has long been recognized as one of the most important accounts of Nietzsche's philosophy, acclaimed for its rare combination of scholarly rigour and imaginative interpretation. Yet this is more than a major work on Nietzsche: the book opened a whole new avenue in post-war thought. Here Deleuze shows
Nietzsche and Philosophy
โ Scribed by Gilles Deleuze
- Publisher
- Columbia University Press
- Year
- 1983
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 255
- Series
- Columbia Classics in Philosophy
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
better scan with bookmarks
โฆ Table of Contents
Contents......Page 6
Foreword by Michael Hardt......Page 10
Preface to the English Translation......Page 16
Translator's Note by Hugh Tomlinson......Page 22
Abbreviations of Nietzsche's Works......Page 23
1. The Concept of Genealogy......Page 24
2. Sense......Page 26
3. The Philosophy of the Will......Page 29
4. Against the Dialectic......Page 31
5. The Problem of Tragedy......Page 33
6. Nietzsche's Evolution......Page 35
7. Dionysus and Christ......Page 37
8. The Essence of the Tragic......Page 40
9. The Problem of Existence......Page 42
10. Existence and Innocence......Page 45
11. The Dicethrow......Page 48
12. Consequences for the Eternal Return......Page 50
13. Nietzsche's Symbolism......Page 52
14. Nietzsche and Mallerme......Page 55
15. Tragic Thought......Page 57
16. The Touchstone......Page 59
1. The Body......Page 62
2. The Distinction of Forces......Page 63
3. Quantity and Quality......Page 65
4. Nietzsche and Science......Page 67
5. First Aspect of the Eternal Return: as cosmological and physical doctrine......Page 70
6. What is the Will to Power?......Page 72
7. Nietzsche's Terminology......Page 75
8. Origin and Inverted Image......Page 78
9. The Problem of the Measure of Forces......Page 81
10. Hierarchy......Page 82
11. Will to Power and Feeling of Power......Page 84
12. The Becoming-Reactive of Forces......Page 87
13. Ambivalence of Sense and of Values......Page 88
14. Second Aspect of the Eternal Return: as ethical and selective thought......Page 91
15. The Problem of the Eternal Return......Page 94
1. Transformation of the Sciences of Man......Page 96
2. The Form of the Question in Nietzsche......Page 98
3. Nietzsche's Method......Page 101
4. Against his Predecessors......Page 102
5. Against Pessimism and against Schopenhauer......Page 105
6. Principles for the Philosophy of the Will......Page 107
7. Plan of The Genealogy of Morals......Page 110
8. Nietzsche and Kant from the Point of View of Principles......Page 112
9. Realisation of Critique......Page 114
10. Nietzsche and Kant from the Point of View of Consequences......Page 116
11. The Concept of Truth......Page 117
12. Knowledge, Morality and Religion......Page 120
13. Thought and Life......Page 123
14. Art......Page 125
15. New Image of Thought......Page 126
1. Reaction and Ressentiment......Page 134
2. Principle of Ressentiment......Page 135
3. Typology of Ressentiment......Page 137
4. Characteristics of Ressentiment......Page 139
5. Is he Good? Is he Evil?......Page 142
6. The Paralogism......Page 145
7. Development of Ressentiment: the Judaic priest......Page 147
8. Bad Conscience and Interiority......Page 150
9. The Problem of Pain......Page 152
10. Development of Bad Conscience: the Christian priest......Page 154
11. Culture Considered from the Prehistoric Point of View......Page 156
12. Culture Considered from the Post-Historic Point of View......Page 158
13. Culture Considered from the Historical Point of View......Page 161
14. Bad Conscience, Responsibility, Guilt......Page 164
15. The Ascetic Ideal and the Essence of Religion......Page 166
16. Triumph of Reactive Forces......Page 168
1. Nihilism......Page 170
2. Analysis of Pity......Page 171
3. God is Dead......Page 175
4. Against Hegelianism......Page 179
5. The Avatars of the Dialectic......Page 182
6. Nietzsche and the Dialectic......Page 185
7. Theory of the Higher Man......Page 187
8. Is Man Essentially "Reactive"?......Page 189
9. Nihilism and Transmutation: the focal point......Page 194
10. Affinnation and Negation......Page 198
11. The Sense of Affirmation......Page 203
12. The Double Affirmation: Ariadne......Page 209
13. Dionysus and Zarathustra......Page 212
Conclusion......Page 218
1. The Tragic......Page 222
2. Active and Reactive......Page 226
3. Critique......Page 229
4. From Ressentiment to the Bad Conscience......Page 234
5. The Overman: Against the Dialectic......Page 238
Index......Page 246
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