File spoon-archives/foucault.archive/foucault_2001/foucault.0104, message 69


From: "Magda Gadelha" <magda2-AT-uol.com.br>
Subject: Re: So what do writers express today?
Date: Mon, 16 Apr 2001 05:52:19 -0300


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Hi,
I'm  in this list for over one month and I'm still kind of "studing the list".
But I would like to notice that the site www.cthonia.com/lyceum/philos_isms/index.html       indicated by Peter has the follow consideration on
NIETZSCHEANISM

The philosophy of Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche (1844-1900), a German philosopher and poet. He conceived of a man of perfection, the ubermench, who exercised his "will to power" over lesser beings and whose ruthlessness was both justifiable and praiseworthy -- a concept which surely influenced the German National Socialists (Nazis) in the 1920s. From 1889, he was quite mad, perhaps suffering from tertiary syphillis, and he was nursed until his death in 1900.

"Which is it, is man one of God's blunders, or is God one of man's?" (Nietzsche)

And what about his sister, Elizabeth, who, as we know, was the anti-semite that used his brother's writing?

I  never thought I would see this mistake anywhere.


HTML VERSION:

Hi,
I'm  in this list for over one month and I'm still kind of "studing the list".
But I would like to notice that the site www.cthonia.com/lyceum/philos_isms/index.html       indicated by Peter has the follow consideration on

NIETZSCHEANISM

The philosophy of Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche (1844-1900), a German philosopher and poet. He conceived of a man of perfection, the ubermench, who exercised his "will to power" over lesser beings and whose ruthlessness was both justifiable and praiseworthy -- a concept which surely influenced the German National Socialists (Nazis) in the 1920s. >From 1889, he was quite mad, perhaps suffering from tertiary syphillis, and he was nursed until his death in 1900.

"Which is it, is man one of God's blunders, or is God one of man's?" (Nietzsche)

And what about his sister, Elizabeth, who, as we know, was the anti-semite that used his brother's writing?

I  never thought I would see this mistake anywhere.


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