"Nietzsche the problem of socrates" Essays and Research Papers

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    this essay will not be taking issue with these criticisms I feel they are the result of piecemeal reading. There is this tendency to jump on passionate thinkers especially those who write in such a way that they can be reduced to catch phrases i.e. Nietzsche: “God is dead”. The first lesson learnt as a student of philosophy is to hold off on criticism until you have begun to grasp the thinker and his thought as a whole. Any philosopher worth his mettle will be working within a dynamic but defined system

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    After discussing Nietzsche in class‚ I could not help but draw connections between his philosophies and the movie Groundhog’s Day. The first Nietzchean concept seen in the film is the idea of the eternal recurrence or the “eternal return of the same”. This concept is integral to the plot of the film because the film follows Phil Connors a weatherman who is cursed to relive the same day over and over. Phil’s life becomes a predictable cycle‚ one in which escape seems impossible. Phil at first seems

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    Nietzsche Good Vs Evil

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    As stated by Nietzsche‚ the more an individual is active‚ headstrong‚ and lively‚ the less duration of the time is left for contemplating constantly on what is done to them‚ and their responses turned less habitually aggressive. The response of a strong-minded person‚ at the point when it happens‚ is ideally a short action: it is not thoroughly thought through‚ and acts on emotions at that moment. Ressentiment May be a reassignment of the torment that accompanies a feeling of one’s own inferiority/failure

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    Jessica Harding December 3st‚ 2010 Nietzsche Independent Study Friedrich Nietzsche: Pain‚ Suffering and the Death of God In order to understand Nietzsche‚ one must actually feel‚ physically and emotionally‚ the pain which was the catalyst that inspired him. The phenomenon of pain effects humans different than animals‚ as humans are both emotionally and physically aware of the pain. Human beings know what it is to tell the great lie of our culture. This lie is the denial of suffering in

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    Freud and Nietzsche on Human Nature and Society After intensive analyzation of reading Civilization and It’s Discontents by Sigmund Freud and Beyond Good and Evil by Friedrich Nietzsche‚ I feel as if both Freud and Nietzsche offered virtually identical views of human nature and of the society in which they lived. In my paper I intend to prove how this is so. The Freudian view of humanity is quite pessimistic. According to his ideology‚ people act only in order to satisfy their needs

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    anti-morality and anti-nature are aspects‚ which negate vital instincts. Friedrich Nietzsche is a renowned philosopher who criticized social laws‚ religion‚ and honorable in a radical manner. Nietzsche argues that‚ “anti-nature refers to the idea of allowing human beings to coerce others into adopting their beliefs and morals” (Friedrich 404). Friedrich Nietzsche had a personal belief that morality is anti-nature. In fact‚ Nietzsche states that‚ “Every naturalism in morality-that is every health morality-is

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    One philosopher‚ however‚ did bring up this issue: Friedrich Nietzsche‚ a German writer/philosopher with mild sanity issues; specifically‚ he brings up the rather dubious nature of morality based on various negative aspects of human history we’ve used to justify our actions. He catalogued many of the concepts‚ ideas‚ and failings of morality in a collection of essays referred to as On the Genealogy

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    Although Nietzsche and Dostoevsky fight for the innermost center of humanity in their attempt to define the art living a meaningful life through the metaphor of Zasima and the overman‚ the turn of the 20th century introduced a new factor. “Totalitarianism is nothing other than the rule of force” (Ambrosio lecture 22) and with the peak of the industrial revolution and the horrors of the two world wars that generated by the scientific community and which brought about death to humanity on an astronomical

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    Socrates was one of the most influential philosophers of all time. This amazing man was known only in the words of his students Plato and Xenophon. He fought in the Athenian army‚ he was a stone statuary‚ he was in the Athens assembly‚ and most of all he was a teacher of philosophy. Socrates was brave and fearless in the face of war and death; he was willing to fight for things he believed in. His words are still referenced today. Socrates was born to a working class family in the city of Athens

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    Why Is Socrates Wrong

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    In 399 BCE Socrates was wrongfully put to death. The charges and verdict were posted in the metroon (Greek temple): "Socrates is guilty of refusing to recognize the gods recognized by the state and introducing other‚ new divinities. He is also guilty of corrupting the youth. The penalty demanded is death‚" (Socrates). Regardless of the laws at the time‚ and the amount of discretion given to the court‚ the wrong moral decision was made. Socrates’ famous student‚ Plato‚ wrote about trial in Apology

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