Friedrich Nietzsche — "Objection, evasion, joyous distrust, and love of irony are signs of health; ever…"
Objection, evasion, joyous distrust, and love of irony are signs of health; everything absolute belongs to pathology.
Objection, evasion, joyous distrust, and love of irony are signs of health; everything absolute belongs to pathology.
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"A good war hallows any cause."
"The Christian resolution to find the world ugly and bad, has made the world ugly and bad."
"The greatest event of recent times — that 'God is dead,' that the belief in the Christian God has become unbelievable — is already beginning to cast its first shadows over Europe."
"You must be ready to burn yourself in your own flame; how could you rise anew if you have not first become ashes?"
"But the worst enemy you can meet will always be yourself; you lie in wait for yourself in caverns and forests."
German philosopher of 'God is dead,' ressentiment, and the will to power, who attacked Christian moral psychology at its foundations. Closely associated with Arthur Schopenhauer (his early intellectual father, later broken with). For an intellectual contrast, see Søren Kierkegaard, Danish Christian existentialist of the leap of faith — both diagnosed modern despair, but Kierkegaard's answer was Christ and Nietzsche's was the death of God — the two existentialist roads taken from the same starting point.
The standard scholarly entry points to Friedrich Nietzsche's work: Walter Kaufmann (Princeton, the postwar Nietzsche rehabilitator) — Nietzsche: Philosopher, Psychologist, Antichrist (1950); Brian Leiter (University of Chicago Law School) — Nietzsche on Morality (2002); Maudemarie Clark (UC Riverside, Emerita) — Nietzsche on Truth and Philosophy (1990). These are the works graduate seminars cite when teaching Friedrich Nietzsche.
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