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Human - All-Too-Human - A Book for Free Spirits [Englisch] [Gebundene Ausgabe]

Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche
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Produktinformation

  • Gebundene Ausgabe: 356 Seiten
  • Verlag: Vogt Press (1. November 2008)
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ISBN-10: 1443721859
  • ISBN-13: 978-1443721851
  • Größe und/oder Gewicht: 21,8 x 14,2 x 3,3 cm
  • Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung: 4.7 von 5 Sternen  Alle Rezensionen anzeigen (3 Kundenrezensionen)
  • Komplettes Inhaltsverzeichnis ansehen

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Kurzbeschreibung

HUMAN- ALL-TOO-HUMAN. Originally published in 1914. Contents include: INTRODUCTION .... Pagevii AUTHORS PREFACE ..... i FIRST DIVISION FIRST AND LAST THINGS . . 13 SECOND DIVISION THE HISTORY OF THE MORAL SENTIMENTS . . . . - 53 THIRD DIVISION THE RELIGIOUS LIFE . ui FOURTH DIVISIC. CONCERNING THE SOUL OF ARTISTS AND AUTHORS . . . .153 FIFTH DIVISION THE SIGNS OF HIGHER AND LOWER CULTURE ..... 207 SIXTH DIVISION MAN IN SOCIETY . . . 267 SEVENTH DIVISION WIFE AND CHILD . . 295 EIGHTH DIVISION A GLANCE AT THE STATE . 317 NINTH DIVISION MAN ALONE BY HIMSELF . . 355 AN EPODE - AMONG FRIENDS .... 409. INTRODUCTION: NIETZSCHES essay, Richard Wagner tn Bayreuth, appeared in 1876, and his next publication was his present work, which was issued in 1878. A comparison of the books will show that the two years of meditation intervening had brought about a great change in Nietzsches views, his style of expressing them, and the form in which they were cast. The Dionysian, overflowing with life, gives way to an Apollonian thinker with a touch of pessimism. The long essay form is abandoned, and instead we have a series of aphorisms, some tinged with melancholy, others with satire, several, especially towards the end, with Nietzschian wit at its best, and a few at the beginning so very abstruse as to require careful study. Since the Bayreuth festivals of 1876, Nietzsche had gradually come to see Wagner as he really was. The ideal musician that Nietzsche had pic tured in his own mind turned out to be nothing more than a rather dilettante philosopher, an opportunistic decadent with a suspicious tendency towards Christianity. The young philosopher thereupon proceeded to shake off the influence which the musician had exercised upon him. He was successful in doing so, but not without a struggle, just as he had formerly shaken off the influence of Schopenhauer. Hence he writes in his autobiography Human y all-too-Human y is the monument of a crisis. It is entitled A book for free spirits and almost every line in it represents a victory in its pages I freed myself from everything foreign to my real nature. Ideal ism is foreign to me the title says, Where you see ideal things, I see things which are only human alas all-too-human I know man better the term free spirit must here be understood in no other sense than this a freed man, who has once more taken possession of himself. The form of this book will be better under stood when it is remembered that at this period Nietzsche was beginning to suffer from stomach trouble and headaches. As a cure for his com plaints, he spent his time in travel when he could get a few weeks respite from his duties at Basel University and it was in the course of his solitary walks and hill-climbing tours that the majority of these thoughts occurred to him and were jotted down there and then. A few of them, however, date further back, as he tells us in the preface to the second part of this work. Many of them, he says, occupied his mind even before he published his first book, The Birth of Tragedy r , and several others, as we learn from his notebooks and post humous writings, date from the period of the Thoughts out of Season. It must be clearly understood, however, that Ecce HomO p. 75. Nietzsches disease must not be looked upon in the same way as that of an ordinary man. People are inclined to regard a sick man as rancorous but any one who fights with and conquers his disease, and even exploits it, as Nietzsche did, benefits thereby to an extraordinary degree. In the first place, he has passed through several stages of human psychology with which a healthy man is entirely unacquainted e. g...

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Von unraveler
Format:Taschenbuch
This is Nietzsche's first, and in some ways the best, philosophy book. Prior to Human All-Too Human, he penned The Birth of Tragedy and Untimely Meditations. But it is only in this book that Nietzsche comes into his own as a philosopher. The book was written soon after his retirement from teaching, due to ill health, and Nietzsche suffered a lot from physical pain, while writing the book, having to take hashish to relieve it. The book contains opinions on almost everything under the Sun. Although it is clearly broken down into distinct chapters, the thoughts within chapters are not arranged systematically. This is intentional and represents Nietzsche mistrust of grand theorizing and excessively systematic thinking. He retained this aphoristic writing style till the last days of his productive life. Thus in his approach, Nietzsche anticipates both existentialism and post-modernism. He views life personally, passionately, and with distrust to grand system(narrative) building. Thoughts slither through the labyrinth of human life, revealing strartling insights and forcing us to reconsider received opinions and conventional wisdoms.

By Nietzsche's standards, the perspectives presented in the book are fairly measured, and the author's voice is not nearly as shrill as it would become ten years later, in his last books. Because Nietzsche settles at a high level of generalization, some opinions do sound narrow-minded and prejudiced. In this, Nietzsche was also a victim of his time and culture: his comments on women and "the youthful Jew of the stock exchange" are not intellectuals gems, to put it very mildly. Some of his other opinions, on marriage, for example, also strike me as strange. Overall, this is a book by an all-too-human philosopher, yet it is a path-breaking work, a precursor to existentialism and post-modernism, written in a style that can appeal to the reader sheerly as good literature.

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A(over)men 25. Mai 1999
Von Ein Kunde
Format:Taschenbuch
Nietzsche is the philosopher of human potentials and possibilities. His philosophy is ultimately centered towards the creation of a new means or mode of life, a revolution of personality working over to culture. But there are no final resting-points and every stop is only another breather before the next leap. Everything merits criticism, for nothing can fulfill the energies or excitations any living person must find in themselves but not find the powers to express. The world as is is a dissappointing place--but the world as it could be deserves more devotion than anything that has been. Metaphysical laxatives or ideals of any sort are murderous when they are taken from outside without awakening the continued impulse to individualization and experiment ricocheted from within. As philosopher of the future Nietzsche meant that he would always mean something else. Also ponder the inscription of Zarathustra--for Everybody and Nobody. "Where you see ideal types, I see what is human, alas, all too human,--I know man better"
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Nietzsche's best 1. Mai 1999
Von Ein Kunde
Format:Taschenbuch
This is Nietzsche's best book, containing amazingly prophetic passages on the failure of Socialism and the decline of the State. I disagree with many of Nietzsches's ideas, but in this book they are all stated lucidly and incisively, without the psuedo-oracular posturing that disfigures his later works.
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