On the Genealogy of Morals and Ecce HomoMasterful translations of the great philosopher’s major work on ethics, along with his own remarkable review of his life and works. On the Genealogy of Morals (1887) shows Nietzsche using philsophy, psychology, and classical philology in an effort to give new direction to an ancient discipline. The work consists of three essays. The first contrasts master morality and slave morality and indicates how the term "good" has widely different meanings in each. The second inquiry deals with guilt and the bad conscience; the third with ascetic ideals—not only in religion but also in the academy. Ecce Homo, written in 1898 and first published posthumously in 1908, is Nietzsche's review of his life and works. It contains chapters on all the books he himself published. His interpretations are as fascinating as they are invaluable. Nothing Nietzsche wrote is more stunning stylistically or as a human document. Walter Kaufmann's translations are faithful of the word and spirit of Nietzsche, and his running footnote commentaries on both books are more comprehensive than those in his other Nietzsche translations because these two works have been so widely misunderstood. |
Contents
Good and Evil Good and Bad | 24 |
Guilt Bad Conscience and the Like | 57 |
What Is the Meaning of Ascetic Ideals? | 97 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
animal Antichrist aphorism artist ascetic ideal ascetic priest bad conscience Bayreuth beautiful become Birth of Tragedy called Chapter Christian concept considered cruelty danger Dionysian Dionysus earth Ecce Homo edition enemy essay eternal everything evil example existence experience eyes faith fear feeling Friedrich Nietzsches Gast Gay Science Genealogy Genealogy of Morals German Greek guilt happiness harm Hegel hitherto holy honor human idea instinct Kaufmann's Kaufmann's Nietzsche kind lack live mankind matter means merely morality nature never Nietzsche contra Wagner Nietzsche's noble one's oneself opposite origin pain Parsifal perhaps Peter Gast philosopher pity Podach Portable Nietzsche precisely problem profound psychological punishment question ressentiment revaluation revenge Richard Wagner Schopenhauer sense sick Socrates soul speak spirit suffering things tion translation truth Twilight vengefulness virtue Wagner Walter Kaufmann whoever whole word Zarathustra



