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The Importance of Nietzsche
 
 
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The Importance of Nietzsche [Hardcover]

Erich Heller (Author)

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Book Description

0226326373 978-0226326375 May 14, 1990 1
In this book, one of the most distinguished scholars of German culture collects his essays on a figure who has long been one of his chief preoccupations. Erich Heller's lifelong study of modern European literature necessarily returns again and again to Friedrich Nietzsche.

Nietzsche prided himself on having broken with all traditional ways of thinking and feeling, and once even claimed that he would someday be recognized for having ushered in a new millennium. While acknowledging Nietzsche's radicalism, Heller also insists on the continuity of the story in which he does indeed occupy a central place. By considering Nietzsche in relation to Goethe, Rilke, Wittgenstein, Yeats, and others, Heller shows the philosopher's ambivalence toward the tradition he inherited as well as his profound effect on the thought and sensibility of those who followed him. It is hardly an exaggeration to say, as Heller does in his first essay, that Nietzsche is to many modern writers and thinkers—including Mann, Musil, Kafka, Freud, Heidegger, Jaspers, Gide, and Sartre—what St. Thomas Aquinas was to Dante: the categorical interpreter of a world, which they contemplate imaginatively and theoretically without ever much upsetting its Nietzschean structure.

Thus it is Nietzsche's thought, so pervasively present in the themes of modernity, that gives coherence and unity to Heller's essays. What emerges from them is that, despite his iconoclastic declarations and unorthodox philosophical practices, Nietzsche deals with the human spirit's persistent concerns. His questions remain urgent, and even the answers, in all their contradictoriness, possess the commanding force of his inquiry. An example is the incompatibility of the famous extremes, the teaching of the Übermensch and the Eternal Recurrence of All Things. These cancel each other out and yet grow from the same intellectual and spiritual roots, as is shown lucidly and cogently by one of Heller's most forceful essays, "Nietzsche's Terrors: Time and the Inarticulate." In fathoming the depth of this contradiction, Heller at the same time reveals the importance of Nietzsche for those who seek to understand the wellsprings of the epoch's disquiet, turmoil, and creativity.

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About the Author

Erich Heller, Avalon Professor of the Humanities emeritus at Northwestern University, is the author of many books, including The Disinherited Mind and In the Age of Prose.

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First Sentence:
In 1873, two years after Bismarck's Prussia had defeated France, a young German who happened to live in Switzerland and taught classical philology in the University of Basle wrote a treatise concerned with "the German mind." Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
posthumous notes, precise emotion, three metamorphoses, eternal recurrence, aesthetic phenomenon
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Duino Elegies, Prosaic Age, Richard Wagner, Thomas Aquinas, Ecce Homo, Jacob Burckhardt, Karl Kraus, Philosophical Investigations, Thomas Mann, New York, Nietzsche's Last Words, Tuscan Diary, Age of the Holy, Bertrand Russell, Ludwig Wittgenstein, Ninth Elegy, Thomas Common, University of Basle, Age of Poetry, Did Nietzsche, Nietzsche's Terrors, Old Testament, Peter Gast, Stefan George, Tree of Knowledge
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