This is an objective and unsensational assessment of Nietzsche's achievements, from his rejection of Christianity to the development of his unique philosophical views, and his much-debated association with Nazism.
خلال حياة نيتشه ، أصبحت المواقف العدمية ملحوظة في الثقافة الأوروبية. كما لوحظ ، أنه كان يُنظر إلى المسيحية من قبل الكثيرين على أنها في أزمة روحية ، وبعض الآمال بأن الجهود البديلة للتجديد - مثل العودة إلى الإغريق الكلاسيكيين - أثبتت أنها غير فعالة.
ضمن هذا السياق ، يمكننا فهم لماذا كان نيتشه مدفوعًا لاكتشاف مصدر جديد للقوة الثقافية. ما هو خاص في نهجه (حكمه بموت الله) لم يكن المشكلة الأساسية: كان يعتقد أن السبب الأساسي للأزمة الروحية في الثقافة المسيحية التي أحاطت به هو الإيمان الإيجابي بالله المسيحي ، والذي كان منهكًا بحد ذاته. رأى نيتشه أن الثقافة المسيحية كانت في حالة غير صحية ، ليس لأنها فقدت حجر الزاوية الملهم ، ولكن لأن أسس إلهامها كانت غير سليمة. يبدو أن الإيمان بـ "حياة" الله أضعف روحيًا من الإيمان بـ "موت" الله. خلص نيتشه إلى أن العقيدة الأساسية للمسيحية - الإيمان بإله خارق للطبيعة ، وكلي المعرفة ، وكلي القدرة ، وخيّر - كان بحد ذاته غير صحي ، ويرجع ذلك أساسًا إلى أنه صرف انتباه الناس عن العالم هنا والآن . . Robert Wicks Nietzsche Translated By #Maher_Razouk
A good - but not perfect - introduction to Nietzsche.
Some comments:
[*] The author seemed obsessed with the unnecessary repetition of simple explanations. I appreciate that some points are important but they don't need to be repeated two or three times.
[*] There seemed to be an excessive focus on (in particular) Birth of Tragedy and his early work.
[*] Very minor point: In discussing Schopenhauer, he seems unaware of the fact that Schopenhauer was a Buddhist and goes onto credit him with coming up with principles that form the basic tenets of Buddhism.
I really appreciated this (audio)book. As someone whom has over the years done Teaching Company, Modern Scholar, Philosophers in 90 minutes, etc lectures on Nietzsche specifically and philosophy in general it struck in the perfect spot. This work bypasses the usual biography on the person and digs in to the works and thinking -- and the impacts and legacy of those.
It does a great job of teasing out where he drew his boundaries, how those shifted/softened a bit as he matured. I also very much gained a new appreciation on how the stresses the narrator added to the cited passages really helped grasp some (at times) thick material.
I can't think of anything I'd want improved, thus 5 stars. I would not have complained with an additional hour or two of topics. I left wishing there was more.
I got a lot from this book. I doubt I'll speak much of it here. Suffice it to say that it's been over a decade since I read what I still hold as likely the greatest book of all time - his Zarathustra - & other than that, I've only read Genealogy of Morals. In Genealogy's preface, from memory, my man says to read his works - all of them - in order. I didn't listen. But, thanks to randomly picking this book up in the new Queanbeyan library, that is exactly what I now plan to do. I've put together a list of all the books I want to read - all the main works along with some extras - & which translations I'm gravitating toward, etc... & this is nothing less than The Year of Walrus. I've nine months to get through it - though I won't rush through anything if it means losing the full effect of the work. I am excited.
This is a very good book. A nice, very thorough presentation of Nietzsche's philosophy. After reading it, I feel like I have a much better grasp of Nietzsche not only as a whole but I'm also more aware how his philosophy changed throughout his life (we can say it went through stages). Robert Wicks does a decent job not only in presenting the philosophy but also in making you want to read the primary works themselves.
Four stars for Robert Wicks’s well-written distillation of Nietzschean philosophy, and for Richard Aspel’s passionate, succinct narration. However I give myself 2 stars for failing to comprehend Nietzsche’s ideas. Not the fault of either author. I did understand (and often experience) a dictum proffered by Schopenhauer: in a Godless Universe, humans may find salvation through music. Yes
A concise and accessible introduction to Nietzsche’s life and evolving philosophies. The book does well to dispel several common myths and provides a useful overview of his intellectual development. It is quite short though - I'll be seeking out a deeper exploration of his key ideas.