81 Avsnitt

  1. Part 1: XX. Child and Marriage

    Publicerades: 2024-12-13
  2. Part 1: XXI. Voluntary Death

    Publicerades: 2024-12-12
  3. Part 1: XXII. The Bestowing Virtue

    Publicerades: 2024-12-11
  4. Part 2: XXIII. The Child with the Mirror

    Publicerades: 2024-12-10
  5. Part 2: XXIV. In the Happy Isles

    Publicerades: 2024-12-09
  6. Part 2: XXV. The Pitiful

    Publicerades: 2024-12-08
  7. Part 2: XXVI. The Priests

    Publicerades: 2024-12-07
  8. Part 2: XXVII. The Virtuous

    Publicerades: 2024-12-06
  9. Part 2: XXVIII. The Rabble

    Publicerades: 2024-12-05
  10. Part 2: XXIX. The Tarantulas

    Publicerades: 2024-12-04
  11. Part 2: XXX. The Famous Wise Ones

    Publicerades: 2024-12-03
  12. Part 2: XXXI. The Night-Song

    Publicerades: 2024-12-02
  13. Part 2: XXXII. The Dance-Song

    Publicerades: 2024-12-01
  14. Part 2: XXXIII. The Grave-Song

    Publicerades: 2024-11-30
  15. Part 2: XXXIV. Self-Surpassing

    Publicerades: 2024-11-29
  16. Part 2: XXXV. The Sublime Ones

    Publicerades: 2024-11-28
  17. Part 2: XXXVI. The Land of Culture

    Publicerades: 2024-11-27
  18. Part 2: XXXVII. Immaculate Perception

    Publicerades: 2024-11-26
  19. Part 2: XXXVIII. Scholars

    Publicerades: 2024-11-25
  20. Part 2: XXXIX. Poets

    Publicerades: 2024-11-24

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Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche (1844–1900) was a nineteenth-century German philosopher. He wrote critical texts on religion, morality, contemporary culture, philosophy and science, using a distinctive German language style and displaying a fondness for aphorism. Nietzsche’s influence remains substantial within and beyond philosophy, notably in existentialism and postmodernism. Thus Spake Zarathustra is a work composed in four parts between 1883 and 1885. Much of the work deals with ideas such as the “eternal recurrence of the same”, the parable on the “death of God”, and the “prophecy” of the Overman, which were first introduced in The Gay Science. Described by Nietzsche himself as “the deepest ever written”, the book is a dense and esoteric treatise on philosophy and morality, featuring as protagonist a fictionalized Zarathustra. A central irony of the text is that the style of the Bible is used by Nietzsche to present ideas of his which fundamentally oppose Judaeo-Christian morality and tradition.

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