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24 Apr 2021 18:29:37 UTC
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Nietzsche and Paradox
Author: Rogerio Miranda de Almeida<br />File Type: pdf<br />Translated from the French, this book analyzes the paradoxes that fundamentally characterize Nietzsches philosophy and texts. Newly translated into English, this book analyzes the paradoxical discourse that flows through and fundamentally characterizes Nietzsches writings. Examining Nietzsches The Birth of Tragedy Human, All Too Human Beyond Good and Evil On the Genealogy of Morals and The Antichrist Rogerio**** Miranda de Almeida patiently opens these texts to the multiplicity of truths that unfold through the process of continuous reinterpretation and reevaluation. Never formally defining the contradictions within Nietzsches conception of metaphysics, religion, art, science, and philosophy, Miranda de Almeida acknowledges instead that the history of thought, and the development of Nietzsches writings in particular, is an interplay of forces and drives, encroachment and surrender, construction and destruction, overcoming and transformation, lack and fulfillment, satisfaction and dissatisfaction, pleasure and displeasure, pain and delight. This book reveals the endless perspectives and truths that Nietzsche creates and transforms. Drawing on the broad tradition of the French Nietzsche, this book offers a rich tapestry of reflections on the multiplicitiesstill to be mined in Nietzsches thought, including the aesthetics of art and appearance, on woman and dissimulation, as well as morality, religion, and, of course, paradox. Babette E. Babich, author of Words in Blood, Like Flowers Philosophy and Poetry, Music and Eros in Holderlin, Nietzsche, and Heidegger From texts prior to The Birth of Tragedy through the final works of 1888, Miranda de Almeida dramatically draws out the tensions, torsions, and the dynamics of Nietzsches theoretical development. In remarkably clear terms, he explains how, for Nietzsche, the whole subsoil of concepts and values are orchestrated by drives and needswhether they be fictive or realand shows how this results in the unique character of his ever-changing appreciation of the cultural symbolic. David B. Allison, author of Reading the New Nietzsche The Birth of Tragedy, The Gay Science, Thus Spoke Zarathustra, and On the Genealogy of Morals**
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