In the light of Nietzsche's repeated assertion that everything is in constant flux , this includes the will to power as well. In fact, it is the will to power as the origin of the world in all its aspects that causes this to be in a constant motion. Hence, just as Lear thought of love as a drive, Nietzsche too thinks of our moral source as something “always on the move”. Furthermore, as the moral source is the framework of our world, it cannot precede it but necessarily come to be with what it frames – that is, at the same time as our subjectivity comes to be and to conceive itself within a world. In this sense, “will to power” is itself nothing but a representation of the essence of reality, insofar as this composes us, our world, and the morals through which we frame our experience of
In the light of Nietzsche's repeated assertion that everything is in constant flux , this includes the will to power as well. In fact, it is the will to power as the origin of the world in all its aspects that causes this to be in a constant motion. Hence, just as Lear thought of love as a drive, Nietzsche too thinks of our moral source as something “always on the move”. Furthermore, as the moral source is the framework of our world, it cannot precede it but necessarily come to be with what it frames – that is, at the same time as our subjectivity comes to be and to conceive itself within a world. In this sense, “will to power” is itself nothing but a representation of the essence of reality, insofar as this composes us, our world, and the morals through which we frame our experience of