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  • ...ather, the subject is a [[social construction]] of the discourse, or, as [[Nietzsche]] said, a "grammatical fiction". Judith Butler would maintain this ambivale
    17 KB (2,437 words) - 00:33, 13 December 2020
  • ...of Hippo|Augustine]], [[René Descartes|Descartes]], [[Friedrich Nietzsche|Nietzsche]]—have become as canonical as any writers. Some recent philosophy works
    35 KB (5,154 words) - 01:39, 13 December 2020
  • ...ects Christian academic scholarly tradition (scholarly sources [[Friedrich Nietzsche]], [[Jacob Burckhardt]], [[Beard]], [[Ferdinand de Saussure]], [[Sigmund Fr
    16 KB (2,310 words) - 00:16, 13 December 2020
  • ...way of the appearance of masters who no longer need slaves to be masters. Nietzsche blessed a world in which the will to live is condemned never to be more tha ...rom which all true rulers have disappeared? And the answer: a super-slave. Nietzsche's concept of the superman, however threadbare it may have been, is worlds a
    69 KB (11,658 words) - 22:37, 12 December 2020
  • ...2/platinum-rule.html] Philosophers, such as [[Immanuel Kant]], [[Friedrich Nietzsche]], and [[Bertrand Russell]], have objected to the rule on a variety of grou
    21 KB (3,385 words) - 10:08, 2 October 2022
  • ...a name for what the powerful or cunning ruler has imposed on the people. [[Nietzsche]], in contrast, argues that justice is part of the slave-morality of the we
    25 KB (3,728 words) - 01:21, 13 December 2020
  • ...[[individual]]s to resolve moral problems without resorting to God. Marx, Nietzsche, Freud, and Sartre all used this argument to convey messages of liberation, ...[https://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=BKz2FcDrFy0C&oi=fnd&pg=PA1&dq=nietzsche+schopenhauer+marx+feuerbach&ots=Uj5_B0kDbS&sig=1lXbokGVRbwxqAIbmcOwL033N88]
    60 KB (8,700 words) - 23:45, 12 December 2020
  • The ideal world," says Nietzsche, "is a lie invented to deprive reality of its value, its meaning, its truth
    30 KB (5,014 words) - 18:36, 12 April 2009
  • Bowie, Andrew, Aesthetics and Subjectivity from Kant to Nietzsche, Manchester, Manchester University Press, 1990.
    38 KB (6,034 words) - 18:41, 13 May 2009
  • ...rich), Pierre-Simon Laplace, Arthur Schopenhauer, William James, Friedrich Nietzsche, Albert Einstein, Niels Bohr, and, more recently, John Searle, Ted Honderic
    33 KB (5,170 words) - 23:56, 12 December 2020
  • ...framework (e.g., Descartes and Kierkegaard). But others, such as Blake and Nietzsche, considered themselves to be prophets, though in their writings it is clear
    35 KB (5,328 words) - 02:32, 13 December 2020
  • .... "Because we can no longer stand the sight of slaves, we suppress them." (Nietzsche)
    35 KB (5,848 words) - 22:40, 12 December 2020
  • ...toward becoming the "Übermensch" (English: "overman" or "superman") that [[Nietzsche]] speaks of extensively in his philosophical writings.
    44 KB (6,801 words) - 01:03, 13 December 2020
  • ...l structure and individual agency. Also influential in these issues were [[Nietzsche]], [[Heidegger]], the critical theory of the [[Frankfurt School]], [[Derrid
    55 KB (7,711 words) - 23:45, 12 December 2020
  • ..., The Quarrel of Reason with Itself. Essays on Hamann, Michaelis, Lessing, Nietzsche. Columbia: Camden House.
    58 KB (8,742 words) - 14:06, 15 April 2009
  • ...ion'' between several dots, in continuous transformation as in [[Friedrich Nietzsche]]'s philosophy. His view of power lent credence to the view that power in h
    67 KB (10,041 words) - 02:37, 13 December 2020

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