Nietzsche Essays

  • Modernity and Nietzsche

    1988 Words  | 4 Pages

    philosophers have tried to explain the nature of reality and the order that exists within the universe around us. The purpose of this paper is to first trace the developments that led up to modernity. Next I will react to the claim made by Fredrick Nietzsche that “God is dead” from a Biblical perspective. Philosophers have attempted to answer that question of what reality is and how to answer the questions that everyone faced. The first philosopher Thales held that water was the source of life and death

  • Friedrich Nietzsche

    975 Words  | 2 Pages

    Friedrich Nietzsche Some call Friedrich Nietzsche the father of the Nazi party. Was Nietzsche's ideas twisted and warped by a needy country? Nietzsche himself despised the middle and lower class people. Was it Nietzsche's Will to Power theory that spawned one of the greatest patriotic movements of the twentieth century? These are some of the questions I had when first researching Friedrich Nietzsche for the following paper. Friedrich Nietzsche, at one time called "the arch enemy of Christianity"(Bentley

  • nietzsche

    726 Words  | 2 Pages

    masses. In “The Gay Science.” Friedrich Nietzsche outlines the evolution of mankind from religion to science and finally his ideal value of life. Nietzsche believes that neither science nor religion are adequate enough to live by. Nietzsches argument holds some consistent ground against science but does not fully refute it. Science holds the key in holding a balance between the unexplainable and quantifiable to put balance and meaning in someones life. Nietzsche starts by laying out the famous example

  • Nietzsche

    1302 Words  | 3 Pages

    Nietzsche I think that the three questions that I will try to find answers are highly interconnected with each other and because of this reason, I will not answer them separately. I will be answering them without order. First of all, from my interpretation of Nietzsche, modern humanity did not invent the idea of God. Rather the God had a functional role from his point of view. There is no doubt that, modern humanity had the idea of God, but in my opinion, this idea was like a heritage to the

  • Nietzsches Superman

    1055 Words  | 3 Pages

    Though when most people think of superheroes they think of the type with super powers, the original idea of the ‘superman’ was developed by Friedrich Nietzsche in the 1800s. The ubermensch (literally overman in German) never had extra-ordinary powers and wasn’t developed as the protector of man. Instead, the superman is a person who has overcome all the flaws of mankind and is essentially ‘perfect.’ This idea, though it was thought of as an ideal goal that all people should strive for, has almost

  • Nietzsche Nihilism

    1752 Words  | 4 Pages

    Germany is marked by a crisis that Nietzsche identifies as nihilism. Nihilism in the general sense is the belief that life is meaningless and there are no truths. This belief became prominent in Germany after World War I. Friedrich Nietzsche and Leo Strauss were German philosophers in pre and postwar Germany that are known for their writings on nihilism. The aim of this paper is to compare and contrast the concept of Nihilism from the views of Strauss and Nietzsche in order to examine why Nietzsche’s

  • Nietzsche: Exposing the Christianity Hoax

    1158 Words  | 3 Pages

    Nietzsche: Exposing the Christianity Hoax For thousands of years the Bible has represented the foundation for one of the largest religions in existence, Christianity. “The Book” affects millions of people’s lives. The creation of morals makes the biggest impacts on individuals and society. Morals are hinted at throughout “The Book”, but are clearly stated in Matthew’s gospel. These morals are written in a series called the Beatitudes. Through morals, laws are created and society is given guidelines

  • An Analysis of Chesterton and Nietzsche

    2517 Words  | 6 Pages

    An Analysis of Chesterton and Nietzsche Imagine the lame giant of the Victorian age stumbling about in the darkness, wrestling with an unseen opponent. It pries the crushing grip of a hand from its throat only to discover the hand is its own. Imagine two explorers on opposites sides of a great ocean. Anchors are weighed, and each explorer sets out to see just beyond the horizon, to sail beyond the sunset. They collide amidships in the midnight fog and breeze, but they continue their journeys

  • Nietzsche, Kundera, and Shit

    2933 Words  | 6 Pages

    Friedrich Nietzsche saw himself surrounded by a world of human constructs. Humanity had become a herd, clinging to these concepts like cattle grazing at a favorite patch of grass. Individual identity struggled to exist. The morality of the mediocre reigned supreme. Nietzsche lived in a dead world. Milan Kundera lives in the world today. His world is dead much like Nietzsche's. Denial is the focal point of society. Society assimilates difference and denies what cannot be assimilated. In his novel

  • Nietzsche : God Is Dead

    752 Words  | 2 Pages

    philosophy of F. Nietzsche. What does he mean by saying "God is Dead"? Nietzsche's philosophy is that of a radical view as it calls for the complete reevaluation of morals and blatantly attacks the Judeo-Christian tradition in modern society. He believed one should dare to become who they are. In order to ascertain one's full potential as a human being, the ethic system of which by society runs, must be changed as it only hampers one's will to power. According to Nietzsche, philosophy is not

  • Nazis and Nietzsche

    1114 Words  | 3 Pages

    Nazis and Nietzsche During the latter parts of the Nineteenth Century, the German existentialist philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche wrote a great deal on his ideas of morality, values, and life. His writings were controversial, but they greatly affected European thought. It can be argued that Nietzschean philosophy was a contributing factor in the rise of what is considered our world's most awful empire, the Third Reich. ‹Such a stance is based on the fact that there are very similar currents

  • Nietzsche Ressentiment

    1087 Words  | 3 Pages

    In On the Genealogy of Morality Nietzsche uses the word ressentiment to, in simple terms, represent a deeply rooted resentment but his interpretation goes further than that. Nietzsche explains that ressentiment arises when people realize that they are inferior to some others but rather than blaming themselves for this they blame those others. These people “being denied the proper response of action, compensate for it only with imaginary revenge”. They experience inferiority not in terms of themselves

  • AP Nietzsche

    739 Words  | 2 Pages

    Friedrich Nietzsche’s The Gay Science offered us only a glimpse of what Nietzsche has to offer. By bringing his teachings into high school classrooms and becoming a standard high school curriculum can truly benefit and further enrich a young student’s education. Babette E. Babich talks about Nietzsche’s style in her article “Self-Deconstruction: Nietzsche’s Philosophy as Style.” In her article she states that, “Nietzsche’s style grants neither the casual reader nor the diligent commentator an automatic

  • Will Of Power Nietzsche

    1811 Words  | 4 Pages

    Friedrich Nietzsche, in which Nietzsche stated, “Christian morality is slave morality.” which refers to the way that Nietzsche compared Christian morality and slave morality which referred to the utility system of morality. In this essay, I will be explaining the actual intent argument that Nietzsche was making, as well as comparing how the master and slave morality compared to Nietzsche’s Ubermensch theory as well. , as quoted by Nietzsche,, it is important to understand that Nietzsche believed

  • Friedrich Nietzsche

    2317 Words  | 5 Pages

    Friedrich Wilhem Nietzsche may also be the most misunderstood. He has become a walking paradox. Today he is regarded as one of the most important thinkers, yet in his lifetime, he could hardly give away his books. Sigmund Freud revered him as one of the great minds in the history of psychoanalysis, yet Nietzsche went insane at the age of 44. He publicly detested German culture, yet German soldiers received copies of his book, Thus Spoke Zarathustra during World War I. Nietzsche also abhorred Nationalism

  • Nietzsche and Wagner

    3902 Words  | 8 Pages

    Nietzsche and Wagner In terms of artists and their influences, the case of Nietzsche and Wagner has been the focal point of discussion between many great academic minds of the last century. The controversy surrounding the relationship has led many to postulate that the eventual break between the two men may have contributed to the untimely death of Wagner in 1882, and Nietzsche's eight-year writing spurt from 1883 - 1888. While investigating the details of this peculiar relationship, I was

  • Nietzsches The Will to Power

    1030 Words  | 3 Pages

    Friedrich Nietzsche was on the cutting edge of sociological and philosophical theory when he lived in the latter part of the Nineteenth century. His ideas and theories about the world around him inspired some of the most recognized schools of thought in the modern world(or post-modern as it is seen). His post-humous work The Will to Power is the culmination of his life's work and allows for all who read it to understand the genius behind one of the greatest thinkers of all time. In The Will to

  • Cassirer, Nietzsche and Niccolò Machiavelli's The Prince

    1164 Words  | 3 Pages

    Cassirer, Nietzsche and Niccolò Machiavelli's The Prince When the word "Renaissance" is mentioned, an image of love for antiquity learning and fine arts usually springs to one's mind. Yet this perception, however legitimate it may be in many areas of Renaissance human achievements, shatters in the face of Niccolò Machiavelli's masterpiece The Prince. Unlike his contemporary Baldassare Castiglione who exemplified subtlety, Machiavelli was ruthlessly practical, nonchalantly callous, and admirably

  • Nietzsche: Philosophizing Without Categorizing

    1233 Words  | 3 Pages

    Nietzsche: Philosophizing Without Categorizing How are we to philosophize without "Isms?" For, although defining a person in terms of an Ism is dangerous--both because it encourages identification of the individual with the doctrine and because it denies her the possibility of becoming that, as a human, she is heir to--grouping people according to a doctrine to which they subscribe is a convenient mental shortcut. Although grouping people into verbal boxes entails the danger of eventually seeing

  • Nietzsche and the Death of God Theology

    2138 Words  | 5 Pages

    Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900) was perhaps best known for pronouncing that “God is dead! God remains dead! And we have killed him!” (Nietzsche, The Gay Science 388). Thinkers of the death of God theology of the American 1960s such as Thomas Altizer insisted that “we must recognize that the death of God is a historical event: God has died in our time, in our history, in our existence” (Christian Atheism 61). Although these two conceptions of the death of God differed, they had several aspects in