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Heidegger and the Death of God: Between Plato and Nietzsche by
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Lia
is on page 12 of 129
for Nietzsche: modern atheism remains just as theistic as the theism it denies... generated by modern science’s “death of God,” [it] remains ultimately unable to free itself from its entrenchment in theism... because it still puts faith in the primary theistic value: truth.
— Nov 15, 2019 07:23PM
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Lia
is on page 12 of 129
modern science for Nietzsche is a project that not only began with Plato, but fails to realize that it is still utterly Platonic, and thus theistic, for it fails to realize that it not only values but believes in objective truth and intelligibility, of which it thinks it can have knowledge (scientia).
— Nov 15, 2019 07:18PM
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Lia
is on page 11 of 129
to argue for any intelligibility, i.e., “being” or “truth,” is to place oneself within the realm of metaphysics, and thus in the Platonic realm ipso facto.
— Nov 15, 2019 07:16PM
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Lia
is on page 11 of 129
the Nietzschean position (by Nietzsche’s own admission) is the truth of naturalism, of all types, in that this position makes the metaphysics of naturalism explicit, and thus brings the logic of naturalism to its (logical) conclusion
— Nov 15, 2019 07:14PM
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Lia
is on page 11 of 129
the essence of Heidegger’s critique of Nietzsche, namely that Nietzsche remains within the metaphysical and the Platonic system, and thus within the modern scientific project as well.
— Nov 15, 2019 07:14PM
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Lia
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what Heidegger thought to be the metaphysics of our contemporary world— a metaphysics oscillating between scientific naturalism and postmodern subjective-relativism
— Nov 15, 2019 07:13PM
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Lia
is on page 10 of 129
Heidegger uses Nietzsche as a means toward better insight into modernity
— Nov 15, 2019 07:10PM
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Lia
is on page 10 of 129
Nietzsche is, therefore, for Heidegger, a thinker concerned with the Seinsfrage, the being question, at least insofar as metaphysics is capable of thinking such a question
— Nov 15, 2019 07:10PM
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Lia
is on page 6 of 129
I nevertheless fundamentally agree (as does Heidegger largely) with Nietzsche’s reading of the history of philosophy as the history of metaphysical Platonism, which ipso facto means that any concession to the objective, ontological status of intelligibility leads inevitably not only to mind-independence, but to transcendence (i.e., metaphysics) and to the transcendent itself.
— Nov 15, 2019 07:05PM
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Lia
is on page 6 of 129
I concede, with Nietzsche, that, following Plato, all subsequent philosophies and philosophical systems, including Aristotle up and through Descartes and Hegel, are none other than Platonism, insofar as each of these “systems” axiomatically assumes the split world between being/becoming, transcendent/immanent, intelligible/sensible, etc 🤔
— Nov 15, 2019 07:03PM
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