In the continental tradition, the work of Nietzsche is one of the main sources for any thought on a primordial form of plurality in human existence. This chapter explores how Nietzsche’s reflections on this plurality also give rise to a particular understanding of community. He does so by interrogating Nietzsche’s reflections on the process of democratization and how this both makes Europeans into serviceable herd animals and will bring about the breeding of tyrants. Subsequently, the author investigates how this sense of democracy and the type of community it produces is taken up in more contemporary strands of thought, such as Richard Rorty’s and Jacques Derrida’s. Especially in light of the latter’s analyses of Nietzsche, the author poin...
Toward a Global ‘Thin’ Community re-examines aspects of the liberal-communitarian debate. While crit...
'One who makes himself a worm cannot complain if people step on him.' —Immanuel Kant Kant's remark ...
This book completes the project, begun in Nietzsches Immoralism: Politics as First Philosophy, of cr...
In the continental tradition, the work of Nietzsche is one of the main sources for any thought on a ...
grantor: University of TorontoCommunitarian critics of liberalism complain of its tendency...
Nietzsche, Foucault, and Rorty are each ethical thinkers in that widest sense that concerns question...
The purpose of this dissertation is to examine the often tumultuous relationship between Friedrich N...
In recent years, there has been a move among Nietzsche scholars to attempt to smooth over many of Ni...
Debates about Nietzsche's political thought today revolve around his role in contemporary democratic...
Nietzsche’s relationship to his contemporaries, as expressed in his writings, was often figured by c...
Nietzsche is almost always regarded as one of the thinkers who advocate extreme indi-vidualism, tota...
In this paper I analyse and critically assess Jacques Derrida’s political reading of Nietzsche. Derr...
Nietzsche\u2019s perspectivism is not a kind of antiscientific relativism, but is grounded on the no...
Virtually all treatments of Nietzsche's political thought today are concerned with its posthumous ap...
In this article, I first show in which ways Nietzsche’s doctrine of the will to power informs his un...
Toward a Global ‘Thin’ Community re-examines aspects of the liberal-communitarian debate. While crit...
'One who makes himself a worm cannot complain if people step on him.' —Immanuel Kant Kant's remark ...
This book completes the project, begun in Nietzsches Immoralism: Politics as First Philosophy, of cr...
In the continental tradition, the work of Nietzsche is one of the main sources for any thought on a ...
grantor: University of TorontoCommunitarian critics of liberalism complain of its tendency...
Nietzsche, Foucault, and Rorty are each ethical thinkers in that widest sense that concerns question...
The purpose of this dissertation is to examine the often tumultuous relationship between Friedrich N...
In recent years, there has been a move among Nietzsche scholars to attempt to smooth over many of Ni...
Debates about Nietzsche's political thought today revolve around his role in contemporary democratic...
Nietzsche’s relationship to his contemporaries, as expressed in his writings, was often figured by c...
Nietzsche is almost always regarded as one of the thinkers who advocate extreme indi-vidualism, tota...
In this paper I analyse and critically assess Jacques Derrida’s political reading of Nietzsche. Derr...
Nietzsche\u2019s perspectivism is not a kind of antiscientific relativism, but is grounded on the no...
Virtually all treatments of Nietzsche's political thought today are concerned with its posthumous ap...
In this article, I first show in which ways Nietzsche’s doctrine of the will to power informs his un...
Toward a Global ‘Thin’ Community re-examines aspects of the liberal-communitarian debate. While crit...
'One who makes himself a worm cannot complain if people step on him.' —Immanuel Kant Kant's remark ...
This book completes the project, begun in Nietzsches Immoralism: Politics as First Philosophy, of cr...