NIETZSCHE’S THE ANTICHRIST (1888): In-Depth Analysis - The Revaluation of All Values

A deep dive into The Antichrist by Friedrich Nietzsche. Taken from episodes 22 & 23 of The Nietzsche Podcast.
The Antichrist (1888) is one of the last books Nietzsche wrote before losing his sanity the next year. It serves as the culmination of a decade or more of Nietzsche's thoughts on morality, Christianity, and the need for a revaluation of values. This project - of finding or defining a new set of values by which man could live - was something about which Nietzsche was deeply ambivalent. On the one hand, some sort of moral direction is required for ascending life. It is essential that the philosophers of the future find some means of pushing their way through the stage of relativism, or "active nihilism". But such a project would be to ignore the contingency of all our moral beliefs; worse yet, by outlining a new values-structure, Nietzsche will have to think and work systematically. But Nietzsche's thinking is by its nature anti-systematic. As a result, numerous contradictions come to the forefront in his philosophical outlook, not all of which are neatly resolved.
However, what we find as key to understanding the work is the opposition we discussed in the previous episode: of Dionysus v/s The Crucified One. The opposition is between the Dionysian morality of which gives a rough sketch, based on life, overcoming and will to power, and the Christian morality which is defined negatively and as the decline of all of these things. He uses this opposition to illuminate the true nature of the Christian religion and to argue for the values that he finds to be badly needed by the modern man. In the course of this moral revaluation, Nietzsche gives a theory of decadence: how empires behave during their decline and collapse. His various considerations lead him to the conclusion that all of the most cherished productions of our society, our highest values, our human ideals, art, philosophy, music, education, and our whole morality - are products of decadence, and thus of weakness. He thus calls into question the value of abstract thinking, and indeed the value of our faculty for conscious thought.
Unlike most critics of the Christian religion, Nietzsche devotes very little time to the refutation of the arguments for Christianity's truth, or the supposed evidence for the historicity of Jesus. Instead, Nietzsche is laser-focused on the effect of the Christian doctrine of pity, and its character as a totally life-denying force. Jesus, for Nietzsche, is the ultimate life-denying figure: the apotheosis of pity. Through his torture and death at teh hands of the Romans, which he does not resist, he became a mimetic example for the spread of this moral contagion. "Resist not evil" is, in Nietzsche's argument, the entire key to the doctrine of the gospels, and the explanation Jesus' profound difference from other gods - even from the God of the Old Testament. Because he was so extraordinary, even the later Christians never measured up to Jesus' complete defiance of the natural world.
"An instinctual hatred of reality" is how Nietzsche describes Jesus. Rather than a "hero", Jesus does not fight, resist, or oppose. He lives in the immanent knowledge of his salvation. "The kingdom of heaven is within you". The later message that was spread was a corruption of this way of life only ever attained to by Jesus. The effect that this religion of pity had on the hearts of the cruel, European barbarians, meanwhile, was to harness their cruelty and turn it inward. With the rejection of all value in the external world, only the internal has meaning. With no external fights, the only fight of any importance becomes the fight against one's own sin. This fight endlessly multiplies the suffering of the world and makes it ever more questionable and worthy of denial: the follower of Christ yearns for some release to this tension, some relief from the endless suffering he lives within. As bleak as all of this sounds, contained in this message, Nietzsche's own "gospel" as it were, or good news, is that if pity is only added on to life, ersatz - that means it is possible that it can be removed. Through this revaluation, maybe we can finally be free of the weakness that has crippled the once strong and beautiful psyche of humanity.
Alan Watts on Jesus: • Video
Hilary Putnam on Quine and Ontology: • Hilary Putnam on Quine...
#nietzsche #philosophy #christianity #atheism #dionysus #paganism #morality #bookreview

Пікірлер: 88

  • @gingerbreadzak
    @gingerbreadzak4 ай бұрын

    00:01 📚 "The Antichrist" by Nietzsche is a complex work that goes beyond critiquing Christianity, incorporating various philosophical ideas. 01:00 🧬 Nietzsche identifies "The Antichrist" with Dionysus, representing violent passions, contrasting with Christian values. 03:46 ⚖ Nietzsche's fundamental opposition is Dionysus versus the Crucified, symbolizing Christian morality as anti-nature and anti-life. 08:10 📖 "The Antichrist" is part of Nietzsche's project for the revaluation of all values, challenging Christian values and seeking a new moral philosophy. 16:08 🤔 Nietzsche criticizes modernity for its relativism and lack of a firm moral stance, emphasizing the importance of committing to necessary fictions in values. 20:56 📜 Nietzsche argues against unquestioned moral values and faith, which were prevalent in religious systems, and advocates for a new direction in the age of relativism and cosmopolitanism. 23:03 💪 Nietzsche defines "good" as that which enhances the feeling of power and "bad" as that which proceeds from weakness, emphasizing the importance of power and strength in his moral framework. 27:30 🔄 Nietzsche contrasts the modern person's avoidance of suffering and conflict with the hyperborean's embrace of conflict and the war-like nature of life, highlighting the rejection of contentment and utopianism. 30:12 🧭 Nietzsche shifts from the idea of man as a bridge (in Zarathustra) to man as an end, focusing on enhancing human life in the present rather than striving for a utopian future. 33:24 🔄 Nietzsche challenges the concept of progress, suggesting that evolution doesn't necessarily lead to betterment, and he warns against projecting utopian ideals onto the future. 39:08 📉 Nietzsche introduces the concept of decadence, defining it as the loss of instincts and the preference for values detrimental to growth and power, highlighting its influence on contemporary values. 42:09 🌍 Sociologist John Glubb discusses the stages of empires, including expansion, commercial prosperity, luxury, intellectualism, and arts, followed by decline. 43:04 💰 During the age of affluence, wealth pours in, leading to luxurious living, art patronage, and architectural development. 43:47 🤑 In the age of affluence, the focus shifts from honor and duty to accumulating wealth, leading to a decline in militancy and moral justifications for not engaging in conflict. 44:28 🌐 At "high noon," the empire stops expanding, leading to factionalism, civil unrest, and eventual collapse, often at the hands of a new emerging empire. 45:08 🧠 Intellectualism replaces military readiness, and subsidies replace weapons as nations become less willing to engage in conflict. 46:06 🗺 Nietzsche and Glubb agree on the later stages of society or empire characterized by decline in strength, correlating culture to the loss of instinct. 49:36 🌸 Nietzsche sees higher ideals, morality, art, and education as products of decadence and decline in strength. 52:28 🤝 Pity, a central value in Christianity, is criticized by Nietzsche as it spreads suffering and makes life questionable, ultimately weakening society. 57:14 💪 Nietzsche's higher man is not a cruel sociopath but magnanimous, generous, and compassionate by nature, not driven by resentment. 01:02:53 🧐 Nietzsche condemns pity as a manifestation of weakness, leading to resentment and vindictiveness in society. 01:03:19 🤔 Nietzsche criticizes the separation of rational thought and philosophical education from life, which he sees as a production of corruption and decadence, causing a detachment from instincts. 01:04:57 😢 Nietzsche argues that the separation of the soul and abstract thought from the law of natural selection leads to the emergence of pity, which he considers a form of nihilism and a denial of life. 01:06:21 👎 Nietzsche views Schopenhauer as hostile to life due to his elevation of pity as a virtue, which ultimately negates life and promotes decadence. 01:09:23 🙏 Nietzsche criticizes theologians, such as Kant, for inverting values, making virtue impersonal, and reducing the world to mere appearances, contrasting this with his idea of a more embodied and personal approach to virtue. 01:15:52 🧪 Nietzsche values a scientific approach that includes the body, passions, culture, and perspective, emphasizing the importance of a science that is not detached from the material world. 01:23:07 🐾 Nietzsche advocates for a more modest perspective, placing humanity among the animals and valuing intellectuality as a result of craftiness. He rejects deriving man from the spirit and godhead.

  • @conormurphy7058

    @conormurphy7058

    2 ай бұрын

    Thank you

  • @eddiebeato5546
    @eddiebeato55462 жыл бұрын

    Once again, dear teacher, your student here. What an honor! Listening to your podcast and lectures, is an excellent exercise to honing and whetting my humble intelectual faculties.

  • @untimelyreflections

    @untimelyreflections

    2 жыл бұрын

    I just want to say thank you for the very deep and thoughtful replies you’ve left on a handful of videos now. I have read all of them, and am always glad to meet a kindred spirit on the quest of philosophy! Cheers, my friend.

  • @adaptercrash

    @adaptercrash

    Жыл бұрын

    Oh you have to sin after they sin and christ says no you shouldn't have to.

  • @singh3100
    @singh3100 Жыл бұрын

    Power doesn't corrupt but weak individuals action corrupts when given power 🤐 Powerful

  • @LamneYokaMou
    @LamneYokaMou2 жыл бұрын

    Nice analysis, this podcast has really helped me to get an entry level understanding of a philosopher whose ideas I had previously found impenetrable.

  • @Tehz1359
    @Tehz1359 Жыл бұрын

    For Nietzsche, the strong person is someone who doesn't act the way that they do out of a feeling of obligation, or vanity. You act the way that you do because you want to. For example(extreme example incoming), someone who has a great capacity for violence and brutality, but is merciful. That is power. And I also personally value this because, the mercy in this scenario is much more authentic and real.

  • @cheri238
    @cheri238 Жыл бұрын

    I can't get enough of your lectures. Thank you.

  • @thenietzschean4072
    @thenietzschean40722 жыл бұрын

    The first time that I read "The Anti-Christ", I thought Nietzsche was talking about Satan, Lucifer, the Devil, Beelzebub, etc. The second time that I read "The Anti-Christ", I thought Nietzche was talking about Hitler, Nazi's etc. It was only much later that I realized Nietzsche was talking about the Dionysian, Aristocracy, Nobility, Royalty, upper-class individuals, artists, poets, etc. Nietzsche thought that Christianity was based in pity and was the belief system of the common & lowly (i.e., the sick & the poor, the underclass).

  • @thenietzschean4072

    @thenietzschean4072

    2 жыл бұрын

    Anton LeVey founded "The Church of Satan" in 1966 based on the writings of Ayn Rand and Friedrich Nietzsche.

  • @virtue_signal_

    @virtue_signal_

    Жыл бұрын

    He was correct

  • @dragonfishing

    @dragonfishing

    Жыл бұрын

    Absolutely.

  • @tangerinesarebetterthanora7060

    @tangerinesarebetterthanora7060

    Жыл бұрын

    Is Harrison Ford a Nietzschean?

  • @thenietzschean4072

    @thenietzschean4072

    Жыл бұрын

    @@tangerinesarebetterthanora7060 That you think I look like Harrison Ford is flattering. However, I don't see the resemblance.

  • @freddy2780
    @freddy2780 Жыл бұрын

    Been reading Nietzche for over 25 years.. now I'm reading Cioran.. this is a great channel.. many thanks keep up the great work..

  • @thephilosophicalagnostic2177
    @thephilosophicalagnostic21773 ай бұрын

    I love all your lectures. Keep them coming.

  • @retribution999
    @retribution9996 ай бұрын

    Very helpful and interesting. Thank you.

  • @ClarezaMeridiana
    @ClarezaMeridianaАй бұрын

    Good essay! I'll see more of the channel

  • @maxaval1240
    @maxaval1240 Жыл бұрын

    Magnificent, as usual.

  • @tangerinesarebetterthanora7060
    @tangerinesarebetterthanora706011 ай бұрын

    That was an excellent point you made about how we can't be value neutral because that would mean our will to power couldn't find a way to express itself.

  • @user-up8rr5rl6q
    @user-up8rr5rl6q5 ай бұрын

    great videos

  • @carlosurbina6246
    @carlosurbina62462 ай бұрын

    Most excellent podcast. If I had a thousand dollars to give I would gladly give it and feel cheap. Your erudition is commendable, your humility extraordinary. I hope to listen to this again, it was that understandable. I feel that I am just now beginning to understand the man and how excellent his views were. I have always seen my own ideas as far more extreme than his, but now I feel closer to him than before. In doing that you have rendered a great service,for which I am grateful. I am certain that many others appreciate your work perhaps more than I do. One of your phrases is memorable, something like 'philosophy should not attach itself to facts; it is speculative. That may be common knowledge, but it was a first for me, revealing and encouraging. I hope your podcasts will allow you to live in such a way that you won't have to do anything else. Thank you so much.

  • @kimfreeborn
    @kimfreeborn Жыл бұрын

    Very interesting this turn to the practical question of a higher man. His attack on relativism might simultaneously be an attack on pragmatism as well. From here we are left with an anti-mimetic non utopian aesthetic. That is an Ideal that is embedded in the material: very Aristotelian. A compassion that elevates rather than a compassion that weakens: pity? "Aristotle, as every one knows, saw in pity a sickly and dangerous state of mind, the remedy for which was an occasional purgative: he regarded tragedy as that purgative. The instinct of life should prompt us to seek some means of with any such pathological and dangerous accumulation of pity as that appearing in Schopenhauer’s case (and also, alack, in that of our whole literary décadence, from St. Petersburg to Paris, from Tolstoi to Wagner), that it may burst and be discharged.... Nothing is more unhealthy, amid all our unhealthy modernism, than Christian pity. To be the doctors here, to be unmerciful here, to wield the knife here-all this is our business, all this is our sort of humanity, by this sign we are philosophers, we Hyperboreans!-" Our ideals circle around an undifferentiated egalitarian Last man: the Christos. The Mass Man with his well regulated "two minutes of hate." The alterity of the will may hold promise but it can't compare to the marriage of instinct and intelligence that the animals have - cows excluded.

  • @stmeainus1922
    @stmeainus1922 Жыл бұрын

    Love it! :)

  • @rippedlikrambo1
    @rippedlikrambo1 Жыл бұрын

    good channel.

  • @CD-kl1dn
    @CD-kl1dn Жыл бұрын

    Great 👍

  • @silent_stalker3687
    @silent_stalker36872 жыл бұрын

    Where can I see episode 6 of the podcast? Is it by another name?

  • @untimelyreflections

    @untimelyreflections

    2 жыл бұрын

    It’s not on youtube, it’s only twenty minutes long, an adaptation of me reading a Medium article

  • @silent_stalker3687

    @silent_stalker3687

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@untimelyreflections I would like to listen to the rest of the series ^^ On a side note on bhudism, a lot of things got switched up during the eating states period. You get Confucius, Buddhism, Taoism, and mohism blending into each other. Confucius pretty much dislikes Taoist but have translated a lot of it (a book has this on Amazon: Taoist texts for 8$) A lot of Taoism bled into Zen Buddhism and Taoism really doesn’t resemble what it was before- so the history is a lot of bleed over and bleeding out of the ideas- Buddhism roughly is a rough translation by Christians to describe Buddhism where they saw it similar in the idea of icons and idols that their churches and cathedrals would have. Brad Warner in ‘don’t be a jerk’ kinda covers this to a degree. Keedo Moore wrote a few books such as hidden zen but I haven’t read it, he has a monestary in Wyoming and kinda does it off of center- instead of focusing on promoting the spread inside a culture he kinda has a different culture. Buddha said there isn’t a right way, such as a boat is good for water but poor on land. Emil Coiran in ANATHEMAS and ADMIRATIONS kinda covers this in his mention of language- ones nation and people are that communicate and share a bridge of language- which has been damaged severely in the last few years with stretching of definitions and so on… think how nihilism became ‘isn’t the culture’ meaning by American traditional religions; however their religion ‘can’t be nihilism’ to other groups… just word games like how some define corporatism but special interest groups- corporatism is roughly used to argue against or in favor of special interest groups.

  • @silent_stalker3687

    @silent_stalker3687

    Жыл бұрын

    @@untimelyreflections just read the article and found the podcast.

  • @emZee1994
    @emZee1994 Жыл бұрын

    Excellent episode, too many great points were made here to summarise. Nietzsche was correct, European civilization needs to move beyond Christianity and reinvent itself if it wants to survive and thrive in a post modernity world

  • @sandozkarika
    @sandozkarika Жыл бұрын

    This is great data to be considered w.Christopher Jon Bjerknes’ discoveries about the revelation religions. We have come some distance. Then again who read Nietszche when he was alive?

  • @gingerbreadzak
    @gingerbreadzak4 ай бұрын

    02:25:01 📚 Nietzsche criticizes Christianity for infecting strong barbarians with its ideas, originating in the Middle East and eventually spreading to Europe. 02:28:17 🌍 Nietzsche laments the loss of European pagan cultures and the influence of Christianity in subjugating and smothering them. 02:35:08 💪 Nietzsche suggests that Christianity arose as a means for the underclass to gain power, harnessing the decadent aspects of Judaism for this purpose. 02:38:47 🤔 Nietzsche emphasizes the importance of skepticism and the challenges it poses to his own ideas and convictions. 02:42:05 🤯 Nietzsche questions whether there is a significant difference between lies and convictions, highlighting the contingent nature of beliefs. 02:44:08 🤔 Nietzsche values the end or goal of a lie and evaluates it based on what it aims to achieve. He distinguishes between lies that serve life enhancement and those that don't. 02:45:17 📜 Nietzsche criticizes Christianity for the direction it pushes humanity rather than solely focusing on the fact that it involves lies. He sees the honesty of a lie as a more important factor. 02:45:46 🌟 Nietzsche emphasizes that what matters most is the direction that the will to power doctrine leads humanity, rather than whether it's an objective truth or his own conviction.

  • @nietzsche1749
    @nietzsche1749 Жыл бұрын

    I condemn Christianity; I bring against the Christian Church the most terrible of all accusations that an accuser has ever had in his mouth. It is, to me, the greatest of all imaginable corruptions; it seeks to work the ultimate corruption, the worse possible corruption. The Christian Church has left nothing untouched by its depravity; it has turned every value into worthlessness, and every truth into a lie, and every integrity into baseness of soul.

  • @messiahisjudaism7186

    @messiahisjudaism7186

    Жыл бұрын

    But did you not see the futility in emperical truth against the lie, see every value as a Christian regurgitation, see the phoney pulpit preaching against corruption a poisonous reminder of the age old suppression of the beast? Are you not indeed the gray matter, the mixing of Dionysus and his nemesis which seeks to reduce every one thing also to gray matter, pebbles on the beach clashing back and forth accepting the sway of external uncontrollable forces. Will your indignant cry for the Dionysian will to power not continually be resurrected as the justification for the ravages of externalities and the modern overflowing Kylix of addictions? In your rejection of truth you lied to yourself, that you could escape the crucified, but as you said yourself the beast is just a reaction to the crucified, a black hole where complex constructions go to die. If I am so concerned with my aesthetic extraction from the worldly, how am I here? But you must clean your kylix before you can drink the pure water again.

  • @gingerbreadzak
    @gingerbreadzak4 ай бұрын

    01:23:37 📜 Nietzsche criticizes how modern man has lost free will and willpower, reduced to mere reactions to stimuli. 01:24:17 🧠 Nietzsche sees consciousness and spirit as symptoms of relative imperfection and unnecessary energy consumption. 01:29:43 🙏 Nietzsche criticizes Christianity for its imaginary beliefs and its detachment from reality, seeing it as a source of suffering. 01:31:33 💔 Nietzsche views Jesus as someone who denied reality and increased suffering, ultimately representing weakness. 01:44:36 📖 Nietzsche discusses how the Old Testament God is complex, not a mindless psychopath, but often portrayed as provincial and conflicted in ancient times. 01:46:02 🕊 The Old Testament God's portrayal challenges modern Christian views of God as an omnipresent, all-knowing, and morally perfect being. 01:47:00 🔀 Nietzsche highlights the contrast between the Old Testament God and the New Testament God, noting the transformation of God from a national deity to a cosmopolitan, peace-loving figure. 01:49:23 🌟 Nietzsche emphasizes that the Old Testament God's duality of good and evil made God relatable to humanity, as it reflected human qualities and imperfections. 01:51:10 🏛 Nietzsche uses Jesus as an archetype of life denial, opposing the concept of Jesus as a hero, and instead portraying him as a symbol of weakness and decline. 01:58:37 ⚔ Nietzsche criticizes the idea of Jesus as a hero, emphasizing that Jesus' message is about resisting not evil and embracing an inner, non-confrontational spirituality. 02:03:48 📚 Nietzsche interprets Jesus as an imminentist, believing that salvation is within individuals at every moment, rather than a future event. 02:05:25 📜 Nietzsche's reading of Jesus in "The Antichrist" lacks the concept of guilt, punishment, and reward. It emphasizes the absence of aloofness between God and man, promoting an imminent approach to life. 02:07:03 🤔 Nietzsche's interpretation suggests that Jesus may have had a perception of an undivided reality, similar to Alan Watts' "cosmic consciousness," but he attributes Jesus' approach to an instinctual hatred of reality, leading to the rejection of the world and the creation of a different one. 02:09:24 🌍 Nietzsche views pity as nature's failed experiment, an impulse that stops the natural selection process. He suggests that eliminating pity could be a path to reevaluating values and improving our perspective on suffering. 02:17:13 🕊 Nietzsche argues that there has only ever been one true Christian, Jesus, and he died on the cross. He criticizes the later Christians for deviating from Jesus' indifference to the world and becoming obsessed with consciously held beliefs, contrasting it with the instinctual level of Jesus.

  • @michaelatkin9649
    @michaelatkin96495 ай бұрын

    2:48:30 happy Yule!

  • @WAZZA1235
    @WAZZA1235 Жыл бұрын

    Started reading it, but someone spoilt the ending for me. wtf man...

  • @StephanieG1
    @StephanieG12 жыл бұрын

    When I was younger I used to enjoy reading Nietzsche. Ten years on I now much prefer Schopenhauer.

  • @alijibran2973

    @alijibran2973

    Жыл бұрын

    Your intake on why Schopenhauer's insights are more valid than Nietzche will be highly appreciated

  • @VidaBlue317

    @VidaBlue317

    Жыл бұрын

    Nothing of Nietzsche ever resonated with me. Maybe it's because I don't speak German. We went thru Hegel, Kierkegaard, Nietzche. These guys - whatever their message, I never quite understood why their ideas were so great. Godel, Russell, Frege, Cantor, Turing - these were the guys that blew me away

  • @tangerinesarebetterthanora7060

    @tangerinesarebetterthanora7060

    Жыл бұрын

    jaded by life I see

  • @ferdinanddclxvi776

    @ferdinanddclxvi776

    9 ай бұрын

    So what did you understand of the others ? Can you message their second names thanx

  • @AGamer1177
    @AGamer1177 Жыл бұрын

    "The weak and botched shall perish! First principle of our charity..." This line has so much meaning is that it's almost profound. I give two interpretations: "The weak and botched shall perish" refers to what he sees as detrimental to mankind both in the political (or mental) sense and the physical sense. The politics of of his Aristocratic Radicalism only sees politics as a tool to achieve a new aristocracy based on Will-to-Power and opposes all ideologies that would hinder it, whether be Nationalism, Egalitarianism, Democracy, Socialism, Anarchism, et al. To him, all these ideas make man sick and weak, but they are useful to level man to where the Lords of the Earth have a base to stand on. The second is rather more direct and eugenic, killing the "weak and botched" in terms of culling the physically and mentally ill from reproducing or reducing them to actual slaves. But he doesn't even preserve himself. He is willing to even sacrifice himself for this to happen. The absolute madman.

  • @josiahamon7280
    @josiahamon728010 ай бұрын

    Funny thing about the Hyperboreans, they are picts and Scots from way back in the day when they painted their skin blue

  • @apricus3155
    @apricus31552 жыл бұрын

    You have a podcast The Nietzsche Podcast?

  • @untimelyreflections

    @untimelyreflections

    2 жыл бұрын

    That’s the name of the podcast, yes.

  • @apricus3155

    @apricus3155

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@untimelyreflections You should upload more there! Also what happened to Nietzsche in the end? You looked into his life, was it sifilis? Mental illness?

  • @untimelyreflections

    @untimelyreflections

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@apricus3155 Here is an article I wrote for the r/nietzsche wiki page which includes most of the evidence and what my opinion on Nietzsche's illness is: www.reddit.com/r/Nietzsche/comments/f7ivyn/frequently_asked_question_nietzsches_illness/

  • @room9podcast

    @room9podcast

    2 жыл бұрын

    I just discovered it a week ago. I am on episode 14 and I am also currently re-listening, from the beginning, while taking notes and looking up references. So many effin dots have been connected. I am slowly starting to be able to actually read and understand Nietzsche. Cannot recommend it enough.

  • @eddiebeato5546

    @eddiebeato5546

    2 жыл бұрын

    I am impressed that this podcaster has the gut to taking into Nietzsche’s philosophy, which is tantamount to having a duel with a beast! This man is a brilliant thinker! I hope he will eventuality reveal his name!

  • @longcastle4863
    @longcastle48632 жыл бұрын

    That so many materialist scientist are nevertheless Platonist where math is concerned, really dtives home home how seductively beautiful math must be to those who are really good at it.

  • @ahmedmahmud4238
    @ahmedmahmud4238Ай бұрын

    @13:55, hyperboreans are nordics, as oppose to the southern european type. The greeks called the nordics the name hyperboreans. Nietszche is refering to the "blonde beast". He uses the term hyperborean literally and metaphorically. It is easy to extract a racialist element from Nietszche's writings. It is peppered through out. During Nietszche's time the Nordic type recognized itself, without guilt. It is only in the American age, that nordics were re-invented as descendants of greeks and romans as part of americas revolution/inversion of values. Hence average americans are culturally blinded to parts of Nietszches thought. As time progresses and more tax revenue is used, the more the american lie is more elaborated on. This is the outcome of Germans loosing ww2. At any rate, hyperboreans are the proto german savages the ancient greeks were deadly afraid of. The bible calls them gog and magog. They call themeselves goths. History remembers them as eastern goths (ostro goths), visigogs (western goths) , and a plethora of other names, and destroyed the western roman empire.

  • @trist5612
    @trist5612 Жыл бұрын

    How only 3,000 subs

  • @dragonfishing

    @dragonfishing

    Жыл бұрын

    Philosophy isn't for the masses, especially nietzche.

  • @trist5612

    @trist5612

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dragonfishing I’ve never understood how or why philosophy wasn’t for the masses. Since the beginning of my thoughts I always questioned how or why I was thinking.

  • @UrbanPovertist
    @UrbanPovertistАй бұрын

    I will reveal a secret of the mystery schools. Death and Rebirth is sybolic of a sacred journey into the astral plane and has no actual death involved

  • @ExxylcrothEagle
    @ExxylcrothEagle2 ай бұрын

    Fascinating how the Bacchae seems to suggest Jesus and dionysis. And christ is like Socrates in martyrdom

  • @filiusdei162
    @filiusdei162Ай бұрын

    Is it true that needs work is satire

  • @Unter_Menschen
    @Unter_Menschen11 ай бұрын

    I do not think, Nietzsche calling himself the Anti-Christ, means that he is the antagonist of Christ, as Paulus of Tarus would be a better fit. Pharaphrasing: "Christianity is Platonism for the masses". Would make his Titel (in true Aristocratic fashion) as Anti-Plato, or Anti-Philosophie. He never really calls himself a Philosopher, for his Poetry is simply to good for that (I guess). Nietzsche being, if at all Pre-Sokratik (Post-Himself), the End of all Philosophie, would be better classified as a Sophist (again, if at all). He titeling himself as a follower of Dionysos is probably the confusing, the weird part. When choosing Dionysos over Apollon, one does not free himself from one or the other, for they are both sides of the same coin. A pawn a man should not have to take, if he wants to be a free spirit. So being Anti-Christ, must ultimately be Anti-Dionysian, as it is a part that Nietzsche plays for the "destruction" of the old morals. So Christ wouldn´t be the actual enemy, but Plato and the tragedy we call classic education. Well that is my coin i have thrown in the well of wisedom. May the head of Nitzsche speak in his Poetry of what really is. For the question he gives us: "Will/Want man understand me?" Maybe we will one day have drunken enough of his mead, of his spring, so we will see, who speaks to us, through him. (I am now officially part of that breed of man, who writes romans/novels in the comment section of youtube.)

  • @The-Interpreter
    @The-Interpreter Жыл бұрын

    Why a few? If a myth is obvious, it is useless. If a myth is too far, it is not reached. The few who are so capable. The life is not a choice between Dionysian or Christian, but while young, have a party and when old surrender everything. The few who are so capable.

  • @dashlamb9318
    @dashlamb9318Ай бұрын

    Perhaps what Jesus said is more accurate than what Nietzsche said. It appears Nietzsche only read the "Sermon on the Mount" to form his opinions.

  • @2024balam
    @2024balam5 ай бұрын

    What about the miracles, the resurrection of Christ, the acts of the apostles, the continuity of the church, the revelations and prophecies...there is so many theological aspects that he left out...he argues only in term of filosoficaly and ideal perspective, but there s so much more to christianity that he leaves out..Nietzche is a great filozofer but he cant offer a solution to mankind not even close to christianity

  • @untimelyreflections

    @untimelyreflections

    5 ай бұрын

    "What about all of these stories that we made up???"

  • @2024balam

    @2024balam

    5 ай бұрын

    @@untimelyreflections well, i understand what you are saying but, we cant know for sure if they are made up or not....i question myself alot, i read alot of good philosophers and teologians, this is a matter of life and death, the universal filosofical question is what is the purpose of life and so far, none of this great filosofers cand give a clear answear so in conclusion, everything is questionable...from Socrates, Plato , Aristotle etc. To kant, heideger, shopenhaur, kierkegaard, kafka, pascal etc. To the theological fathers of the church...we clearly search for an absolute answer, but to say that the purpose of life isnt transcendental and everyting that is life is here in this reality for me it is absurd and not at all embracing this reality, at least christianity offers meaning to life thru virtues, as mercy, sacrifice , and love ... Of course virtues that maybe today are laughable and stupid... Anyway i do listen , subscribed and like your videos...sorry for my bad english. Not englishman.

  • @michaelatkin9649
    @michaelatkin96495 ай бұрын

    1:44:05 this wasnt Abraham. This was a story of Lot. His wife was turned to pillar of salt because she looked back when she was told not to. So theres the psychopathic god that isnt forgiving within the same story.

  • @michaelatkin9649

    @michaelatkin9649

    5 ай бұрын

    Oh, and Lot then had sex with his daughters after his wife was turned to be a pillar of salt. The old testament is written by disgusting psychopathic people. You can see this continuous behavior in isreal if you know of the crimes of them

  • @untimelyreflections

    @untimelyreflections

    5 ай бұрын

    The story I was relating wasn't the story of Lot, but the story of Abraham arguing with God over how many innocent people would have to live there for him to show mercy to Sodom & Gomorrah. This happens in a passage just before the story of Lot.

  • @chriscoke2505
    @chriscoke2505 Жыл бұрын

    Nietzsche was very mistaken

  • @dragonfishing

    @dragonfishing

    Жыл бұрын

    Ok lok

  • @ShitSpooky

    @ShitSpooky

    3 ай бұрын

    So are you.

  • @Tomski-eh3qe
    @Tomski-eh3qe4 күн бұрын

    We shouldn't worry about the anti christ Jesus is coming back

  • @untimelyreflections

    @untimelyreflections

    4 күн бұрын

    In yr dreams

  • @dashlamb9318
    @dashlamb9318Ай бұрын

    Obviously Mr. Nietzsche missed the part about Jesus casting every one who did not adhere to Jesus's teachings INTO ETERNAL HELL FIRE and DAMNATION.

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