Nietzsche's Best 8 Books - Weebly

Nietzsche's Best 8 Books

F. Nietzsche (Editor: Bill Chapko)

Published: 2010 Tag(s): Nietzsche Existentialism Zen Philosophy Buddhism

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Title Page

NIETZSCHE'S BEST 8 BOOKS

An Ebook to Search the Spirit of Friedrich Nietzsche

Edited by Bill Chapko

CONTENTS Editor Notes Introduction to Nietzsche's Life And Writings The Gay Science Ecce Homo Thus Spoke Zarathustra The Dawn Twilight of the Idols The Antichrist Beyond Good and Evil Genealogy of Morals Appendices A - Timeline Biography B - Nietzsche's Comments on his Books C- Eternal Recurrence, by B. Chapko

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Editor Notes

EDITOR NOTES

Nietzsche Love of Fate Series Version 4.67 - March 1, 2010. ?William A. Chapko, 2010

All eight digital books in the "Nietzsche Love of Fate Series" are unabridged.

"Nietzsche's Best 8 Books" is covered by a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative 3.0 License. You may copy and share this work as long as you attribute it to Bill Chapko, do not alter the contents, nor use it for commercial purposes.

Note on the Translations Cover Photos Note On The Selection Of Books Eternal Recurrence Editor Profile

Note on the Translations Based on translations published from 1899 to 1919, these eight books have been somewhat modified (especially Zarathustra). Words no longer commonly used, such as fain, hitherto, thee, wouldst, therefrom, nigh, ye and forsooth, have been replaced with their modern English equivalents.

The eight books are:

The Gay Science ... . .Modified digital version based on the translation by Thomas Common published in 1910. Ecce Homo ... ... . .Modified digital version based on the translation by Anthony M. Ludovici published in 1911. Zarathustra ... ... .Extensively Modified digital version based on the translation by Thomas Common published in 1909. The Dawn ... ... . . Modified digital version based on the translation by J. M. Kennedy published in 1911. Twilight of the Idols . .Modified digital version based on the translation by Thomas Common published in 1899.

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The Antichrist ... . . Modified digital version based on the translation by H.L. Mencken published in 1919. Beyond Good and Evil . . Modified digital version based on the translation by Helen Zimmern published in 1909. Genealogy of Morals ... Modified digital version based on the translation by Horace B. Samuel published in 1910.

Ebook Cover Photos The bottom photo on the ebook cover shows Nietzsche joking with his friends, Miss Lou Salom? (left) and Paul Ree (center). The taking and arrangement of the photo were at Nietzsche's suggestion. The top photo was taken at age 31.

Note On The Selection Of Books The Nietzsche Love of Fate Series contains the full texts of Nietzsche's eight best and most mature works. The books written before The Dawn (1880) are not as mature as those written later. The Case of Wagner (1888) and Nietzsche Contro Wagner (1888) are too narrow in scope.

The famous book, The Will to Power (1901) is a collection of tentative notes edited, arranged and published by Nietzsche's sister after his death. It's value is surrounded by a great deal of controversy among scholars. The eminent Nietzsche scholar Mazzino Montinari went so far as to call it a "forgery". As Walter Kaufmann said in his introduction to the book, Nietzsche could have included these notes in his published works but he chose not to and therefore it is possible he was not fully satisfied with them. For these reasons the book is not included among his "best 8".

Eternal Recurrence To the Reader,

In his autobiography Nietzsche said that Zarathustra was by far his most inspired and most important book, and that the "basic conception of this work" was the idea of "eternal recurrence". This idea is intimately involved with what he calls "love of fate", "that one wants nothing to be different, not forward, not backward, not in all eternity."

The idea of eternal recurrence, so strange and yet so simple, needs to be

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considered more than it has been. I have taken the liberty of including my essay on eternal recurrence in the appendices of this ebook. You may read it here: Appendix C: Eternal Recurrence: The World Loves You So Much It Repeats You Forever. (Or else as a web page at eternal-) Bill Chapko Editor Profile Born in 1947, Bill Chapko grew up in suburban New Jersey. At New York University he studied Existential Philosophy under Professor William Barrett, author of the book "Irrational Man: A Study in Existential Philosophy". He graduated with a BA in Philosophy in 1969. He has read, enjoyed and studied Nietzsche all his life. Since 1981 he, together with his American wife Eva and their four children, have lived happily in southern Italy.

Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative

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Introduction to Nietzsche's Life and Writings

INTRODUCTION TO NIETZSCHE'S LIFE AND WRITINGS

by Bill Chapko

University philosophers, especially from America and England, have always been bewildered and irritated by Nietzsche. He doesn't fit anywhere. His influence has been outside university culture - among artists, dancers, poets, writers, novelists, psychologists, playwrights. Some of the most famous who publicly acknowledged being strongly influenced by Nietzsche were Picasso, Isadora Duncan, Martha Graham, William Butler Yeats, Rainer Rilke, Allen Ginsberg, Khalil Gibran, Martin Buber, H.L. Mencken, Emma Goldman, Jacques Derrida, Michel Foucault, Thomas Mann, Hermann Hesse, Jack London, Franz Kafka, Jean-Paul Sartre, Albert Camus, Sigmund Freud, Carl Jung, Karl Jaspers, Alfred Adler, Fritz Perls, Eugene O'Neill and George Bernard Shaw.

There is a large amount of scholarly literature attempting to "explain" and systematize Nietzsche and his thought. Professors comb through the events of his rather ordinary life to find reasons or a pattern to his radical ideas. Books and articles about his writings strain to fit him neatly into some framework of western philosophy. I am assuming that Nietzsche gave birth to something radically new, outside of western philosophy that he was defending a new type of philosopher yearning to explore outside "systems of thought".

"I mistrust all systematizers and I avoid them. The will to a system is a lack of integrity."

Twilight of the Idols, (part 2, sec 26)

Explore Nietzsche yourself. He mostly wrote directly and clearly, without scholarly jargon. See if he brings out the artist or psychologist or dancer in you.

Summary of Nietzsche's Life

Other than a lifelong painful debilitating illness and his temporary friendship with the famous composer Richard Wagner, Nietzsche's life

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