People can't understand me cause I m 1000years ahead — dimosthenis9
"People can't understand me cause I m 1000years ahead" he said. So yeah,if we take that literally, there are many more years left yet I guess — dimosthenis9
such a great thinker — dimosthenis9
You say he is such a great thinker, yet you say he is still centuries ahead of us. How could you evaluate his thinking and find out he is great if you think you can't understand him ? Or perhaps do you consider yourself another "1000 years ahead of y'all" type of guy ? — Hello Human
I mentioned what he said. Who told you that I agree with that also? He is a damn great thinker indeed. One of the greatest for me,who will still influence human thinking after hundreds of years. That doesn't mean he couldn't also be arrogant at the same time. — dimosthenis9
Funnily enough, when I spoke of Nietzsche creating a new romantic movement, — Jack Cummins
Nietzsche’s concern was how humanity would ‘replace’ religion. — I like sushi
I, the last disciple and initiate of the God Dionysus: and perhaps I might at last begin to give you, my friends, as far as I am allowed, a little taste of this philosophy? In a hushed voice, as is but seemly: for it has to do with much that is secret, new, strange, wonderful, and uncanny. The very fact that Dionysus is a philosopher, and that therefore Gods also philosophize, seems to me a novelty which is not unensnaring, and might perhaps arouse suspicion precisely among philosophers. — Beyond Good and Evil, 295
He did not want to replace religion, he wanted to overcome Christianity. He recognized the importance of religion. People need something to believe in, something to follow. Nietzsche does what Plato did, the invention of a religion in the service of philosophy. Only Nietzsche's religion is to be an inversion of Plato's. A religion of the earth, a religion of becoming, a religion of the god Dionysus, of a god who philosophizes. — Fooloso4
He certainly did like to throw around words like ‘gods’, but in what sense is becoming and self-overcoming religion? — Joshs
What he encouraged was recognizing that the ‘something’ one believes in is always transforming itself into something new, so it is the endless movement , the eternal return of the same movement , that he sees as fundamental — Joshs
People need something to believe in, something to follow. — Fooloso4
Yes, it does seem that Nietzsche's approach was about looking beyond the 'animal' aspect of the human being as Gus Lamarch suggested. I was just looking at Colin Wilson's discussion of Nietzsche in, 'The Outsider'. Wilson suggests an interpretation which is more about the development of the inner aspects of the human being, saying how Nietzsche, asked himself about happiness and the nature of delusion and,
'His imagination set to work on the problem, to conceive a man great enough to affirm. Not the Hero- no hero could ever command a philosopher's complete admiration. But the prophet, the saint, the man of action; or, perhaps, a combination of all four? ' in this way, Nietzsche's emphasis can be seen as going beyond the animal and irrational aspects of human nature, and of becoming the highest possible example of how a person may become. — Jack Cummins
Nietzsche: Guys, guys, guys, we're better than this! C'mon! — Agent Smith
...in what sense is becoming and self-overcoming religion? — Joshs
He did not simply encourage people to have something to believe in. — Joshs
What he encouraged was recognizing that the ‘something’ one believes in is always transforming itself into something new, so it is the endless movement , the eternal return of the same movement , that he sees as fundamental , not the enslavement to something one believes in. — Joshs
For instance, it is valuable as a tool for rules to control and pacify others. — Joshs
But the real philosophers are commanders and lawgivers: they say "That is how it should be!" They determine first the "Where to?" and the "What for?" of human beings, and, as they do this, they have at their disposal the preliminary work of all philosophical labourers, all those who have overpowered the past - they reach with their creative hands to grasp the future. In that process, everything which is and has been becomes a means for them, an instrument, a hammer. Their "knowing" is creating; their creating is establishing laws; their will to truth is - will to power. - Are there such philosophers nowadays? Have there ever been such philosophers? Is it not necessary that there be such philosophers? . . . . — BGE 211
Who are you quoting in these four paragraphs. And why? If one takes to heart what Nietzsche says about idle readers then reliance on secondary sources, while helpful, should always be secondary. And to not cite sources is understandable if it is an oversight, but inexcusable when it is one's standard practice. — Fooloso4
What he encouraged was recognizing that the ‘something’ one believes in is always transforming itself into something new, so it is the endless movement , the eternal return of the same movement , that he sees as fundamental
— Joshs
Why is this important to him? — Tom Storm
I am complete skeptic when it comes to Plato — Twilight of the Idols,
Nietzsche inverts this. Instead of the mythical philosopher who possesses divide knowledge, a god, Dionysus, is a true philosopher, that is, one who desires but does not possess wisdom. In place of the fixed world of being is the changing world of becoming. But here too the philosophers are commanders and lawgivers (see above The Philosophers) — Fooloso4
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