Nietzsche on Anaxagoras (Part 6 of 8)  @untimelyreflections
Nietzsche on Anaxagoras (Part 6 of 8)  @untimelyreflections
essentialsalts | Nietzsche on Anaxagoras (Part 6 of 8) @untimelyreflections | Uploaded March 2024 | Updated October 2024, 10 hours ago.
Spotify: open.spotify.com/show/0ZARzVCRfJZDCyeKjvIEfE?si=5nTQubi9QU-HDP8pNzEKaQ

Patreon: patreon.com/untimelyreflections

#nietzsche #philosophypodcast #thenietzschepodcast #history #philosophy #historyofphilosophy #ancientphilosophy #greekphilosophy #heraclitus #thales #anaximander #anaxagoras #empedocles #parmenides #democritus

Philosophy in the Tragic Age of the Greeks is one of the more obscure texts in Friedrich Nietzsche’s corpus. There are many good reasons for this: it is unfinished, and ends abruptly; it was never published; and it concerns subject matter that is not as immediately accessible as Nietzsche’s more popular writings. You will not find his major concepts in this work – such as the will to power, or the critique of metaphysics - except insofar as those ideas appear in the background, inchoate, unnamed… not yet fully formed. In Nietzsche’s interpretation of the Pre-Platonic philosophers of Ancient Greece, we find the starting place for his later philosophical career. The inspiration for many of those great ideas, can arguably be found in his exegesis of these extraordinary figures from the Hellenic world, from the 6th to the 4th century BC. In this series we’ll consider Nietzsche’s view of Thales, Anaximander, Heraclitus, Parmenides, Anaxagoras, Empedocles & Democritus.
Nietzsche on Anaxagoras (Part 6 of 8)Mud LungThe Cause of Mass Psychosis - An Analysis of Jungs Undiscovered SelfFAUST Explained: Goethe’s eulogy of the Enlightenment & its philosophical influenceThe Lucid Furs - Faust Tavern, San AntonioImmanuel Kant’s Perpetual Peace (The Nietzsche Podcast #60)Nietzsche on Democritus & Conclusion (Part 8 of 8)Left Nietzscheanism Explained - With Devin GoureDid Emperor Pedro II meet Nietzsche?Nietzsche: “Forgetfulness is an Active and Positive Force...”Spinoza: Nietzsche’s Precursor (The Nietzsche Podcast #83)Nietzsche - Birth of Tragedy: Sections 1-3 Analysis

Nietzsche on Anaxagoras (Part 6 of 8) @untimelyreflections

SHARE TO X SHARE TO REDDIT SHARE TO FACEBOOK WALLPAPER