Don’t Embrace Nietzsche’s Nothingness
“Life itself is essential assimilation, injury, violation of the foreign and the weaker, suppression, hardness, the forcing of One’s own forms upon something else, ingestion and—at least in its mildest form—exploitation.” -Nietzsche Beyond Good and Evil
The nihilism analysis has been prevalent position over the past few years. Its anticipated purpose is to demand questions about the norms made in a philosophical debate. These contain the notion that one must actually suggest and preserve an idea in order to contextualize one’s idea.
Tacitly, this philosophy, nihilism, seems new to most people and to philosophy as a whole. Especially from a Western standpoint. But Nietzsche conducts …show more content…
Western political philosophy has had this interest in Eastern ideologies. The Western thinkers have coveted specific Eastern thoughts as something to be mirrored. American and European thinkers truly could not (and still cannot) comprehend all of these concepts because of the lack of economic significance. The ideas of quietness and nonexistence are some that many cannot understand. So basically, in the West, we have produced a counter culture. In multiple ways, nihilism is an endeavor to the East and Eastern philosophies. But to understand how nihilism originated we must understand the man that helped to create it. Nietzsche …show more content…
If the bullies deviated away from that “code” then there was some sort of punishment that was to follow. Sometimes it worked and sometimes it didn’t. He viewed Christianity as a tactic (that was accomplished deliberately or unintentionally) to increase the control of the weak by making people humbled by the power and the glory that is God. Nietzsche set forth to distribute people’s cultures. There was a certain notion that Nietzsche held closely; and that was he wanted humans to clinch to the “what could be” vs. the ice cold reality that was. Which is why Nietzsche noted the famous phrase….”God is