We moderns have an advantage over the Greeks in two ideas, which are given as it were as a compensation to a world behaving thoroughly slavishly and yet at the same time anxiously eschewing the word "slave": we talk of the "dignity of man" and of the "dignity of labour." Everybody worries in order miserably to perpetuate a miserable existence; this awful need compels him to consuming labour; man (or, more exactly, the human intellect) seduced by the "Will" now occasionally marvels at labour as something dignified. However in order that labour might have a claim on titles of honour, it would be necessary above all, that Existence itself, to which labour after all is only a painful means, should have more dignity and value than it appears to have had, up to the present, to serious philosophies and religions. What else may we find in the labour-need of all the millions but the impulse to exist at any price, the same all-powerful impulse by which stunted plants stretch their roots through earthless rocks!
Early Greek Philosophy
Kom i gang med denne boken i dag for 0 kr
- Få full tilgang til alle bøkene i appen i prøveperioden
- Ingen forpliktelser, si opp når du vil
Forfatter:
Språk:
engelsk
Format:

Nietzsche’s The Birth of Tragedy: From the Spirit of Music

Also sprach Zarathustra. Ein Buch für Alle und Keinen. : Hörbuchzeit: Klassiker der Weltliteratur

Thus Spake Zarathustra : A Book for All and None

Twilight of the Idols : How to Philosophize with a Hammer

Existentialism: Philosophical and Literary Works : Notes from Underground. Fear and Trembling. Ecce Homo. The Metamorphosis and others

Thus Spoke Zarathustra : A Book for All and None

The Philosophy Collection

The Antichrist :

2000 Final Quotations

Early Greek Philosophy & Other Essays

Beyond Good and Evil

Nietzsche's The Birth of Tragedy
