New2K2
180 Proof
deletedmemberbcc
deletedmemberbcc
Janus
(personally, I find Nietzche's views and writing to be fascinating, even though I think he was wrong about 80% of the time). — busycuttingcrap
deletedmemberbcc
I'd be interested to hear which of his views you think were wrong and why — Janus
Shawn
Freud was a big Nietzsche fan — busycuttingcrap
deletedmemberbcc
I read stuff to the contrary. Would you care to provide sources on this claim? — Shawn
Shawn
I like sushi
Agent Smith
I recommend
• The Great Philosophers: An Introduction to Western Philosophy, Bryan Magee
• The Philosopher's Toolkit: A Compendium of Philosophical Concepts and Methods (3rd Ed), Peter S. Fosl and Julian Baggini
to get you startered. The bibliographies of both books are very much worth checking out too. — 180 Proof
deletedmemberbcc
Janus
This could take all day. How about some notable examples: Nietzsche's views on realism wrt truth-value and value judgments/normativity were internally inconsistent- in some of his works, he espouses a form of nominalism/anti-realism wrt truth-value and normativity, but in others he is presupposing a realist position, for instance in his critique of Christianity (as, seemingly, objectively false and evil/harmful). This inconsistency severely undermines many of his arguments and positions, imo. — busycuttingcrap
As for being fascinated by someone whose views you mostly disagree with: Nietzsche is, imo, the most interesting character in the entire history of philosophy. — busycuttingcrap
deletedmemberbcc
I see Nietzsche's critique of Christianity highlighting its incipient nihilism: by imposing values it undermines the ability to find/ create one's own, so I don't see that as presupposing realism. — Janus
Moliere
But then, on the other hand, there are many other passages where he seems to be advancing an anti-realist critique of these things, often in the same work — busycuttingcrap
deletedmemberbcc
deletedmemberbcc
Moliere
deletedmemberbcc
Shawn
not just because its usually clear and understandable, but because it occasionally even achieves poetic beauty, which is a very rare thing to find in your usual philosophical tomes. — busycuttingcrap
Moliere
And such a good writer! A lot of philosophy is downright miserable to read- have you ever tried to read Kan't CPR, for instance? As in, reading it cover to cover? Pure torture! :vomit: — busycuttingcrap
deletedmemberbcc
Shawn
The Tractatus is about as obscure and technically dense as you'll find, — busycuttingcrap
deletedmemberbcc
I understand what you mean, but I actually love reading Kant. It's not literary at all, so that's why I say I understand. But I sort of enjoy the rhythms of a mind expressing itself in the most explicit manner. — Moliere
To answer your question directly, and humble-brag, I've read the CPR 2 times :D -- first translation by Norman Kemp Smith, the latter read on Pluhar's — Moliere
deletedmemberbcc
Paine
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.