Nietzsche had a glimpse of the ideal race but his atheism and aristocratic prejudices marred his whole conception." Thus the ideal society, comprising ideal human beings is yet to be created through ...
The Übermensch. Nietzsche’s concept of the Übermensch describes the individuals who transcend ordinary humanity, who create their own value system and live beyond conventional morality, religious ...
Review of The Great Debate: Nietzsche, Culture, and the Scandinavian Welfare Society by Georg Brandes and Harald Høffding ... few on the Right today find Nietzsche’s aristocratic ideal of a kind of ...
Nietzsche is a self-proclaimed inverter of Platonic philosophy ... In The Republic he argues that poetry should not be allowed in the ideal society because it stimulates people to attempt to fill ...
To choose the Apollonian path is to cultivate the desire to create a perfect world, with ideal ... Nietzsche especially valued the Dionysian attitude, seeing in it the source of everything powerful ...
It might be tempting to make Nietzsche's vigorous advocacy of egoism, both as a motivational theory and as a human ideal, more palatable by reading ... of actions are irrelevant to their value to a ...
Firth, Rhiannon and Robinson, Andrew 2014. For the past yet to come: Utopian conceptions of time and becoming. Time & Society, Vol. 23, Issue. 3, p. 380. Chappel, James 2015. Nihilism and the Cold War ...
The life of every society is a harsh process of mutual ... deep similarity--is sometimes forgotten. Friedrich Nietzsche set forth the ideal of the man-god more literally and dramatically than ...
For Kant’s vision of a progressive society which increasingly realizes his ideal of autonomy ... Section II of the Metaphysics of Morals (164-171). Nietzsche was perhaps the boldest critic of ...
The traditions and sensibilities of China, India, Indonesia, Japan, and various African impulses provided abstractive capacities, which resonated with neo-avant-gardist drives as they had done for ...
In theory, Harvard undergraduates must take one course in each of four categories: Aesthetics & Culture; Ethics & Civics; Histories, Societies, Individuals; and Science & Technology in Society.