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Friedrich_Nietzsche - Untimely_Meditations_(Cambridge_Texts_in_the_History_of_Philosophy__1997)

Friedrich_Nietzsche - Untimely_Meditations_(Cambridge_Texts_in_the_History_of_Philosophy__1997)

Friedrich_Nietzsche - Untimely_Meditations_(Cambridge_Texts_in_the_History_of_Philosophy__1997)

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IndexScience (cont.)and greed 169history as 67, 77-82, 99-100and knowledge vii, viii-ix, 120-1, 137,169-70, 173, 188-90, 229-30man <strong>of</strong> xxix, 117, 144<strong>in</strong> Strauss 41-3secularization 148-50, 153seekers, and f<strong>in</strong>ders 8-10self vii, xvias construct xixas essence xixand history 62, 73<strong>in</strong>ner! outer xxviiiliberation xix, 127-30, 161-2self-awareness, ironic 100, 107-8, 110self-satisfaction, critique xxviii, 7-13, 75sensibility, cultural 78-9, 86, 225Shakespeare, William 207simplicityand historiography 94and scholarship 170and Schopenhauer 133-5, 140and Wagner 209, 213, 233social democracy, and Strauss 33Socrates 88, 174solecism 50, 52solitudeand music 226, 230-1<strong>of</strong> philosopher 138-40, 143-4, 160, 165,176, 183speech, public 48-9Stael, Anne Louise, Baronne de 24, 257stateand culture 174and egoism 114, 149-50and greed 165-6, 169, 174, 176and highest duty <strong>of</strong> mank<strong>in</strong>d 147-8,158, 162, 185and music 217and promotion <strong>of</strong> philosophy 182, 183-93and Schopenhauer 180-1Ste<strong>in</strong>bach, Erw<strong>in</strong> von 73, 255Strauss, David <strong>Friedrich</strong> xii-xiv, 3-55, 109,257as cheerful th<strong>in</strong>ker 27-8, 135as confessor 14-19, 24-34, 45as cultural philist<strong>in</strong>e xiii, 12, 13-34, 35,37-40, 43, 45, 47-8and Less<strong>in</strong>g 19-21The Life <strong>of</strong> Jesus xii, 257The OldFaith and <strong>the</strong> New: A Confessionxii, xiii, xlvi, 14, 20n., 34-5, 38, 51-2,257and Schopenhauer 12, 25-6, 27-8, 32and science and culture 35-6as secular humanist xxixand Wagner xii, xiiias writer 34-48, 51-5styleand Kant 53and modern writ<strong>in</strong>g 49-5 1and public speech 48-9and Schopenhauer 53, 134-5and Strauss as writer xiii, 40-1, 43-8,49, 51-5unity xxviii, 5-6, 7-8, 49, 79-80and Wagner 234, 245, 248subjectivity, and history 91successdeification xiv, 31, 105-6, 114and greatness 113-14, 228and Wagner 234-5suffer<strong>in</strong>gand art 212as punishment 157-8and Schenhauer xviii, 27-8, 143,152-4, 161and science 169and Wagner 203, 221, 230-1, 233Swift,Jonathan 92, 189Tasso, Torquato 216tasteand cultural philist<strong>in</strong>ism 11-12, 37-8,45and history 71, 72and language 49-50Teichmiiller, Gustav xxxi n.9teleologyand cultivation <strong>of</strong> exemplars 161-4and historicism xv, 31-2, 77, 91-2,100-7and nature 177-9and world-process 107-12, 114-15<strong>the</strong>atreGreek 210Wagnerian reform 209-1 1, 227, 229,234-5<strong>the</strong>ologyand history 96, 102and Strauss 38-9, 41, 44, 47Thiers, Louis Adolphe 94, 96, 257thought, and language 214timeand human existence xv-xvi, xxviii,60-9, 155as relative 209274

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