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| | Friedrich Nietzsche - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Nietzsche is also well-known for the statement "God is dead". |  | | Nietzsche states, after communicating the main idea of Zarathustra along with an aspect of his “gaya scienza,” in Ecce Homo:...that Hymn to Life... |  | | The initial emotional symptoms of Nietzsche's breakdown, as evidenced in the letters he sent to his friends in the few days of lucidity remaining to him, bear many similarities to the ecstatic writings of religious mystics insofar as they proclaim his identification with the godhead. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nietzsche
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| | Friedrich Nietzsche |
 | | Nietzsche refers to this higher mode of being as "superhuman" (übermenschlich), and associates the doctrine of eternal recurrence -- a doctrine for only the healthiest who can love life in its entirety -- with this spiritual standpoint, in relation to which all-too-often downhearted, all-too-commonly-human attitudes stand as a mere bridge to be crossed and overcome. |  | | In the third essay, Nietzsche focusses upon the ascetic ideals typical of the social representatives of art, religion and philosophy, and he offers a particularly scathing critique of the priesthood: the priests are allegedly a group of weak people who shepherd even weaker people as a way to experience power for themselves. |  | | To a similar end, Nietzsche's doctrine of eternal recurrence (sections 285 and 341) was formulated to draw attention away from all worlds other than the one in which we presently live, since eternal recurrence precludes the possibility of any final escape from the present world. |
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http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/nietzsche
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| | Literary Encyclopedia: Nietzsche, Friedrich |
 | | Nietzsche baptises the state of complete loss of belief in moral values that the death of God signifies with the name nihilism: the belief that nothing is true and everything is permitted is, in fact, a direct consequence of self-destructive elements in Christian ideals fulfilling themselves. |  | | Nietzsches books written between 1878 and 1882 (between Human, All-Too-Human and The Gay Science though the latter had a fifth book added to it in 1886) display aspects that are further developed in his later works. |  | | But, says Nietzsche, it does not follow from this that the belief in question is objectively true. |
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http://www.litencyc.com/php/speople.php?rec=true&UID=3342
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| | Friedrich Nietzsche - Free Online Library |
 | | Later in life Nietzsche addressed Cosima Wagner as "Princess Ariadne" in his letters to her and declared that the author of them is the god Dionysus. |  | | According to Nietzsche, the Greeks went against this tendency and erected the sober, rational, and active Apollonian principle. |  | | Rejecting his father's faith, Nietzsche became a lifelong rebel against Christianity. |
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http://nietzsche.thefreelibrary.com
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| | Nietzsche and Society |
 | | Nietzsche's doctrines of eternal return and amor fati combine to redeem man's past and future, but are also the most apparently contradictory doctrines of his philosophy. |  | | Fredrich Nietzsche challenged all ideas that had not only come before him, but also those which proliferated during his own period. |  | | The first thing we need to remember is, Nietzsche is a Zarathustra, not the Ubermensch, the Ubermensch was his noble lie. |
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http://infonectar.com/nietzsche/nietzsch.htm
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| | Nietzsche |
 | | As John puts it, Nietzsche's story of morality explains why we have these beliefs without explaining whether or not they are true. |  | | As a way to rebel against his parents, he refuses to get confirmed as a Catholic, citing Nietzsche's claims that God is dead and life is meaningless. |  | | This site is helpful for investigating arguments about God, evaluating their soundness, and gaining appreciation for the controversies raised by Nietzsche's criticism of religion. |
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http://www.philosophytalk.org/pastShows/Nietzsche.htm
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| | The Influence of Nietzsche |
 | | This is clearly very similar to Nietzsche's ideas about the sources of religion. |  | | By far his most often quoted utterance--seldom understood--is "God is dead," which placed his thought beyond the pale for many readers. |  | | Thomas Altizer (b.1927) created a sensation (and found himself on the cover of Time) in the 1960s by helping to create the oxymoronically named "death of God theology" together with a number of other theologians who argued for religion without God. |
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http://www.wsu.edu:8080/~brians/hum_303/nietzsche.html
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| | The New Yorker: The Critics: Books |
 | | Safranski astutely notes that all of Nietzsche's subsequent philosophy "was an endeavor to cling to life even when the music stopped." Yet Nietzsche's worship of Wagner's genius was never more than a spiritual detour, a replication in sound of the transcendent faith that he had lost: a last communion. |  | | The central tenet of Nietzsche's religion of heroes, the idea that had hit him as the light had hit St. Paul, was the "eternal recurrence": understand it, he wrote, believe it, and you will change your life. |  | | We may never know, but whatever Salomé meant to Nietzsche as a woman, as an intellectual and spiritual companion she seems to have been his last chance to believe that he might not spend his life alone. |
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http://www.newyorker.com/critics/books/?020408crbo_books
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| | Amazon.com: Books: Basic Writings of Nietzsche (Modern Library Classics) |
 | | Nietzsche opposed Christianity not because it anulled visualizing the mechanical relationship between cause and effect, but rather because it changes the meaning of the word "meek" to be what it has come to mean in the expressionin "The meek shall enherit the earth" rather than the Old Testament meaning of "logical". |  | | There is no doubt that Nietzsche opposed the Jewish and Christian Gods. |  | | Moses, the author of logic in the Bible was said to be the meekest man who ever lived. |
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http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0679783393?v=glance
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| | Nietzsche: The Problem of Autumn, photo feature from The Good European by Krell and Bates |
 | | Nietzsche also was thrilled by the beauty of Recoaro Terme, in the Dolomites of the South Tyrol [11], and he loved the simple elegance of the Albergo Tre Garofani ("The Three Carnations") [12] [13] [14], where he resided for a time with Heinrich Köselitz. |  | | Even though the weather could be cold and rainy, the beauty of the place and the health-giving waters of the Fonti Centrali promised him health of body and mind. |  | | The places where Nietzsche lived and worked include some of the most beautiful places in Europe. |
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http://www.press.uchicago.edu/Misc/Chicago/452786.html
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| | Natural Born Killers : Beyond Good And Evil |
 | | As Nietzsche points out, the arguments against free will are very convincing but one is loathe to accept them because of the possible consequences. |  | | For Mickey, the demon, which can also be understood in terms of Nietzsche's " will to power, " lives in all people. |  | | Nevertheless, they do have moral principals, but they are quite different from those of their community. |
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http://www.geocities.com/Hollywood/2682/heidi1.htm
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| | New Nietzsche Studies |
 | | Nietzsche, Friedrich Nietzsche, NEW NIETZSCHE STUDIES, Nietzsche Journal, Journal of the Nietzsche Society, Continental Philosophy, Nietzsche Zeitschrift, Nietzsche and Music, Nietzsche and Philology, The Death of God, Nietzsche and Religion, Nietzsche and Ecology, Will to Power, Zarathustra, Nietzsche and Politics, Habermas, Haar, Taminiaux, Strong, Allison, Babich, Schmid, Shapiro, Conway, Warren, Valadier, Salaquarda |  | | Note that no reductions have been made to the journal's scope or length page range, or quality. |  | | Note that all final book reviews must be sent both in hard copy and with a diskette version (see above specifications) to Prof. |
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http://www.fordham.edu/gsas/phil/nns_journal_description.html
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| | Nietzsche |
 | | But for Nietzsche, this entailed rejection of traditional values, including the Christian religion. |  | | Afraid to live by the strength of our own wills, we invent religion as a way of generating and then explaining our perpetual sense of being downtrodden and defeated in life. |  | | Nietzsche insists that there are no rules for human life, no absolute values, no certainties on which to rely. |
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http://www.philosophypages.com/hy/5v.htm
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| | Nietzsche's biography |
 | | Nietzsche works on *The Dawn*, dictating it to Peter Gast. |  | | Lou goes with Ree, Nietzsche plans for the three of them to live togethr in Paris. |  | | Nietzsche to Sils Maria to work on *Zarathustra* Book 3. |
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http://www.nietzsche.ru/english/biography.php3
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| | Friedrich Nietzsche Quotes - The Quotations Page |
 | | At times one remains faithful to a cause only because its opponents do not cease to be insipid. |  | | What is done out of love always takes place beyond good and evil. |  | | The man of knowledge must be able not only to love his enemies but also to hate his friends. |
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http://www.quotationspage.com/quotes/Friedrich_Nietzsche
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| | Madison (background) - Coping with Nietzsche's Legacy: Rorty, Derrida, Gadamer |
 | | Rorty, it must be admitted, has not had any great trouble knowing what to do after the end of Philosophy. |  | | --Friedrich Nietzsche, Ecce Homo, "Why I Am a Destiny." |  | | Nietzsche's word about the "death of God" seems to have been the liberating news he had been awaiting throughout all of the years of his exile in the arid waste lands of analytic philosophy. |
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http://www.focusing.org/madison2.html
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| | AllRefer.com - Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche (Philosophy, Biography) - Encyclopedia |
 | | Nietzsche was not a systematic philosopher but rather a moralist who passionately rejected Western bourgeois civilization. |  | | The son of a clergyman, Nietzsche studied Greek and Latin at Bonn and Leipzig and was appointed to the chair of classical philology at Basel in 1869. |  | | Apologists for Nazism seized on much of his writing as a philosophical justification for their doctrines, but most scholars regard this as a perversion of Nietzsche's thought. |
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http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/N/Nietzsch.html
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| | Nietzsche |
 | | From this Nietzsche concluded that traditional philosophy and religion are both erroneous and harmful for human life; they enervate and degrade our native capacity for achievement. |  | | Nietzsche sharply criticized the Greek tradition's over-emphasis on reason in his |  | | ) (1887) Nietzsche bitterly decried the slave morality enforced by social sanctions and religious guilt. |
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http://www.philosophypages.com/ph/niet.htm
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| | Projekt Gutenberg-DE - Kultur - SPIEGEL ONLINE |
 | | Friedrich Nietzsche wurde am 15.10.1844 in Röcken bei Lützen geboren. |  | | Nietzsche kam 1876 wegen eines Nerven- und Augenleidens vorübergehend und 1879 endgültig in den Ruhestand. |
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http://gutenberg.spiegel.de/autoren/nietzsch.htm
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| | Open Directory - Society: Philosophy: Philosophers: N: Nietzsche, Friedrich |
 | | ShadowForest - Nietzsche's Metaphysics of Time - Article analyzing the metaphysical claims of temporal structure coming from Nietzsche's Eternal Recurrence, by Matthew Pike. |  | | Nietzsche's Schopenhauer and Education - Explores the pedagogical aspects of Nietzsche's thought as revealed in his statements relating to Arthur Schopenhauer. |  | | The Abyss: Friedrich Nietzsche - Biography, quotes, and extracts. |
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http://dmoz.org/Society/Philosophy/Philosophers/N/Nietzsche,_Friedrich
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| | EpistemeLinks.com: Website results for philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche |
 | | A must-see for Nietzsche fans and scholars alike. |  | | Description: Includes Nietzsche's major writings, and links to dozens of commentaries and analyses of them. |  | | Also includes a biography, downloadable music by Nietzsche, a quotes file, and more. |
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http://www.epistemelinks.com/Main/Philosophers.aspx?PhilCode=Niet
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| | Nietzsche Society |
 | | (Not fully updated) links to Other Nietzsche Societies (for there are "More Than You Think...") |  | | Some additional sites of interest --- but be careful: some of these sites will keep you there!: |  | | Site composed and maintained by Babette E. Babich, Nietzsche Society, Executive Secretary |
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http://www.fordham.edu/gsas/phil/New_Nietzsche_Society.html
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| | Nietzsche, Friedrich -- Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | For most of his life he met the resistance of a dull world, which took the form of indifference to his work. |  | | He saw a civilization so self-confident over its mastery of science, technology, politics, and economics that for it God is... |  | | He was a man of the 19th century whose influence on 20th-century thought was enormous. |
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http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9108765
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| | Nietzsche's... Buffalo's Legendary Music Hotspot |
 | | You have to call the bar to book a show. |  | | The webmaster does NOT book bands to play at Nietzsche's. |  | | If your show isn't listed on the Nietzsche's calendar, please contact the bar and make sure that your show is on the bar's calendar. |
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http://www.nietzsches.com
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| | Friedrich Nietzsche: Tutte le informazioni su Friedrich Nietzsche su Encyclopedia.it |
 | | La filosofia di Nietzsche parte dalla rivalutazione delle filosofie ed arti greche più antiche, a sfavore del periodo classico, visto come affermazione della visione razionale e quindi decadente. |  | | Successivamente Nietzsche criticò i valori fondamentali della società (filosofia, cristianesimo e democrazia), giungendo alla negazione di qualsiasi principio trascendente ed all'affermazione del libero arbitrio come destino dell'uomo. |  | | Associazione Internazionale di Studi e Ricerche Federico Nietzsche (http://www.geocities.com/Athens/3221/) |
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http://www.encyclopedia.it/f/fr/friedrich_nietzsche.html
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| | Friedrich Nietzsche Society |
 | | Nietzsche and Antiquity: His Reaction and Response to the Classical Tradition, ed. |  | | Fifteenth Annual Conference: Nietzsche on Time and History (University of Cambridge, 16-18 September 2005) |  | | Welcome to the home page of the Friedrich Nietzsche Society (www.fns.org.uk). |
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http://www.fns.org.uk
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| | FNS: Other Sites of Interest |
 | | The Nietzsche Society (Babette Babich, Fordham University, NY) |  | | Sociedad Española de Estudios sobre Friedrich Nietzsche (University of Malaga) |  | | Nietzsche in: Encarta; Encylopædia Britannica; Fifty Key Contemporary Thinkers (John Lechte, Routledge, 1994); Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Robert Wicks) |
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http://www.swan.ac.uk/german/fns/fnslink.htm
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| | Beyond Good and Evil. |
 | | THE Will to Truth, which is to tempt us to many a hazardous enterprise, the famous Truthfulness of which all philosophers have hitherto spoken with respect, what questions has this Will to Truth not laid before us! |  | | Source: Beyond Good and Evil, from Nietzsche's Complete Works, Gordon Press, translated by Helen Zimmern (1974). |
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http://www.marxists.org/reference/subject/philosophy/works/ge/nietzsc1.htm
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| | Friedrich Nietzsche - Spuren |
 | | Nietzsche Spuren CD-ROM: alle Werke Nietzsches, die Fragmente und biographischen Frühwerke samt der grandiosen Biographie dieser Internetseite, ein Muß für jeden Nietzsche-Leser... |  | | Nietzsches Ahnentafel - ein einmaliges Dokument zeigt die Herkunft Nietzsches bis in das 16.Jh. |  | | Wartburg Festival Kammerspiel "ICH BIN DEIN LABYRINTH" Mareike Carrière und Dieter Laser als Cosima Wagner und Friedrich Nietzsche Sebastian Stoermer, Klavier mehr |
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http://www.friedrichnietzsche.de
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| | The Nietzsche Page at USC |
 | | This page is designed to help facilitate the study of the works of Friedrich Nietzsche. |  | | Its primary purpose is to provide scholars an on-line reference for contemporary scholarship about Nietzsche. |  | | Web Design by Bonsai Web all images and text © Bonsai Web 1996, 1997. |
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http://www.usc.edu/schools/annenberg/c/faculty/thomas/nietzsche.html
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| | Nietzsche en castellano |
 | | Una orientación sobre el pensamiento de los comentaristas de Nietzsche |  | | 16 Imágenes de las primeras ediciones de las obras de Nietzsche |  | | 36 Imágenes de los que compartieron la vida de Nietzsche |
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http://www.nietzscheana.com.ar
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| | Friedrich Nietzsche Society |
 | | If your browser supports automatic redirection, you will be taken there in fifteen seconds; if not, click on the above link. |  | | The homepage of the Friedrich Nietzsche Society has moved to |
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http://www.swan.ac.uk/german/fns/fns.htm
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