000 01288nam a2200217Ia 4500
999 _c81863
_d81863
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020 _a9780140446173
082 _a193 NIE
100 _a"Nietzsche, Friedrich"
245 0 _a"Human, all too human"
260 _aLondon
260 _bPenguin
260 _c2004
300 _a275p.-
365 _b 250.00
365 _dRS
520 _aWritten after Nietzsche had ended his friendship with Richard Wagner and had been forced to leave academic life through ill health, Human, All Too Human (1878) can be read as a monument to his personal crisis. It also marks the point when he matured as a philosopher, rejecting the German romanticism espoused by Wagner and Schopenhauer and instead returning to sources in the French Enlightenment. Here he sets out his unsettling views in a series of 638 stunning aphorisms - assessing subjects ranging from art to arrogance, boredom to passion, science to vanity and women to youth. This work also contains the seeds of concepts crucial to Nietzsche's later philosophy, such as the will to power and the need to transcend conventional Christian morality. The result is one of the cornerstones of his life's work.
650 _aPhilosophy
942 _cB
_2ddc