Nietzsche: A Philosophical Biography
The Panacea of Knowledge 145 The various proofs of immortality that Socrates cites in his last con- versation with his students ...
146 Nietzsche development was implicit in Socrates' confidence that knowledge is a "panacea." By the time of Aristode, one gener ...
The Panacea of Knowledge 147 toward solving the mystery of nature in terms of causality and can grasp at least part of the chain ...
148 Nietzsche cratic upheaval as linked together in this manner. Why, then, was this state of affairs so unappealing to him? Why ...
The Panacea of Knowledge 149 should not exceed a certain limit. A worker needs to feel tolerably well "so that he and his descen ...
150 Nietzsche reticai curiosity, but Nietzsche sought and found other bases on which to criticize him. When he compared Socrates ...
The Panacea of Knowledge 151 these are only effects and not causes, occurring as a "blind" necessity devoid of teleology and "me ...
152 Nietzsche Thinking became an exercise in successful life, able to climb up above a hierarchy of concepts on a divine ladder ...
The Panacea of Knowledge 153 forms, contending that good and evil are not conventional value judg- ments devoid of actual truth ...
154 Nietzsche eye—therein lies the optimism inherent in cognition. The man of knowledge proudly declares: I will endure my knowl ...
CHAPTER 7 Human, All Too Human Human, All Too Human · Chemistry of concepts · Logical renunciation of the world · The uncanny di ...
156 Nietzsche Nietzsche viewed much of his previous writing. Sobrieties are not intended to be written "for a singing voice," as ...
Human, All Too Human 157 strength. Now I can only hope to become free little by little; and I have sensed so far that I am becom ...
158 Nietzsche repose, as well as a certain cruel relentlessness of thought" (8,315). His relentless program for enlightenment in ...
Human, All Too Human 159 was interested in an implicit rather than an explicit system. "Do you think it has to be piecework beca ...
160 Nietzsche greedy, the insatiable, the murderous, in the indifference of his igno- rance" (1,877). A radical, uninhibited wil ...
Human, All Too Human 161 ity was designated coolly as the logically "disclosed essence of the world" (2,30; HH\ § 10). With this ...
162 Nietzsche because there is nothing that remains identical, even for the moment of comparison. For Spir, therefore, the discl ...
Human, All Too Human 163 objects, substances, or characteristics that are affixed to "a something." All of those categories are ...
164 Nietzsche The "logical denial of the wodd" is somewhat analogous to the Kantian "thing in itself." We can rest easy with it ...
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