14 Folgen

Of The Twilight of the Idols, Nietzsche says in Ecce Homo: “If anyone should desire to obtain a rapid sketch of how everything before my time was standing on its head, he should begin reading me in this book. That which is called ‘Idols’ on the title-page is simply the old truth that has been believed in hitherto. In plain English, The Twilight of the Idols means that the old truth is on its last legs.”

Certain it is that, for a rapid survey of the whole of Nietzsche’s doctrine, no book, save perhaps the section entitled “Of Old and New Tables” in Thus Spake Zarathustra, could be of more real value than The Twilight of the Idols. Here Nietzsche is quite at his best. He is ripe for the marvellous feat of the transvaluation of all values. Nowhere is his language – that marvellous weapon which in his hand became at once so supple and so murderous – more forcible and more condensed. Nowhere are his thoughts more profound. But all this does not by any means imply that this book is the easiest of Nietzsche’s works. On the contrary, I very much fear that unless the reader is well prepared, not only in Nietzscheism, but also in the habit of grappling with uncommon and elusive problems, a good deal of the contents of this work will tend rather to confuse than to enlighten him in regard to what Nietzsche actually wishes to make clear in these pages.

(Excerpt from A. Ludovici’s Preface)

Twilight of the Idols, The by Friedrich Nietzsche (1844 - 1900‪)‬ LibriVox

    • Kunst

Of The Twilight of the Idols, Nietzsche says in Ecce Homo: “If anyone should desire to obtain a rapid sketch of how everything before my time was standing on its head, he should begin reading me in this book. That which is called ‘Idols’ on the title-page is simply the old truth that has been believed in hitherto. In plain English, The Twilight of the Idols means that the old truth is on its last legs.”

Certain it is that, for a rapid survey of the whole of Nietzsche’s doctrine, no book, save perhaps the section entitled “Of Old and New Tables” in Thus Spake Zarathustra, could be of more real value than The Twilight of the Idols. Here Nietzsche is quite at his best. He is ripe for the marvellous feat of the transvaluation of all values. Nowhere is his language – that marvellous weapon which in his hand became at once so supple and so murderous – more forcible and more condensed. Nowhere are his thoughts more profound. But all this does not by any means imply that this book is the easiest of Nietzsche’s works. On the contrary, I very much fear that unless the reader is well prepared, not only in Nietzscheism, but also in the habit of grappling with uncommon and elusive problems, a good deal of the contents of this work will tend rather to confuse than to enlighten him in regard to what Nietzsche actually wishes to make clear in these pages.

(Excerpt from A. Ludovici’s Preface)

    Maxims and Missiles

    Maxims and Missiles

    • 12 Min.
    The Problem of Socrates

    The Problem of Socrates

    • 17 Min.
    "Reason" in Philosophy

    "Reason" in Philosophy

    • 15 Min.
    How the "True World" Ultimately Became a Fable

    How the "True World" Ultimately Became a Fable

    • 4 Min.
    Morality as the Enemy of Nature

    Morality as the Enemy of Nature

    • 16 Min.
    The Four Great Errors

    The Four Great Errors

    • 27 Min.

Top‑Podcasts in Kunst

Augen zu
ZEIT ONLINE
Zwei Seiten - Der Podcast über Bücher
Christine Westermann & Mona Ameziane, Podstars by OMR
life is felicious
Feli-videozeugs
Clare on Air
Yana Clare
eat.READ.sleep. Bücher für dich
NDR
Was liest du gerade?
ZEIT ONLINE

Mehr von LibriVox

Erzählungen by Edgar Allan Poe (1809 - 1849)
LibriVox
Anna Karenina (Dole translation) by Leo Tolstoy (1828 - 1910)
LibriVox
De Bello Gallico Libri Septem by Gaius Julius Caesar (100 - 44 BCE)
LibriVox
Erzählungen aus 'Die Leute von Seldwyla' by Gottfried Keller (1819 - 1890)
LibriVox
Wilhelm Tell by Friedrich Schiller (1759 - 1805)
LibriVox
His Last Bow: Some Reminiscences of Sherlock Holmes by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (1859 - 1930)
LibriVox