The Philosophies of Friedrich Nietzsche

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Philosophies of Friedrich Nietzsche

Friedrich Nietzsche was a 19th-century German philosopher and held in regard amongst the greatest philosophers of the early part century. He sharpened his philosophical skills through reading the works of the earlier philosophers of the 18th century such as Immanuel Kant, John Stuart Mill, Arthur Schopenhauer and African Spir; however, their works and beliefs were opposite to his own. His primary mentor was Author Schopenhauer, whose belief was that reality was built on the foundation of experience. Such as it is, one of his essays, Schopenhauer als Erzieher, published in 1874, was dedicated to Schopenhauer (Mencken, 2008). In the past two centuries, his work has had authority and influence in both intellect and politics around the world over. He had a unique dissemination style, and it is through this style that his work has had sharp reactions across the board. Those who hated his writings hated it with a passion, and those who loved it loved it with a passion.

Nietzsche’s works are widespread and his view is that God is dead. This is not meant literally but in the context that the Christians faith is not gaining followers but that there is an explosion of non-believers. In the Madman he states, “God is dead. God remains dead. And we have killed him. How shall we comfort ourselves, the murderers of all murderers? What was holiest and mightiest of all that the world has yet owned has bled to death under our knives? . . .” His philosophies include a proposal that the culture from the west should rise above the traditions of Christianity. He does not see God’s meaning in our lives and accepts that the findings from physics surpass God. He claims that nihilism resulted from the intellect circl...

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...r. He explains that an individual cannot survive on his own. Thus, in his thoughts he must relate one person to another so that he can have a clear picture of his views. Even though, another philosopher, Alfred Baeumler, heavily disagrees with Nietzsche (Lemm, 2009). It can be deduced that Friedrich Nietzsche gained his philosophical ideas through wide reading of other philosophers’ works. Some of them form part of his mentors as much as he has inspired other people. Notably, his main advocacy was to fight against theism in which most Christians believe in the existence of a god who is all-powerful and all knowing. Just like many atheists, Friedrich Nietzsche argues that the existence of God overrules the possibility of evil in the world. The paper has taken into account one of Nietzsche’s writings and discussed most of the ideas being advocated for in the work.

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