Philosophical Writings: Friedrich NietzscheA&C Black, 01/10/1995 - 270 páginas Philosophical Writings, part of the German Library Series contains essential portions of the theses that make Nietzsche the most controversial of philosophers. It includes: The Birth of Tragedy, Beyond Good and Evil, The Gay Science, Untimely Meditations, Human, All too Human, and other works. Included are Preface to Richard Wagner, On Truth and Falsity in their Extramortal Sense, The History of an Error, We Antipodes, Geneaology of Morals: A Polemic, and On the Pathos of Truth. Although his reputation has bordered on notoriety, Nietzsche's influence has unquestionably not diminished with time, and our fascination with him will be further fed by the publication of this volume. > |
Índice
The Birth of Tragedy or Greekness and Pessimism 187286 | 3 |
How One Becomes What One Is 1888 | 73 |
From Five Prefaces to Five Unwritten Books | 83 |
APHORISMS ESSAYS NOTES | 101 |
A Book for Free Spirits 1878 | 109 |
From Human AllTooHuman II | 126 |
Thoughts about Morality as a Prejudice 1881 | 134 |
A Polemic 1887 | 180 |
A Musicians Problem 1888 | 191 |
Curse upon Christianity | 236 |
Summer 1883SpringSummer 1888 | 238 |
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Palavras e frases frequentes
Aeschylus aesthetic Apollo Apollonian appearance Aristophanes artist ascetic ideal beautiful become believe Birth of Tragedy Bruce Armstrong chorus Christian concept culture danger decadence desire Dionysian Dionysus dithyramb divine dream Edited error eternal Euripides everything evil existence expression eyes faith feeling Friedrich Friedrich Nietzsche genius German Goethe Greek happiness Hellenic Heraclitus highest Homer human ideas illusion impulse individual insight instinct knowledge live lyric poetry mankind means merely metaphors metaphysical morality myth nature never Nietzsche Nietzsche's Olympian once oneself opposite origin passion perhaps pessimism philosopher Plato pleasure poet poetry possible precisely problem profound question R. J. Hollingdale reality reason Richard Wagner satyr Schopenhauer scientific sense Socrates song Sophocles soul speak spectator spirit sublime suffering symbol things thought tion tragic Translated by Walter truth understand Wagner Walter Kaufmann whole wisdom words Zarathustra