"This essay focuses on the third play in the Oresteia trilogy, the Eumenides. Telech provides a compelling reinterpretation of Nietzsche’s reading of Aeschylus's masterpiece, saving the reading from the complaint that it oversimplifies and sentimentalizes the Oresteia by celebrating the triumph of a modern and liberal understanding of law's rationalist virtues over customary and traditional forms. Telech provides an alternative Nietzschean reading that is consistent with Nietzsche's own, that reintroduces passion and irrationality into the trial and sentencing of Orestes, refrains from romanticizing law, and along the way makes a case for institutionalizing a role for mercy in contemporary legal processes." (OUP abstract
This dissertation explores Nietzsche‟s ethics of reading. I argue that narrative strategies such as ...
Scholars have long debated the exact difference between what is “pious” (ὅσιος) and what is “lawfull...
In this thesis I attempt to elucidate the complex relationship between life and justice in Nietzsche...
The main purpose of this article is to present a critique of the Nietzschean reading of the evaluati...
This article scrutinises one of the most challenging theses of Nietzsche's Birth of Tragedy, that on...
Contemporary theorists critical of the current vogue for compassion might like to turn to Friedrich ...
Contemporary theorists critical of the current vogue for compassion might like to turn to Friedrich ...
Since the XIX century, a pleiad of philosophers and historians support the idea that Greek philosoph...
Nietzsche’s On the Genealogy of Morals (GM) embarks upon an ambitious project to account for the roo...
Abstract—This paper aims at delving into the play Medea in the light of Nietzsche’s views on tragedy...
Nietzsche is often called an a-moralist. According to him, it is said, there is no God, so that you ...
In Nietzsche scholarship, little has been done regarding Nietzsche’s reflections on penology and cri...
Said to be higher! - You say that the morality of pity is higher morality than that of Stoicism? Pr...
The antagonism between deontological and teleological conceptions of law can be felt throughout the ...
The initiative to turn off the past and allow the march of time forward is often attributed to the G...
This dissertation explores Nietzsche‟s ethics of reading. I argue that narrative strategies such as ...
Scholars have long debated the exact difference between what is “pious” (ὅσιος) and what is “lawfull...
In this thesis I attempt to elucidate the complex relationship between life and justice in Nietzsche...
The main purpose of this article is to present a critique of the Nietzschean reading of the evaluati...
This article scrutinises one of the most challenging theses of Nietzsche's Birth of Tragedy, that on...
Contemporary theorists critical of the current vogue for compassion might like to turn to Friedrich ...
Contemporary theorists critical of the current vogue for compassion might like to turn to Friedrich ...
Since the XIX century, a pleiad of philosophers and historians support the idea that Greek philosoph...
Nietzsche’s On the Genealogy of Morals (GM) embarks upon an ambitious project to account for the roo...
Abstract—This paper aims at delving into the play Medea in the light of Nietzsche’s views on tragedy...
Nietzsche is often called an a-moralist. According to him, it is said, there is no God, so that you ...
In Nietzsche scholarship, little has been done regarding Nietzsche’s reflections on penology and cri...
Said to be higher! - You say that the morality of pity is higher morality than that of Stoicism? Pr...
The antagonism between deontological and teleological conceptions of law can be felt throughout the ...
The initiative to turn off the past and allow the march of time forward is often attributed to the G...
This dissertation explores Nietzsche‟s ethics of reading. I argue that narrative strategies such as ...
Scholars have long debated the exact difference between what is “pious” (ὅσιος) and what is “lawfull...
In this thesis I attempt to elucidate the complex relationship between life and justice in Nietzsche...