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What Nietzsche Taught

XI The Will to Power

Word Count: 7119    |    Released on: 19/11/2017

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ained in two volumes of desultory and often highly condensed notes which were recently issued under the single

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What Nietzsche Taught
What Nietzsche Taught
“It is no longer possible to ignore the teachings of Friedrich Nietzsche, or to consider the trend of modern thought without giving the philosopher of the superman a prominent place in the list of thinkers who contributed to the store of present-day knowledge. His powerful and ruthless mind has had an influence on contemporary thought which even now, in the face of all the scholarly books of appreciation he has called forth, one is inclined to underestimate. No philosopher since Kant has left so undeniable an imprint on modern thought. Even Schopenhauer, whose influence coloured the greater part of Europe, made no such widespread impression. Nietzsche has penetrated into both England and America, two countries strangely impervious to rigorous philosophic ideals.”
1 INTRODUCTION2 I Biographical Sketch3 II Human, All-Too-Human 4 III The Dawn of Day 5 IV The Joyful Wisdom 6 V Thus Spake Zarathustra 7 VI The Eternal Recurrence 8 VII Beyond Good and Evil 9 VIII The Genealogy of Morals 10 IX The Twilight of the Idols 11 X The Antichrist 12 XI The Will to Power 13 XII The Will to Power 14 BIBLIOGRAPHY