrote that anti Semitism appears to be exactly like the struggle against the rich and the means previously employed to become rich 124 He praised old wealthy Jewish families as a sort of refined Jewish aristocracy seeing them as allies in the fight against socialism while remaining scornful towards the masses of Jewish workers artisans and merchants who were often poor immigrants from Eastern Europe perceived as uncouth and politically subversive 125 His most negative comments are directed against Jewish prophets and priests due to their historical influence on the West he saw the leftist intellectuals as their modern version 126 Regarding the wealthy Jewish financiers he even proposed assimilationist policy of eugenic marriages with Prussian nobility 127 Nietzsche broke with his publisher in 1886 because of his opposition to his anti Semitic stances he was already dissatisfied because Schmeitzner s political engagement in Anti Jewish Alliance was the reason for delayed publication of Zarathustra 128 His rupture with Richard Wagner expressed in The Case of Wagner and Nietzsche contra Wagner both of which he wrote in 1888 had much to do with Wagner s endorsement of pan Germanism and anti Semitism and also of his rallying to Christianity In a March 29 1887 letter to Theodor Fritsch Nietzsche mocked anti Semites Fritsch Eugen Duhring Wagner Ebrard Wahrmund and the leading advocate of pan Germanism Paul de Lagarde who would become along with Wagner and Houston Chamberlain the main official influences of Nazism 3 This 1887 letter to Fritsch ended by And finally how do you think I feel when the name Zarathustra is mouthed by anti Semites 129 He admitted that his Thus Spoke Zarathustra was read and positively reviewed almost only by Wagnerians and anti Semites who also unsuccessfully tried to win him to their cause 130 However his philosophy actually started to attract a significant number of Jewish admirers and he established correspondence with some of them 131 nbsp Peter Gast would correct Nietzsche s writings even after the philosopher s breakdown and hence without his approval Nietzsche heavily criticized his sister and her husband Bernhard Forster speaking harshly against the anti Semitic canaille I ve seen proof black on white that Herr Dr Forster has not yet severed his connection with the anti Semitic movement Since then I ve had difficulty coming up with any of the tenderness and protectiveness I ve so long felt toward you The separation between us is thereby decided in really the most absurd way Have you grasped nothing of the reason why I am in the world Now it has gone so far that I have to defend myself hand and foot against people who confuse me with these anti Semitic canaille after my own sister my former sister and after Widemann more recently have given the impetus to this most dire of all confusions After I read the name Zarathustra in the anti Semitic Correspondence my forbearance came to an end I am now in a position of emergency defense against your spouse s Party These accursed anti Semite deformities shall not sully my ideal Draft for a letter to his sister Elisabeth Forster Nietzsche December 1887 Nietzsche became very critical of pan Germanism and nationalism after the Prussian victory over France Although he participated in the war as a volunteer he soon became disillusioned by the new German Empire seeing the subsequent development in German culture as vulgar and triumphalist 132 Instead he praised European identity and integration 62 predicting that developments in trade industry and internal migrations will weaken the nations and result in a mixed European race and a unified continent that will play a more dominant role in the world politics 133 He deeply disliked Hohenzollern dynasty especially due to their social policies accommodative toward the working class 134 In Ecce Homo 1888 Nietzsche criticized the German nation and its will to power to Empire to Reich thus underscoring an easy misinterpretation of the Wille zur Macht the conception of Germans as a race and the anti Semitic way of writing history or of making history conform to the German Empire and stigmatized nationalism this national neurosis from which Europe is sick this small politics 135 Later in his life he even started to identify as Polish believing that his ancestors were Polish noblemen who migrated to Germany 136 both his Polish and aristocratic ancestry claims are usually rejected by biographers see Citizenship nationality and ethnicity Nietzsche s cosmopolitan proclamations are not without its detractors who point out that he retained a lifelong focus on German society and culture with his last writings before insanity being about German politics 137 His hostile and mocking attitude towards Germany is sometimes also traced to his personal frustrations the break up of his friendship with Wagner and the very poor reception of his work in Germany 138 Nietzsche had a positive view of Slavic people but expressed mixed attitudes towards Russian Empire describing it in his earlier works as a hostile Asian power while later praising the Tsarist autocracy the opposition towards the modernity and the positive reception of his works in the aristocratic circles in Saint Petersburg 139 In Ecce Homo he particularly praised French culture as superior to all others especially German 140 However his negative attitudes and national criticisms were not reserved only for Germany In his last years he made negative comments on cultural trends in French society and denounced many leading intellectuals of the era such as Hugo Sand Zola Goncourt brothers Sainte Beuve Baudelaire Comte and Renan 141 His most consistently negative attitudes were towards England which he described as nation of shopkeepers philistines moral hypocrites and puritanical Christians Disregarding the British colonial pre eminence and the ability to escape revolutionary upheavals of the Continent which were often admired among reactionary aristocratic authors of the era Nietzsche s ire was mostly driven by British philosophical traditions which he denounced as utilitarian altruistic focused on lowly plebeian goals of comfort and happiness He held the same negative attitude toward the United States 142 Nietzsche was an advocate of European colonialism seeing it as a way to solve the overpopulation problem pacify the rebellious working class and rejuvenate the decadent European culture European expansion and global domination were part of his great politics He noted that in colonies Europeans often act as ruthless conquerors unconstrained by the Christian morality and democratic values which he saw as a liberated healthy instinct 143 He had even shown some initial interest for his brother in law s colonial project in Paraguay Nueva Germania despite the huge political differences between them and for a while in mid 1880s also considered migrating to a Swiss colony in Oaxaca Mexico 144 He was especially interested in climate differences believing that Northern Europe is an unhealthy habitat which stunts cultural development similar ideas often very radical and unrealistic were also held by Wagner and many of his followers 145 Nietzsche titled aphorism 377 in the fifth book of The Gay Science published in 1887 We who are homeless Wir Heimatlosen 146 in which he criticized pan Germanism and patriotism and called himself a good European In the second part of this aphorism which according to Georges Bataille contained the most important parts of Nietzsche s political thought the thinker of the Eternal Return stated No we do not love humanity but on the other hand we are not nearly German enough in the sense in which the word German is constantly being used nowadays to advocate nationalism and race hatred and to be able to take pleasure in the national scabies of the heart and blood poisoning that now leads the nations of Europe to delimit and barricade themselves against each other as if it were a matter of quarantine For that we are too open minded too malicious too spoiled also too well informed too traveled we far prefer to live on mountains apart untimely in past or future centuries merely in order to keep ourselves from experiencing the silent rage to which we know we should be condemned as eyewitnesses of politics that are desolating the German spirit by making it vain and that is moreover pettypolitics to keep its own creation from immediately falling apart again is it not finding it necessary to plant it between two deadly hatreds mustit not desire the eternalization of the European system of a lot of petty states We who are homeless are too manifold and mixed racially and in our descent being modern men and consequently do not feel tempted to participate in the mendacious racial self admiration and racial indecency that parades in Germany today as a sign of a German way of thinking and that is doubly false and obscene among the people of the historical sense We are in one word and let this be our word of honor good Europeans the heirs of Europe the rich oversupplied but also overly obligated heirs of thousands of years of European spirit as such we have also outgrown Christianity and are averse to it and precisely because we have grownoutof it because our ancestors were Christians who in their Christianity were uncompromisingly upright for their faith they willingly sacrificed possessions and position blood and fatherland We do the same For what For our unbelief For every kind of unbelief No you know better than that my friends The hidden Yes in you is stronger than all Nos and Maybes that afflict you and your age like a disease and when you have to embark on the sea you emigrants you too are compelled to this by a faith 147 Bataille was one of the first to denounce the deliberate misinterpretation of Nietzsche carried out by Nazis among them Alfred Baeumler In January 1937 he dedicated an issue of Acephale titled Reparations to Nietzsche to the theme Nietzsche and the Fascists 3 There he called Elisabeth Forster Nietzsche Elisabeth Judas Forster recalling Nietzsche s declaration To never frequent anyone who is involved in this bare faced fraud concerning races 3 Domenico Losurdo ridicules the idea that an intellectually rather mediocre woman managed to manipulate and derail interpretations of Nietzsche for decades and inspire political movements encompassing millions of people He dismisses such idea as unsustainable conspiracy theory noting that there is no shortage of unsettling and horrific passages in Nietzsche s writings 148 Due to his complex views and occasionally contradictory comments on these matters the idea of Nietzsche as a predecessor to Nazism and fascism remains controversial and debated among scholars see Nietzsche and fascism Owing largely to the writings of Walter Kaufmann and French postwar philosophers Nietzsche s reputation improved and today he usually is not linked to Nazism as he was in the past Detractors note that authors such as Houston Stewart Chamberlain and Arthur de Gobineau also had complex views on matters of politics nation and race that were incompatible with Nazi ideology on numerous points but their influence on the Third Reich is still not dismissed as a misunderstanding 149 War and military values Edit Nietzsche made numerous comments in which he denounces pacifism praises war military values and conquests Some of them could be read as metaphoric but in others he quite explicitly refers to specific policies or military actions and commanders Although he volunteered for the Franco Prussian war he soon became critical of Prussian militarism mostly because of his disillusionment in German culture and national politics but didn t renounce militarism in general 150 He praised Napoleon for reviving the military spirit which he saw as defense against the decadent rule of modern ideas businessmen and philistines 18 In The Will to Power he further elaborated When the instincts of a society ultimately make it give up war and renounce conquest it is decadent it is ripe for democracy and the rule of shopkeepers In the majority of cases it is true assurances of peace are merely stupefying draughts 151 He opposed the rule of mandarins solving conflicts by arbitration instead of war 152 and encouraged the military development of Europe 153 He proposed conscription polytechnic military education and the idea that all men of higher classes should be reserve officers in addition to their civilian jobs 154 In The Will to Power he wrote The maintenance of the military State is the last means of adhering to the great tradition of the past or where it has been lost to revive it By means of it the superior or strong type of man is preserved and all institutions and ideas which perpetuate enmity and order of rank in States such as national feeling protective tariffs etc may on that account seem justified 155 However most of his praise is reserved for aristocratic warriors rather than common plebeian soldiers He expressed some doubts about arming and training the conscripted proletarian masses seeing them as a potential revolutionary threat 156 He also worried that modern wars among European nations might have dysgenic effect by sacrificing too many strong brave individuals 157 Views on women Edit Main article Friedrich Nietzsche s views on women Nietzsche s views on women have served as a magnet for controversy beginning during his life and continuing to the present He frequently made remarks in his writing that some view as misogynistic He stated in Twilight of the Idols 1888 Women are considered profound Why Because we never fathom their depths But women aren t even shallow 158 non primary source needed Relation to Schopenhauer EditAccording to Santayana Nietzsche considered his philosophy to be a correction of Schopenhauer s philosophy In his Egotism in German Philosophy 159 Santayana listed Nietzsche s antithetical reactions to Schopenhauer The will to live would become the will to dominate pessimism founded on reflection would become optimism founded on courage the suspense of the will in contemplation would yield to a more biological account of intelligence and taste finally in the place of pity and asceticism Schopenhauer s two principles of morals Nietzsche would set up the duty of asserting the will at all costs and being cruelly but beautifully strong These points of difference from Schopenhauer cover the whole philosophy of Nietzsche These emendations show how Schopenhauer s philosophy was not a mere initial stimulus for Nietzsche but formed the basis for much of Nietzsche s thinking Von Hartmann suggested that Schopenhauer was the only philosopher who has been systematically studied by Nietzsche 160 Relation to Philipp Mainlander Edit nbsp Philipp MainlanderThe work of Philipp Mainlander had an important impact on Nietzsche s intellectual development and made him distance himself from the philosophy of Schopenhauer 161 162 In Mainlander s 200 pages long criticism of Schopenhauer s philosophy Mainlander argues against a metaphysical will behind the world and argues instead for a real multiplicity of wills that struggle with each other Mainlander is perhaps best understood as a negative influence on Nietzsche 163 Mainlander took the pessimism of Schopenhauer to its ultimate conclusion and ended his own life However he did never recommend or argue for suicide this is a common misconception and aims to motivate those who abhor the world back to an active life with self chosen goals 164 Mainlander is a hedonist 165 and the goal of his ethics to indicate how man can reach the highest happiness 166 If life is worthless then this must be used to attain a state of complete fearlessness 167 Both Nietzsche and Mainlander owed their philosophical awakening to The World as Will and Representation they disliked the popular successor of Schopenhauer Eduard von Hartmann both championed the individual and rejected traditional values both proclaimed that God is dead Mainlander had popularized the theme before Nietzsche 168 Their mental collapse has also drawn comparisons 169 Relation to Soren Kierkegaard EditNietzsche knew little of the 19th century philosopher Soren Kierkegaard 170 171 Georg Brandes a Danish philosopher wrote to Nietzsche in 1888 asking him to study the works of Kierkegaard to which Nietzsche replied that he would 172 nb 1 Recent research however suggests that Nietzsche was exposed to the works of Kierkegaard through secondary literature Aside from Brandes Nietzsche owned and read a copy of Hans Lassen Martensen s Christliche Ethik 1873 in which Martensen extensively quoted and wrote about Kierkegaard s individualism in ethics and religion Nietzsche also read Harald Hoffding s Psychologie in Umrissen auf Grundlage der Erfahrung ed 1887 which expounded and critiqued Kierkegaard s psychology Thomas Brobjer believes one of the works Nietzsche wrote about Kierkegaard is in Morgenrothe which was partly written in response to Martensen s work In one of the passages Nietzsche wrote Those moralists on the other hand who following in the footsteps of Socrates offer the individual a morality of self control and temperance as a means to his own advantage as his personal key to happiness are the exceptions Brobjer believes Kierkegaard is one of those moralists 173 The first philosophical study comparing Kierkegaard and Nietzsche was published even before Nietzsche s death 174 More than 60 articles and 15 full length studies have been published devoted entirely in comparing these two thinkers 174 Legacy EditMain article Influence and reception of Friedrich Nietzsche Perhaps Nietzsche s greatest philosophical legacy lies in his 20th century interpreters among them Pierre Klossowski Martin Heidegger Georges Bataille Leo Strauss Alexandre Kojeve Michel Foucault Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari Jacques Derrida and Albert Camus Foucault s later writings for example adopt Nietzsche s genealogical method to develop anti foundationalist theories of power that divide and fragment rather than unite politics as evinced in the liberal tradition of political theory The systematic institutionalisation of criminal delinquency sexual identity and practice and the mentally ill to name but a few are examples used by Foucault to demonstrate how knowledge or truth is inseparable from the institutions that formulate notions of legitimacy from immoralities such as homosexuality and the like captured in the famous power knowledge equation Deleuze arguably the foremost of Nietzsche s interpreters used the much maligned will to power thesis in tandem with Marxian notions of commodity surplus and Freudian ideas of desire to articulate concepts such the rhizome and other outsides to state power as traditionally conceived Certain recent Nietzschean interpretations have emphasized the more untimely and politically controversial aspects of Nietzsche s philosophy Nietzschean commentator Keith Ansell Pearson has pointed out the absurdity of modern egalitarian liberals socialists communists and anarchists claiming Nietzsche as a herald of their own left wing politics The values Nietzsche wishes to subject to a revaluation are largely altruistic and egalitarian values such as pity self sacrifice and equal rights For Nietzsche modern politics rests largely on a secular inheritance of Christian values he interprets the socialist doctrine of equality in terms of a secularization of the Christian belief in the equality of all souls before God 175 Works such as Bruce Detwiler s Nietzsche and the Politics of Aristocratic Radicalism 176 Fredrick Appel s Nietzsche contra Democracy 177 and Domenico Losurdo s Nietzsche il ribelle aristocratico 178 challenge the prevalent liberal interpretive consensus on Nietzsche and assert that Nietzsche s elitism was not merely an aesthetic pose but an ideological attack on the widely held belief in equal rights of the modern West locating Nietzsche in the conservative revolutionary tradition See also EditNorth American Nietzsche SocietyNotes Edit Brandes and Nietzsche wrote letters back and forth between 1886 1888 In 1886 Nietzsche sent Brandes copies of Beyond Good and Evil written in 1885 and later Genealogy of Morals and Human All Too Human p 314 Brandes sent Nietzsche a copy of Main Currents in 1888 pp 331 331 Nietzsche wrote in May of 1888 that Dr George Brandes is now delivering an important course of lectures at the University of Copenhagen on the German philosopher Freidrich Nietzsche According to the papers these lectures are having the most brilliant success The hall is full to overflowing each time more than three hundred people present p 227 They were ready for my theory of master morality owing to the thorough general knowledge they possess of the Icelandic sagas which provide very rich material for the theory I am glad to hear that the Danish philologists approve and accept my derivation of bonus in itself it seems rather a tall order to trace the concept good back to the concept warrior p 229 On January 11 1888 Brandes wrote the following to Nietzsche There is a Northern writer whose works would interest you if they were but translated Soren Kierkegaard He lived from 1813 to 1855 and is in my opinion one of the profoundest psychologists to be met with anywhere A little book which I have written about him the translation published at Leipzig in 1879 gives me exhaustive idea of his genius for the book is a kind of polemical tract written with the purpose of checking his influence It is nevertheless from a psychological point of view the finest work I have published p 325 Nietzsche wrote back that he would tackle Kierkegaard s psychological problems p 327 and then Brandes asked if he could get a copy of everything Nietzsche had published p 343 so he could spread his propaganda p 348 360 361 Selected Letters of Friedrich Nietzsche 1st ed edited with a preface by Oscar Levy authorized translation by Anthony M Ludovici Published 1921 by Doubleday Page amp CoReferences Edit The Gay Science Section 108 provides an exception See Beyond Good and Evil a b c d e f Georges Bataille Nietzsche and Fascists in the January 1937 issue of Acephale available on line Mazzino Montinari Friedrich Nietzsche 1974 transl in German in 1991 Friedrich Nietzsche Eine Einfuhrung Berlin New York De Gruyter and in French Friedrich Nietzsche PUF 2001 p 121 chapter Nietzsche and the consequences Book 1 of Wille zur Macht a b Kockelmans J J 2012 Heidegger on Art and Art Works Dordrecht Springer Science amp Business Media p 53 ISBN 978 90 247 3144 2 Holub R C 2018 Nietzsche in the Nineteenth Century Social Questions and Philosophical Interventions University of Pennsylvania Press 2018 p 369 see Steven Luper s introduction on Nietzsche in Existing for a detailed analysis of these efforts Dennett D C 1995 Darwin s Dangerous Idea Evolution and the Meanings of Life Simon amp Schuster Holub R C 2018 Nietzsche in the Nineteenth Century Social Questions and Philosophical Interventions University of Pennsylvania Press 2018 p 385 For a clear reconstruction of Nietzsche s uncharacteristically careful deduction of what he once described as the most scientific of hypotheses see Danto 1965 pp 201 9 For a discussion and survey of this and other interpretations of Nietzsche s notorious idea of eternal recurrence see Nehamas 1980 which argues that by scientific Nietzsche meant specifically not teleological A recurring but so far not eternally recurring problem with the appreciation of Nietzsche s version of the eternal recurrence is that unlike Wheeler Nietzsche seems to think that this life will happen again not because it and all possible variations on it will happen over and over but because there is only one possible variation this one and it will happen over and over Dennett D C 1995 Darwin s Dangerous Idea Evolution and the Meanings of Life Simon amp Schuster Detwiler B 1990 Nietzsche and the Politics of Aristocratic Radicalism University Of Chicago Press 1990 a b Dombowsky D 2014 Nietzsche and Napoleon The Dionysian Conspiracy University of Wales Press 2014 Keith Ansell Pearson An Introduction to Nietzsche as Political Thinker The Perfect Nihilist Cambridge University Press 1994 pp 33 34 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 711 745 a b Leiter Brian 2021 Nietzsche s Moral and Political Philosophy in Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Summer 2021 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University retrieved 2022 03 09 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 524 a b c The Gay Science 362 Twilight of the Idols Skirmishes of an Untimely Man 44 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 452 455 a b Dombowsky D Cameron F 2008 Political Writings of Friedrich Nietzsche An Edited Anthology Palgrave Macmillan 2008 p 11 Dombowsky D Cameron F 2008 Political Writings of Friedrich Nietzsche An Edited Anthology Palgrave Macmillan 2008 p 22 Dombowsky D Cameron F 2008 Political Writings of Friedrich Nietzsche An Edited Anthology Palgrave Macmillan 2008 p 240 Twilight of the Idols Skirmishes of an Untimely Man 37 The Will to Power manuscript 753 a b The Gay Science 377 Dombowsky D Cameron F 2008 Political Writings of Friedrich Nietzsche An Edited Anthology Palgrave Macmillan 2008 p 118 Beyond Good and Evil 257 Dombowsky D Cameron F 2008 Political Writings of Friedrich Nietzsche An Edited Anthology Palgrave Macmillan 2008 p 172 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 386 Dombowsky D Cameron F 2008 Political Writings of Friedrich Nietzsche An Edited Anthology Palgrave Macmillan 2008 p 17 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 391 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 392 396 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 395 from Nachlass quoted and translated in Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 919 On the Genealogy of Morality Second Essay 17 Dombowsky D 2014 Nietzsche and Napoleon The Dionysian Conspiracy University of Wales Press 2014 p 94 Dombowsky D 2004 Nietzsche s Machiavellian Politics Palgrave Macmillan 2004 p 19 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 364 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 564 Nietzsche Letter to Georg Brandes December 2nd 1887 Arthur Schopenhauer The World as Will and Representation 68 available on line Olivier Ponton Mitfreude Le projet nietzscheen d une ethique de l amitie dans Choses humaines trop humaines HyperNietzsche 2003 12 09 on line Archived 2007 09 27 at the Wayback Machine in French Dombowsky D 2004 Nietzsche s Machiavellian Politics Palgrave Macmillan 2004 p 125 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 973 977 Dombowsky D 2004 Nietzsche s Machiavellian Politics Palgrave Macmillan 2004 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 663 671 Bernd A Laska Nietzsche s Initial Crisis In Germanic Notes and Reviews vol 33 n 2 fall Herbst 2002 pp 109 133 Conclusion of Stirner et Nietzsche by Albert Levy op cit Patrick Wotling Nietzsche et le probleme de la civilisation PUF 1995 2nd ed 1999 The Will to Power manuscript translated by Anthony Ludovici 1914 784 a b c The Wanderer and His Shadow 285 a b c The Will to Power manuscript 125 Thus Spoke Zarathustra On the new idol Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 641 642 The Will to Power manuscript 864 Twilight of the Idols Skirmishes of an Untimely Man 38 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 638 639 a b The Gay Science 40 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 931 Miscellaneous Maxims and Opinions 304 a b Human All Too Human 475 a b Dombowsky D Cameron F 2008 Political Writings of Friedrich Nietzsche An Edited Anthology Palgrave Macmillan 2008 p 163 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 543 546 Quoted in Young Julian 2010 Friedrich Nietzsche A Philosophical Biography Cambridge University Press p 525 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 362 363 Dombowsky D 2004 Nietzsche s Machiavellian Politics Palgrave Macmillan 2004 p 29 32 Altman W H F 2012 Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche The Philosopher of the Second Reich Lexington Books 2012 p 66 Dombowsky D Cameron F 2008 Political Writings of Friedrich Nietzsche An Edited Anthology Palgrave Macmillan 2008 p 15 Buccola N 2009 The Tyranny of the Least and the Dumbest Nietzsche s Critique of Socialism Quarterly Journal of Ideology Volume 31 Dombowsky D 2014 Nietzsche and Napoleon The Dionysian Conspiracy University of Wales Press 2014 p 111 Thus Spoke Zarathustra Conversation with the kings Dombowsky D Cameron F 2008 Political Writings of Friedrich Nietzsche An Edited Anthology Palgrave Macmillan 2008 p 161 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 330 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 581 Holub R C 2018 Nietzsche in the Nineteenth Century Social Questions and Philosophical Interventions University of Pennsylvania Press 2018 p 37 38 The Will to Power manuscript 1017 The Dawn of Day 3 Human All Too Human 463 The Will to Power manuscript 98 The Antichrist book 54 On the Genealogy of Morality Third Essay 14 Nietzsche F 1887 On the Genealogy of Morality translated by Horace B Samuel Boni and Liverlight Second Essay 11 Human All Too Human 235 Twilight of the Idols Skirmishes of an Untimely Man translated by Anthony Ludovici 1911 37 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 929 The Will to Power manuscript 51 Nietzsche F 1895 The Antichrist 2nd ed translated by H L Mencken Alfred A Knopf 1918 57 The Will to Power manuscript translated by Anthony Ludovici 1914 209 Brobjer T H 2008 Nietzsche s Philosophical Context An Intellectual Biography University of Illinois Press 2008 p 70 Sineokaya Y 2018 The prohibited Nietzsche anti Nitzscheanism in Soviet Russia Studies in East European Thought Springer Nature B V 2018 Moore G 2002 Nietzsche Biology and Metaphor Cambridge University Press 2002 a b c Bernasconi R 2017 Nietzsche as a philosopher of racialized breeding In Zack N ed The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Race Oxford University Press 2017 a b Beyond Good and Evil 208 a b On the Genealogy of Morality First Essay 5 Twilight of Idols The Improvers of Mankind 3 The Antichrist book 57 Moore G 2002 Nietzsche Biology and Metaphor Cambridge University Press 2002 p 124 Holub R C 2018 Nietzsche in the Nineteenth Century Social Questions and Philosophical Interventions University of Pennsylvania Press 2018 p 289 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 591 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 1010 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 590 591 Dombowsky D 2004 Nietzsche s Machiavellian Politics Palgrave Macmillan 2004 p 97 Holub R C 2018 Nietzsche in the Nineteenth Century Social Questions and Philosophical Interventions University of Pennsylvania Press 2018 The Dawn of Day 272 a b Beyond Good and Evil 200 Twilight of Idols The Problem of Socrates 3 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 582 Beyond Good and Evil 224 The Antichrist book 60 The Dawn of Day 204 The Dawn of Day 206 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 1009 Nietzsche der Philosoph und Politiker 8 63 et passim Ed Alfred Baeumler Reclam 1931 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 994 999 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 954 On the Genealogy of Morality First Essay 16 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 795 796 Holub R C 2018 Nietzsche in the Nineteenth Century Social Questions and Philosophical Interventions University of Pennsylvania Press 2018 p 306 Holub R C 2018 Nietzsche in the Nineteenth Century Social Questions and Philosophical Interventions University of Pennsylvania Press 2018 p 310 Beyond Good and Evil 251 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 578 Young Julian 2010 Friedrich Nietzsche A Philosophical Biography Cambridge University Press p 358 359 Holub R C 2018 Nietzsche in the Nineteenth Century Social Questions and Philosophical Interventions University of Pennsylvania Press 2018 p 291 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 561 562 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 574 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 545 Young Julian 2010 Friedrich Nietzsche A Philosophical Biography Cambridge University Press p 358 March 29 1887 letter to Theodor Fritsch in English Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 566 Young Julian 2010 Friedrich Nietzsche A Philosophical Biography Cambridge University Press Untimely Meditations David Strauss the Confessor and the Writer 1 Holub R C 2018 Nietzsche in the Nineteenth Century Social Questions and Philosophical Interventions University of Pennsylvania Press 2018 p 245 252 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 533 534 Ecce Homo Why I Write Such Good Books The Case of Wagner 1 and 2 Ecce Homo Why I Write Such Good Books 3 Altman W H F 2012 Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche The Philosopher of the Second Reich Lexington Books 2012 Holub R C 2018 Nietzsche in the Nineteenth Century Social Questions and Philosophical Interventions University of Pennsylvania Press 2018 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 560 Ecce Homo book Why Am I So Clever 3 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 750 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 746 750 Holub R C 2018 Nietzsche in the Nineteenth Century Social Questions and Philosophical Interventions University of Pennsylvania Press 2018 p 249 Holub R C 2018 Nietzsche in the Nineteenth Century Social Questions and Philosophical Interventions University of Pennsylvania Press 2018 p 236 Holub R C 2018 Nietzsche in the Nineteenth Century Social Questions and Philosophical Interventions University of Pennsylvania Press 2018 p 121 227 Wir Heimatlosen Die frohliche Wissenschaft in German Nietzsche Source Retrieved 2015 08 21 The Gay Science aphorism 377 transl by We who are homeless We who are without Fatherlands read here dead link Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 711 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 816 Dombowsky D Cameron F 2008 Political Writings of Friedrich Nietzsche An Edited Anthology Palgrave Macmillan 2008 p 33 The Will to Power manuscript translated by Anthony Ludovici 1914 728 On the Genealogy of Morality Third Essay 25 The Will to Power manuscript 127 The Will to Power manuscript 793 The Will to Power manuscript translated by Anthony Ludovici 1914 729 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 689 Losurdo D 2002 Nietzsche the Aristocratic Rebel Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance Sheet Brill 2020 p 693 694 Friedrich Nietzsche 1844 1900 Twilight of the Idols 1888 http www handprint com SC NIE GotDamer html sect1 Chapter XI Nietzsche and Schopenhauer von Hartmann Eduard 1898 Ethische Studien Leipzig Hermann Haacke p 35 Brobjer Thomas H 2008 Nietzsche s Philosophical Context An Intellectual Biography University Of Illinois Press p 149 ISBN 9780252032455 It was in a letter to Cosima Wagner December 19 1876 that is while reading Mainlander that Nietzsche for the first time explicitly claimed to have parted ways with Schopenhauer It may be worth mentioning that Mainlander s book ends with a long section more than two hundred pages consisting mainly of a critique of Schopenhauer s metaphysics Decher emphasizes the importance of the fact that Mainlander reinterpreted Schopenhauer s metaphysical and single will to a multiplicity of wills always in struggle and the importance of this for Nietzsche s will to power Marta Kopji Wojciech Kunicki 2006 Nietzsche und Schopenhauer Rezeptionsphanomene der Wendezeiten Leipzig Leipziger Universitatsverlag p 340 ISBN 3865831214 Bekanntlich war es Philipp Mainlander der als Scharnierstelle zwischen den metaphyisischen Willensbegriffen Schopenhauers und Nietzsches fungierte Famously it was Philipp Mainlander who functioned as the interface between the metaphysical will concept of Schopenhauer and Nietzsche Brobjer Thomas H 2008 Nietzsche s Philosophical Context An Intellectual Biography University Of Illinois Press p 95 ISBN 9780252032455 Mainlander Philipp 1876 Die Philosophie der Erlosung Vol 1 Berlin p 349 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Wolf Jean Claude 2007 Egoismus und Moral p 21 Mainlander Philipp 1876 Die Philosophie der Erlosung Vol 1 Berlin p 169 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Mainlander Philipp 1886 Die Philosophie der Erlosung Vol 2 Berlin p 251 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Beiser Frederick C 2008 Weltschmerz Pessimism in German Philosophy 1860 1900 Oxford Oxford University Press p 202 ISBN 978 0198768715 Batz introduces a very modern and redolent theme the death of God He popularized the theme before Nietzsche Ulrich Horstmann Mainlanders Mahlstrom Uber eine philosophische Flaschenpost und ihren Absender In Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung No 508 1989 Angier Tom P Either Kierkegaard or Nietzsche Moral Philosophy in a New Key ISBN 0 7546 5474 5 Hubben William Dostoevsky Kierkegaard Nietzsche and Kafka ISBN 0 684 82589 9 Nietzsche Chronicle 1888 Journal of the History of Philosophy a b Miles Thomas Rival Visions of the Best Way of Life in Kierkegaard and Existentialism Jon Stewart ed p 263 Ansell Pearson Keith ed 1994 Nietzsche On the Genealogy of Morality and Other Writings Translated by Diethe Carol Cambridge University Press p 9 Detwiler Bruce 1990 Nietzsche and the Politics of Aristocratic Radicalism University of Chicago Press Appel Frederick 1998 Nietzsche contra Democracy Cornell University Press ISBN 9780801434242 JSTOR 10 7591 j ctvv4162f Losurdo Domenico 2002 Nietzsche il ribelle aristocratico Biografia intellettuale e bilancio critico Nietzsche the rebel aristocrat Intellectual biography and critical balance in Italian Turin Bollati Boringhieri ISBN 9788833914312 Further reading EditMain article List of works about Friedrich Nietzsche On Nietzsche s view on women see Jacques Derrida Spurs Nietzsche s Styles trans Barbara Harlow Chicago amp London University of Chicago Press 1979 On Nietzsche and biology see Barbara Stiegler Nietzsche et la biologie PUF 2001 ISBN 2 13 050742 5 Martin Heidegger and Nietzsche s Overman Aphorisms on the Attack Wilkerson Dale Friedrich Nietzsche Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Kirwin Claire Nietzsche s Ethics Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Jensen Anthony K Nietzsche s Philosophy of History Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy External links EditNietzsche Source Digital version of the German critical edition of the complete works Digital facsimile edition of the entire Nietzsche estate The Nietzsche Channel include letters section on Nietzsche s library etc Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche amp oldid 1180164621, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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