Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche

It was actually Nietzsche who warned against the leveling effects of Christian slave morality. It was likewise Nietzsche who in the introduction to Der Wille zur Macht describes “nihilism” as the portentous “history of the Western world for the next two hundred years.” Nietzsche claimed to be composing a “fragment out of the history of a post-Christian epoch,” as someone who could draw on both Greek fatalism and intimations of a post-nihilistic future. One may not agree with such claims but they have nothing to do with moral relativism. In fact Nietzsche would have been the first to recognize the character of moral relativism, as a dishonest form of slave morality. --Paul Gottfried, Understanding Nietzsche, First Principles, February 2, 2009


Papal preacher exalts non-violence, connects Nietzsche to Holocaust, by John L. Allen, Jr., NCRCafe, Posted on Mar 16, 2007 06:21am CST
(via Open Book)

The Still North by Drew Lerman, The Dartmouth, November 7, 2006
(via Arma Virumque)

Bugs in the belfry by Joshua Glenn, Boston Globe, November 28, 2004

Malignant Genius, review by Algis Valiunas of Nietzsche and Music, by Georges Liebert, and Death-Devoted Heart: Sex and the Sacred in Wagner’s Tristan and Isolde, by Roger Scruton, First Things, November 2004

It wasn't him, it was her, review by Jenny Diski of Nietzsche's Sister and the Will to Power: A Biography of Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche by Carol Diethe, London Review of Books, September 25, 2003

Nietzsche on the Cross: The Defence of Personal Freedom in The Birth of Tragedy, by Wayne A. Borody, Humanitas 2003 No. 2 [18 pp. pdf]

Review by John Gray of Friedrich Nietzsche, by Curtis Cate Hutchinson, New Statesman

Nietzsche 2000: An introduction, by H. James Birx, Philosophy Now, October/November 2000

Nietzsche’s Truth by Damon Linker, First Things, August/September 2002

Is There a Gay Basis to Nietzsche's Ideas? By Edward Rothstein, New York Times, July 6, 2002

Superman and the Little Pastor by A. C. Grayling, Guardian, June 8, 2002

The Domesticated Nietzsche, by Werner J. Dannhauser, First Things, February 1996

Nietzsche Dreams of Detroit, review by Denis Dutton of My Sister and I, Philosophy and Literature 16 (1992)

The Nietzsche Family Circus, at Losanjealous
(via Catholic and Enjoying It!)

Nietzsche (1912), by Paul Elmer More


The Nietzsche Channel

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