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Selected letters of Friedrich Nietzsche

Chicago,: University of Chicago Press. Edited by Christopher Middleton (1969)

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  1. Unmasking nihilism. [REVIEW]Alan N. Woolfolk - 1985 - Human Studies 8 (1):85-96.
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  • The human animal nach Nietzsche re-reading zarathustra's interspecies community.Nathan Snaza - 2013 - Angelaki 18 (4):81-100.
    This article examines the double account of the human in Friedrich Nietzsche's writings. Genealogically, Nietzsche insists that humanity is a tamed herd that attacks its own animality. Philologically, this human – through anthropomorphism – sunders itself from those aspects of language that are not representational. Read in relation to this double critique, the article argues that Thus Spoke Zarathustra is an attempt to imagine an entirely different relation between politics and language, one that enables a thinking of a future without (...)
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  • Pregnant bodies, pregnant minds.Amy Mullin - 2002 - Feminist Theory 3 (1):27-44.
    Philosophers and artists frequently make use of metaphors drawn from female bodily experiences of pregnancy and childbirth to express intellectual or artistic creativity. While philosophical and artistic originality are presented as a kind of spiritual pregnancy, women's bodily pregnancies are often presented as at best intellectually or spiritually insignificant, to be valued solely for their products — physical children. I contrast the view of pregnancy found in philosophers such as Plato and Nietzsche, and artists such as Chagall, with an understanding (...)
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  • Los epígrafes en los Escolios de Nicolás Gómez Dávila: hacia una lectura intertextual.Tomás Felipe Molina Peláez - 2019 - Universitas Philosophica 36 (73):235-258.
    Partial commentaries of Gomez Davila’s epigraphs in Scholia to an Implicit Text have been put forward by several scholars. Nevertheless, none of them has yet attempted a systematic study of their meaning and their relation to the rest of the book or the literary sources to which they allude. This article is aimed to present such a systematic analysis, thus revealing two things: first, a number of essential premises of Gómez Dávila’s thought; second, the importance of intertextuality for a thorough (...)
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