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476 pages, Hardcover
First published October 4, 2018
„Eu nu sînt cîtuşi de puţin un şarlatan, un monstru moral” (Ecce homo).
Ah, give me madness, you heavenly powers! Madness, that I may only at last believe in myself! Give deliriums and convulsions, sudden lights and darkness, terrify me with frost and fire such as no mortal has ever felt, with deafening din and prowling figures, make me howl and whine and crawl like a beast: so that I may come to believe in myself!
All his life he valued intelligent women, making close and enduring friendships with them. He only fell in love with clever women – starting with Cosima [Wagner]. He disliked ignorant and bigoted women.
"'I am frightened,' Nietzsche had written, 'by the thought of what unqualified and unsuitable people may invoke my authority one day. Yet that is the torment of every great teacher of mankind: he knows that, given the circumstances and the accidents, he can become a disaster as well as a blessing to mankind.'" (374-5)Ironically, Nietzsche wrote these words in a letter to his sister Elizabeth, who, as Prideaux painfully shows, abused her brother and his thought more than anyone else—associating it with Nazi ideology in a manner that echoes to this day. Hopefully, Prideaux's biography will dispel the last, lingering notions that Nietzsche was an anti-Semite and proto-Nazi (already intrepidly addressed by Walter Kaufmann before her).