Nietzsche: Beyond Good and Evil: Prelude to a Philosophy of the FutureCambridge University Press, 2002 - 193 páginas Beyond Good and Evil is one of the most scathing and powerful critiques of philosophy, religion, science, politics and ethics ever written. In it, Nietzsche presents a set of problems, criticisms and philosophical challenges that continue both to inspire and to trouble contemporary thought. In addition, he offers his most subtle, detailed and sophisticated account of the virtues, ideas, and practices which will characterize philosophy and philosophers of the future. With his relentlessly energetic style and tirelessly probing manner, Nietzsche embodies the type of thought he wants to foster, while defining its historical role and determining its agenda. This edition offers a new and readable translation, by Judith Norman, of one of the most influential texts in the history of philosophy, together with an introduction by Rolf-Peter Horstmann that sets it in its historical and philosophical context. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 47
Página xvii
... look would no doubt lead back to his use of some of Schopenhauer's ideas and to his picture of what constituted the cultural life of pre - Socratic ancient Greece . ) Against the background of these convictions , Nietzsche became inter ...
... look would no doubt lead back to his use of some of Schopenhauer's ideas and to his picture of what constituted the cultural life of pre - Socratic ancient Greece . ) Against the background of these convictions , Nietzsche became inter ...
Página xxii
... look considerably less arbitrary and idiosyncratic than has been claimed . For example , his so - called " theory of truth " which he alludes to quite often in the first two books of BGE , seems less absurd than many commentators have ...
... look considerably less arbitrary and idiosyncratic than has been claimed . For example , his so - called " theory of truth " which he alludes to quite often in the first two books of BGE , seems less absurd than many commentators have ...
Página xxiii
... looks like a collection of impromptu remarks , each of which explores to a different degree of depth some aspect or other of a particular observation , specific claim , or surprising phenomenon . These remarks are numbered and loosely ...
... looks like a collection of impromptu remarks , each of which explores to a different degree of depth some aspect or other of a particular observation , specific claim , or surprising phenomenon . These remarks are numbered and loosely ...
Página xxv
... look at the phenomenon of organic life as an integral part of reality , we find that it consists not in a static condition but in a dynamic and chaotic process of creation and decay , of overpowering and becoming overpowered , of ...
... look at the phenomenon of organic life as an integral part of reality , we find that it consists not in a static condition but in a dynamic and chaotic process of creation and decay , of overpowering and becoming overpowered , of ...
Página xxviii
... look too closely at his actual teachings , but to think of his texts as a kind of mental tonic designed to encourage his readers to continue to confront their doubts and suspicions about the well - foundedness of many of their most ...
... look too closely at his actual teachings , but to think of his texts as a kind of mental tonic designed to encourage his readers to continue to confront their doubts and suspicions about the well - foundedness of many of their most ...
Contenido
On the prejudices of philosophers | 5 |
The free spirit | 25 |
The religious character | 43 |
Epigrams and entractes | 58 |
On the natural history of morals | 75 |
We scholars | 93 |
Our virtues | 109 |
Peoples and fatherlands | 131 |
What is noble? | 151 |
Aftersong | 178 |
Glossary of names | 181 |
186 | |
Términos y frases comunes
Aristophanes artists become believe belong Birth of Tragedy called Christianity claim concept conscience culture dangerous Descartes dominant drives ears Ecce Homo edited Epicurus eternal Europe European everything evil experience eyes fact faith feeling finally force free spirits French FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE friends fundamental Gay Science Genealogy of Morals genius German give Goethe Greek heart herd higher honor humanity instinct interpretation invented Kant live look matter means mediocre metaphysical modern ideas morality nature Nietzsche Nietzsche's noble ourselves perhaps person perspectivism philosopher pity Plato precisely problem profound psychologist question R. J. Hollingdale rank religion Richard Wagner romanticism scholars Schopenhauer seems sense skepticism slave someone sort soul strong stupidity subtle suffering taste things thought translated truth understand virtues vivisection Wagner woman women words writings Zarathustra