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Nietzsche’s “drive theoryâ€, as it is referred to in the
secondary literature, is a rich, unique and fascinating
articulation of the human condition. In broad brushstrokes,
Nietzsche appears to contend that all human psychology is either
directly reducible to animal drives (e.g. sex, aggression) or
indirectly explicable to the historical transformations thereof
(e.g. ressentiment). Moreover, Nietzsche’s initial elucidation of
drive theory in On the Genealogy of Morals (and elsewhere) is
well-complemented with a fecund, profound, and clear elucidation of
the concept in the secondary literature. Yet, there remains a
glaring lacuna for all the discussion of drive theory in the
scholarship. The secondary literature is delinquent in explaining
how animal drives became incorporated to form the human psyche.
 Nietzsche’s account to elucidate how drives became
“digested†or in his words “inpsychated†is called the
Internalization Hypothesis. However, as it appears in GM: II, 16,
the hypothesis is grossly inchoate. The result of this
undertheorization is manifold; its deleterious effects resonate
along many axes of Nietzsche’s philosophy. The present book,
Internalized Valuation: A Genealogical Analysis of Nietzschean
Drive Theory, offers an original and fruitful interpretation of
Nietzsche’s philosophical psychology. First, it clarifies what
drives are. Second, it provides a new way of thinking about
Nietzsche’s genealogical methods and then applies these insights
to The Genealogy itself. What follows is a work that not only sheds
much-needed light on Nietzsche’s philosophy of mind in general
and his theory of emotions in particular, but also informs and
illuminates problematic passages of Nietzsche’s Genealogy.
"The world viewed from the inside, the world defined and determined
according to its "intelligible character"--it would be "will to
power" and nothing else." Cryptic passages like this one from
section 36 of Beyond Good and Evil have been the source of much
intrigue, speculation, and puzzlement in the Nietzschean secondary
literature. This passage in particular along with many others, have
sparked a slew of questions in recent decades such as: "What is the
will to power? "Is will to power a metaphysical principle?" "Is it
an empirical assertion?" "Or, is will to power merely a hypothesis
that Nietzsche himself rejected?" Although asked ad nausea in the
literature, the multitude of answers given to the above questions
never seem to satisfy. In this book, Brian Lightbody shed light on
Nietzsche's most famous "esoteric" teaching by explaining what the
will to power is and what it denotes. He then demonstrates how will
to power may be naturalized in an attempt to show that the doctrine
is epistemically and empirically defensible. Finally, he uses will
to power as a philological key of sorts to unlock Nietzsche's
philosophy as a whole by showing that his ontology, epistemology,
and ethics are only properly understood once a coherent naturalized
rendering of will to power is produced.
Philosophers often use the term "naturalism' in order to describe
their work. It is commonplace to see a metaphysical,
epistemological and/or ethical position self-described and
described by others as one that is "naturalized." But what, if
anything, does the term naturalized add--or subtract---to the
position being articulated? I demonstrate in The Problem of
Naturalism: Analytic and Continental Perspectives, that the term
naturalism connotes such a broad meaning that it is difficult to
demarcate naturalism from philosophy itself. Still, many
philosophers have tried to provide non-trivial and non-vacuous
definitions of the term. My book, by and large, argues that such
attempts are unsuccessful. Instead, I argue that naturalism is an
attitude and neither a methodology nor a substantive position. I
then articulate the guidelines the naturalist needs to follow, as
well as the virtues he or she needs to practice, in order for the
term naturalism to do any meaningful work. Much of the book
explains and then critiques the various attempts to define
naturalism in the Anglo-American secondary literature. Some of the
criticisms I raise seem to emanate from the internal logic of the
naturalistic position being expressed. However, others have emerged
from gleaning the work of such Continental thinkers as: Nietzsche,
Husserl, Heidegger and Foucault. I use these thinkers in order to
expose the unjustified implicit and sometimes explicit assumptions
that many naturalistic philosophers presume to hold when they
attempt to render a clear, distinct and robust naturalist position.
Philosophical genealogy is a distinct method of historical and
philosophical inquiry that was developed by the nineteenth-century
philosopher, Friedrich Nietzsche, and subsequently adopted and
extended by the twentieth-century philosopher, Michel Foucault. In
brief, genealogies critically examine the historical origin of
philosophical concepts, ideas and practices. They challenge the
value of traditional methods of philosophical inquiry along with
the results that these inquiries produce. Philosophical Genealogy
Volume I: An Epistemological Reconstruction of the Genealogical
Method explored the three axes of the genealogical method: power,
truth and the ethical. In addition, various ontological and
epistemic problems pertaining to each of these axes were examined.
In Philosophical Genealogy Volume II: An Epistemological
Reconstruction of the Genealogical Method, these problems are now
resolved. Volume II establishes what requisite ontological
underpinnings are required in order to provide a successful,
epistemic reconstruction of the genealogical method. Problems
regarding the nature of the body, the relation between power and
resistance as well as the justification of Nietzschean
perspectivism, are now all clearly answered. It is shown that
genealogy is a profound, fecund and, most importantly, coherent
method of philosophical and historical investigation which may
produce many new discoveries in the fields of ethics and moral
inquiry provided it is correctly employed.
Philosophical Genealogy Volume I: An Epistemological Reconstruction
of Nietzsche and Foucault's Genealogical Method is a rigorous
examination of the philosophical investigatory practice known as
"genealogy". This critique of the philosophical tradition leads to
the creation of new values. Both Nietzsche and Foucault extolled
these critical and emancipatory virtues of genealogy. Volume I
examines the principal ontological and epistemological problems
with Nietzsche and Foucault's respective uses of the genealogical
method. It elucidates the differences between genealogy and other
forms of historical inquiry before turning to explicate, in great
detail, the three axes of genealogical inquiry: the power axis, the
truth axis and the ethical axis. Volume I explains the very
important role the body plays in a genealogical investigation
before examining several of the problems with the doctrine of
perspectivism - a central component to a genealogical inquiry.
Philosophical Genealogy Volume I provides a thorough and incisive
analysis of essay two of On the Genealogy of Morals, as well as the
"the means of correct training" section in Discipline and Punish,
while reaffirming the problems that have been examined in previous
chapters and pointing toward a solution that will be further
explicated in Philosophical Genealogy Volume II.
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