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      Friedrich Nietzsche

      The Most Influential Works of Friedrich Nietzsche

      Thus Spoke Zarathustra, Beyond Good and Evil, The Will to Power, Antichrist, Ecce Homo…

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      2017 OK Publishing

      ISBN 978-80-272-2080-9

      Table of Contents

       Beyond Good and Evil

       The Genealogy of Morals

       The Birth of Tragedy or, Hellenism and Pessimism

       The Antichrist

       Thus Spoke Zarathustra: A Book for All and None

       The Case of Wagner

       The Twilight of the Idols

       The Will to Power (Vol. 1&2)

       The Gay Science or, The Joyful Wisdom

       We Philologists

       Ecce Homo: How One Becomes What One Is (An Autobiography)

       Selected Personal Letters

       Selected Essays

      Beyond Good and Evil

      Translated by Helen Zimmern

       Table of Contents

       Preface

       Chapter I. Prejudices of Philosophers

       Chapter II. The Free Spirit

       Chapter III. The Religious Mood

       Chapter IV. Apophthegms and Interludes

       Chapter V. The Natural History of Morals

       Chapter VI. We Scholars

       Chapter VII. Our Virtues

       Chapter VIII. Peoples and Countries

       Chapter IX. What is Noble?

       From the Heights

       Supplement to Chapter VIII. Peoples and Countries

      Preface

       Table of Contents

      Supposing that Truth is a woman—what then? Is there not ground for suspecting that all philosophers, in so far as they have been dogmatists, have failed to understand women—that the terrible seriousness and clumsy importunity with which they have usually paid their addresses to Truth, have been unskilled and unseemly methods for winning a woman? Certainly she has never allowed herself to be won; and at present every kind of dogma stands with sad and discouraged mien—IF, indeed, it stands at all! For there are scoffers who maintain that it has fallen, that all dogma lies on the ground—nay more, that it is at its last gasp. But to speak seriously, there are good grounds for hoping that all dogmatizing in philosophy, whatever solemn, whatever conclusive and decided airs it has assumed, may have been only a noble puerilism and tyronism; and probably the time is at hand when it will be once and again understood WHAT has actually sufficed for the basis of such imposing and absolute philosophical edifices as the dogmatists have hitherto reared: perhaps some popular superstition of immemorial time (such as the soul-superstition, which, in the form of subject- and ego-superstition, has not yet ceased doing mischief): perhaps some play upon words, a deception on the part of grammar, or an audacious generalization of very restricted, very personal, very human—all-too-human facts. The philosophy of the dogmatists, it is to be hoped, was only a promise for thousands of years afterwards, as was astrology in still earlier times, in the service of which probably more labour, gold, acuteness, and patience have been spent than on any actual science hitherto: we owe to it, and to its "super-terrestrial" pretensions in Asia and Egypt, the grand style of architecture. It seems that in order to inscribe themselves upon the heart of humanity with everlasting claims, all great things have first to wander about the earth as enormous and awe-inspiring caricatures: dogmatic philosophy has been a caricature of this kind—for instance, the Vedanta doctrine in Asia, and Platonism in Europe. Let us not be ungrateful to it, although it must certainly be confessed that the worst, the most tiresome, and the most dangerous of errors hitherto has been a dogmatist error—namely, Plato's invention of Pure Spirit and the Good in Itself. But now when it has been surmounted, when Europe, rid of this nightmare, can again draw breath freely and at least enjoy a healthier—sleep, we, WHOSE DUTY IS WAKEFULNESS ITSELF, are the heirs of all the strength which the struggle against this error has fostered. It amounted to the very inversion of truth, and the denial of the PERSPECTIVE—the fundamental condition—of life, to speak of Spirit and the Good as Plato spoke of them; indeed one might ask, as a physician: "How did such a malady attack that finest product of antiquity, Plato? Had the wicked Socrates really corrupted him? Was Socrates after all a corrupter of youths, and deserved his hemlock?" But the struggle against Plato, or—to speak plainer, and for the "people"—the struggle against the ecclesiastical oppression of millenniums of Christianity (FOR CHRISTIANITY IS PLATONISM FOR THE "PEOPLE"), produced in Europe a magnificent tension of soul, such as had not existed anywhere previously; with such a tensely strained bow one can now aim at the furthest goals. As a matter of fact, the European feels this


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