About This Book
The author examines Nietzsche's philosophy and allied exponents of individualism, tracing themes such as anti-scientific tendencies, extreme nominalism, and a cult of originality centered on the will to power and the figure of the overman. He contrasts Nietzsche's celebration of instinctive self-assertion and contempt for received truth with calls for an ethic grounded in objective truth and self-control, evaluates Nietzsche's predecessors and disciples, and discusses Zarathustra and the principle of valuation. Throughout, the study weighs philosophical ambition against standards of truth and practical ethics, arguing for a balance between individuality and accountable, truth-based conduct.
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