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The Nietzsche Disappointment - Reckoning with Nietzsche's Unkept Promises on Origins and Outcomes (Hardcover, New)
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The Nietzsche Disappointment - Reckoning with Nietzsche's Unkept Promises on Origins and Outcomes (Hardcover, New)
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The Nietzsche Disappointment examines the workings of time in
Nietzsche's philosophy. It asks how he explains the great changes
that (according to him) turned the past into the present -
catastrophic transformations of morality, language, human nature -
or that may yet make a desirable future out of this sorry present
age. The question is essential. Nietzsche attacks morality by
appeal to the past and future. Where philosophy had fancied itself
eternal, imagining all times to be more or less like the present,
Nietzsche sets the subject in motion with his attention to abrupt,
utterly consequential events. Everything eternal becomes temporal.
But after whetting his readers' appetites for past and future
cataclysms, Nietzsche makes them seem impossible. Birth of Tragedy
raises the question of where Socrates could have come from - and
then can't answer. In Beyond Good and Evil Nietzsche pins his hopes
on the birth of future philosophers, even as he shows how many
obstacles prevent their being born. On the Genealogy of Morals
posits occurrences, like the triumph of slave morality, that
violate Nietzsche's own claims about what can happen. What stops
Nietzsche from telling the very stories that he wanted philosophy
to attend to? Perhaps that question can't be answered without
considering how Nietzsche understands his own place in the flow of
time - considering, for instance, his wish to be an original
philosopher. The Nietzsche Disappointment is both critical and
sympathetic. It interrogates Nietzsche in terms that he should
understand; it closes by asking whether there is some way of being
critical that is also self-critical. For then a good reading may
free the reader from Nietzsche's person while continuing to
confront the challenge he bequeathed to philosophy.
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