Buch | Kapitel
Book five
sections 356–365
pp. 229-236
Abstrakt
In the preceding sections Nietzsche commented on the cheerful response of "free spirits' to God's death. He examined the meaning and consequences of God's death. He also drew attention to its implications for our conceptions of so-called knowledge and morality, and suggested conventional morality masks our weaknesses. Nietzsche conjectured consciousness is intrinsically social and our idea of so-called knowledge springs from our desire for the security of the familiar. He contended so-called knowledge of the familiar is the hardest to attain, because it entails recognizing the familiar as problematic.
Publication details
Published in:
Langer Monika (2010) Nietzsche's Gay science: dancing coherence. Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.
Seiten: 229-236
Referenz:
Langer Monika (2010) Book five: sections 356–365, In: Nietzsche's Gay science, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 229–236.