Read Nietzsche With Me | New Series
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- Опубликовано: 23 июл 2024
- Read and discuss Nietzsche's works with me this November
Nietzsche is known for aphoristic style, provocative critiques, and cultural analyses. For this reason, he's one of the most read philosophers today and his ideas still remain relevant and widely discussed.
With that in mind, I'm eager to invite you all to read some of his most popular works with me in November. I'll have a new video each week breaking down key themes, core concepts, quotes, and more from one of his books. I'll leave the order below in case you are able to join along!
1. The Birth of Tragedy : amzn.to/48OJ4nD
2. The Gay Science : amzn.to/45rgq9r
3. On the Genealogy of Morals : amzn.to/3tk7J3e
4. Beyond Good and Evil : amzn.to/46GQKqg
5. Thus Spoke Zarathustra : amzn.to/48R1C6L
Free PDFs:
www.russoeconomics.altervista....
philoslugs.files.wordpress.co...
philosophy.ucsc.edu/news-even...
www.holybooks.com/wp-content/...
ia803405.us.archive.org/32/it...
Timecodes:
0:00 - New Weekly Series in November
1:08 - Week 1, The Birth of Tragedy
1:45 - Week 2, The Gay Science
2:25 - Week 3, On the Genealogy of Morals
2:58 - Week 4, Beyond Good and Evil
3:36 - Week 5, Thus Spoke Zarathustra
4:20 - Join Along
My Instagram: / brockcovington
My Substack: brockcovington.substack.com
#philosophy #nietzsche - Развлечения
Nice one. I'll be reading again some of his texts. I'm writing an article on Danto's book on Nietzsche, the book that brought Nietzsche in United States
Perfect timing! Walter Kaufmann was also an important figure for spreading Nietzschean philosophy
needs more views, amazing video
Looking forward to this!
Leaving this here before you become famous
I’ll be joining. Gives a good reason to reread some of these books!
love your content man keep it up🤝🤝
Not sure if this story is apocryphal, but apparently the iconic mustache wasn’t a look Nietzsche chose for himself. While he did have a mustache most of his adult life, his huge, lip-covering mustache (the one we all think of) was something his sister had him grow out to hide the facial ticks that resulted from his stroke.
Again, not sure how accurate that story is, but an interesting piece of Nietzsche trivia if true.
Anyway, sounds like an awesome series. I’ll be checking it out!
Neat piece of trivia if it’s accurate! It would make sense especially later in his life
Sounds good
The kindle app you get free books if you have a Amazon prime account, so I have been reading his on good and evil. So far it has challenged some ideas, I like anything that makes me rethink things.
I agree! Anything to shake up conventional thought or introduce nuance
Sounds like a book club.
Hopefully it’s something like a virtual book club for the month! Would love to hear everyone’s thoughts and interpretations
@@TheActiveMind1 Why Nietzsche though?
I tried reading good and beyond evil 1 year ago but felt like a complete moron , dont know how to start
Hopefully it makes more sense when we revisit it!
One of the first things for Americans to ponder about is that Friedrich and Frederick are two different names which also do not sound alike. For example, in the name "Friedrich" there is nothing that sounds like "Fred" and the word neither ends in a "c" or a "k" sound. This is similar to how, in the US, there's people called Robert and people called Richard. Robert and Richard are actually distinctly written and, in turn, not pronounced in the same way either. Those also have some overlapping characters when written, but you couldn't confuse the one for the other if the name is spoken.
Forgive my ignorance. From my understanding, Søren Kierkegaard is hard to pronounce for English speakers as well since we do not have ø nor “aa” sounds in our language