Skip to main content
Nietzsche in neubesedljiva misel


Author: Aleš Bunta
Year: 2024


Nietzsche in neubesedljiva misel ('Nietzsche and the Unspeakable Thought') is Aleš Bunta’s second book on the philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche, after Uničiti nič? ('To Annihilate Nothing?', 2007). The motif of the unspeakable thought in Nietzsche’s work is usually associated with the theme of the “eternal recurrence”. In Bunta’s study, too, the eternal return takes centre stage, but gradually. In the first chapter, the study first discusses the motif of the unspeakable as such and in relation to the fundamental incongruity of language and becoming. In the second chapter, it looks at Nietzsche’s unusual presentation of the eternal return in Thus Spoke Zarathustra, which is supposed to speak of the eternal return, but which does not speak of it in the usual sense at all. It is only in the third chapter that the discussion focuses on Nietzsche’s original unpublished derivations of the eternal return and explains the ontological, epistemological and psychological dimensions of the doctrine. Chapter 4 is devoted to another key Nietzschean theme, the critique of objectivity, through which the discussion returns in Chapter 5 to the topics of silence and the ineffable, but this time in the context of the problem of a philosophical act.


Table of content

DISHARMONIA PRAESTABILITA: MOTIV IN TÓPOS NEUBESEDLJIVE MISLI
»Najtišja ura« in govorica plasti tišine
Na meji postajanja in govorice: nevarno
življenje človeške zavesti

IZBRIS VEČNEGA VRAČANJA ENAKEGA
Po sledeh izginotja
Psevdonimi in zakon, ki se prepove
Stela in epitaf

VRNITEV NA ZAČETEK: VEČNO VRAČANJE ENAKEGA V NIETZSCHEJEVEM ZVEZKU M III
Izpeljave večnega vračanja
Podzemna eksplozija in preobrazba

NIETZSCHEJEVA KRITIKA OBJEKTIVNOSTI
Epistemološki vidik
Interventni vidik kritike objektivnosti

DOGODEK, INTERVENCIJA, »BOG JE MRTEV«
Nietzschejeva »arhepolitika«
Interpretativna askeza
Tiha senca smrti Boga

LITERATURA



More ...



Regular price
19.00 €

Online price


Keywords
epistemology
Nietzsche, Friedrich
object
ontology




Options

Add to favorites

Print

Send by e-mail

QR