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Beyond Good & Evil by Friedrich Nietzsche

Penguin

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Beyond Good and Evil
Prelude to a Philosophy of the Future
by Friedrich Nietzsche

“One of the greatest books of a very great thinker.” - Michael Tanner

Beyond Good and Evil confirmed Nietzsche's position as the towering European philosopher of his age. The work dramatically rejects the tradition of Western thought with its notions of truth and God, good and evil. Nietzsche demonstrates that the Christian world is steeped in a false piety and infected with a 'slave morality'. With wit and energy, he turns from this critique to a philosophy that celebrates the present and demands that the individual imposes their own 'will to power' upon the world.

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Table of Contents

Introduction
Further Reading
Translator’s Note

BEYOND GOOD AND EVIL
      Preface
      Part One: On the Prejudices of Philosophers
      Part Two: The Free Spirit
      Part Three: The Religious Nature
      Part Four: Maxims and Interludes
      Part Five: On the Natural History of Morals
      Part Six: We Scholars
      Part Seven: Our Virtues
      Part Eight: People and Fatherlands
      Part Nine: What is Noble?
      From High Mountains: Epode

Commentary
Chronology

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Paperback Edition
240 pages. Printed card cover.
ISBN: 9780140449235

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Press, reviews, endorsements

“One of the greatest books of a very great thinker.”
       Michael Tanner

“Enigmatic, vatic, emphatic, passionate, often breathtakingly insightful, his works together make a unique statement in the literature of European ideas.”
       A.C. Grayling

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About the Author

The late Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900) was a German classical scholar, philosopher, and critic of culture, who became one of the most influential of all modern thinkers. His attempts to unmask the motives that underlie traditional Western religion, morality, and philosophy deeply affected generations of theologians, philosophers, psychologists, poets, novelists, and playwrights. He thought through the consequences of the triumph of the Enlightenment’s secularism—expressed in his observation that “God is dead”—in a way that determined the agenda for many of Europe’s most-celebrated intellectuals after his death. Although he was an ardent foe of nationalism, antisemitism, and power politics, his name was later invoked by fascists to advance the very things he loathed.  For further reading on the misappropriation of Nietzsche’s work, read here.