IndexCarriere, Phillip Moriz 148, 255Cell<strong>in</strong>i, Benvenuto 130-1chance, and history 70, 91-2, 128, 162,197, 221chauv<strong>in</strong>ism, critique <strong>of</strong> xiii, 3-7cheerfulnessand history 63, 69, IIIand Schopenhauer 135-6and Strauss 27-8, 135and Wagner 232-3Christianityabandonment by <strong>Nietzsche</strong> xiiand antiquity 132-3, 208and greed <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> state 166and historical judgment 102and idealism 96-7and Strauss l4-17, 28, 29, 33, 41, 257and <strong>the</strong> Volk 229and worldly success 113-15classicsand cultural philist<strong>in</strong>ism 9-12and German language 48-50and Strauss as writer 37-48, 51-5and university philosophers 186Coll<strong>in</strong>s, Adrian xlvcommunication, and Wagner 215, 236-9,246-9confession, <strong>of</strong> cultural philist<strong>in</strong>ism 12-13,14-34, 45consecration, to culture 163-4, 212-13contemplation 159and antagonism 223and Goe<strong>the</strong>an man 151-2content, and form 78-82, 86, 166, 168,169, 174, 216convention 78, 80, 82, 85, 170and <strong>in</strong>dividuality 127, 138, 215, 219Copernicus, Nicolas 170creativityand destruction xxviii, 47-8, 95, 153and history 71, 75, 91, 93and transformation xv, 62-3, 77and Wagner 206, 226, 231-2, 244, 245Cromwell, Oliver 129cultureclassical 100-4, 107, 122-3cultural chauv<strong>in</strong>ism 3-7decorative 123enterta<strong>in</strong>ment culture xiii, 36and greed 164-5, 168-75and Hellenization 208-9historical 100-3, 107, 109-10, 114and history 78-80, 98as liberation 130, 162-3popular/genu<strong>in</strong>e xiii-xiv, 3-9, 69reform viii-ix, xlvi, 97, 160, 209-12,217-18and science 35-8, 117, 169task 208-13, 222-6tragic ix, 212-1 3as unity <strong>of</strong> style xxviii, 5-6, 7-8, 49, 79-82see also philist<strong>in</strong>es, culturalcynicism 83, 107, 116Cynics 61-2Dannhauer, Werner J. xlvDarw<strong>in</strong>, Charles 29-31, 34, 42David Strauss, <strong>the</strong> confessor and <strong>the</strong> writerand ethics 29-31and German culture 3-6, 7-14, 34, 35,38-9and public op<strong>in</strong>ion xlv-xlvi, 3, 7, 24,38-9, 45and Strauss as classic writer 37-48, 51-5and Strauss as confessor 14-19, 24-34, 45and Strauss as cultural philist<strong>in</strong>e xiii,12, 13, 14-34, 35, 47Demos<strong>the</strong>nes 113-14, 243, 255destruction, creative power xxviii, 47-8, 153Deussen, Paul xvii, 255Devrient, Eduard 50, 255Diogenes Laertius 98, 186-7, 194, 255,263n.'The Dionysia Worldview' ixdramadithyrambic 223, 225-6, 227, 231and Goe<strong>the</strong> 19and history 91, 92tragic 212-1 3, 225-6and Wagner 205, 214, 223-6, 227,229-33, 237-40, 243-4dualism see appearance; realityDubois-Reymond, Emil 167, 255Eckermann,johann Peter 6, 106, 255Eckhart, Meister 153, 255educationand cultural philist<strong>in</strong>ism 37-8, 117erotic dimension viiand feel<strong>in</strong>g 215and greed 164-5, 174-5and history 79, 83-4, 87, 100-1, 116-19and liberation <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> self 129-30and music 217-1 8<strong>in</strong> philosophy 182-7reform viii-ix, 175-6, 192-3and role <strong>of</strong> philosopher xvii-xix,130-46, 147, 156, 177-82267
Indexegoismand history 71, 75<strong>in</strong>dividual 113, 114-15, 149-50practical 83ref<strong>in</strong>ed 9, 165and truth 88Eleatic philosophers 208-9elegance, and German culture 166--8Emerson, Ralph Waldo 129n., 193Empedocles xlvii, 145, 146, 208, 255enlightenment 159enterta<strong>in</strong>ment, art as 109enthusiasm, and cultural philist<strong>in</strong>ism10-11Epicureanism, cultural 165epigoneand cultural philist<strong>in</strong>ism 10, 11and history 83, 94, 100-4, 122-3essentialism xixethics see moralityevolutionand morality 29-32and world-process Ill, 114example, philosopher as xvii-xvii, 88, 132,136--46, 156, 161-2, 177-82'Exhortation to <strong>the</strong> Germans' xx, xxxviiexistenceand action 69and antiquarian history 72-4and becom<strong>in</strong>g xix, 62, 108-10, 155,161, 188and critical history 76historicity xv, 61-6, 86, 120and life 119-20, 128, 155, 157-9and optimism 147-8and Schopenhauer 144-6, 257existentialism xixexperience, drrect l18, 187faith, and knowledge 41-3fame 69, 178-9, 227fanaticismand cultural philist<strong>in</strong>ism 11and monumental history 71feel<strong>in</strong>gand abstraction 81-2, 86and aes<strong>the</strong>tic judgment xiv, 89-90,93false 219, 252and language 214-15, 217, 237-9and music 241-3, 252f<strong>in</strong>ders, and seekers 8-10folk, and Wagner 229-33, 236--7, 249,251-2 ,254forgetfulness see history, and <strong>the</strong>unhistorical; memoryform, and content 78-82, 86, 166, 168,169, 174, 216Forster-<strong>Nietzsche</strong>, Elizabeth xxxix, 255France, culture 3-6, 80, 134, 166--7Franco-Prussian Warand cultural philist<strong>in</strong>ism xiii, 13and German culture xiii, xxxvi, 3-5, 7,166--7and Wagner 233, 235freedom see <strong>in</strong>dependenceFritsch, E. W. ix, xifutureand cultural renewal xlviand past xlvi, 63, 65, 67, 77, 94-5,104and teleology 111-12 , 115and true self xixand Wagner 250-2, 254Gast, Peter (He<strong>in</strong>rich Koselitz) xxi, xxviii,xxxvii, 256genealogical analysis xxixgeneraftzation, and history 92-3geniusand cultural philist<strong>in</strong>e 11, 21, 33, 37,47-8,99and present age 23-4, 30, 109, 128,142-3, 179-80production <strong>of</strong> l63-4, 169, 176, 182, 187and scholarship 174, 186and Schopenhauer viii, xviii, xxxii n.15,111, 142-3, 146, 179-81and Strauss 46-8and Wagner viii, 137, 209, 231, 250Germany, found<strong>in</strong>g <strong>of</strong> Reich xiii, xxxvi, 3,147, 250Gersdorff, Carl von xiii, xxi, 255Gerv<strong>in</strong>us, Georg Gottfried 19-20, 23, 255gesture, and drama 239Gibbon, Edward 117Goe<strong>the</strong>, Johann Wolfgang von 25n., 28n.,60, 106, 111, 136and art and nature 92, 151, 160compared with Wagner 206as epic poet 200Faust l5n., 19, 45, 86n., 144n., 151, 153,249and German culture 6, 9, 11, 138, 167and history 11, 59,64, 67, 73, 85and <strong>the</strong> <strong>in</strong>dividual 100and <strong>in</strong>fluence 227lp higenie 235and literature 19-22 ,34, 45-6268
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