fridgebuzz
Bluelighter
New thread! They don't happen very often but this has been on my mind.
So what was so special about Friedrich Nietzsche? He referred to himself as the last prophet, but was he at all?
I'd like to start out with some brief religious background. The Hindu religion promised a prophet who later emerged as Buddha. The Christian religion also promised a prophet who later turned out to be Jesus. I said brief, right, but do you see a pattern?
Now along comes Nietzsche to simply apply this same script to the so-called post-modern view. He says that eventually a "superman" will emerge and will look back on man as man looks back on apes. He said man is a rope tied between ape and the "superman". This view sounds a bit too scientific for a guy who openly denounces scientific progress claiming that science takes away who we are by turning us into equations and labels. He basically asserts science and religion are both incorrect methods of finding answers even though his views reflect both. It also seems as if he steals some aspects of Rationalism claiming answers can only come from you, which sounds a lot like A Priori, or innate knowledge.
For a guy who says "God is dead" because he is afraid of losing our humanity replacing god with science, I think it's rather counteractive to then claim that 'there is no universal moral and ultimately we make the rules > rules are written by people > rules are written by those in power > everyone seeks powers so they may write the rules'
His views on wealth/status vs. charity/compassion are at best conspiracy theories.
The final prophet? Ha. I understand we develop ideas today by standing on the shoulders of the ideas of those who came before us, but this guy's a ripoff. I can't believe he's actually considered a prominent philosopher.
So what was so special about Friedrich Nietzsche? He referred to himself as the last prophet, but was he at all?
I'd like to start out with some brief religious background. The Hindu religion promised a prophet who later emerged as Buddha. The Christian religion also promised a prophet who later turned out to be Jesus. I said brief, right, but do you see a pattern?
Now along comes Nietzsche to simply apply this same script to the so-called post-modern view. He says that eventually a "superman" will emerge and will look back on man as man looks back on apes. He said man is a rope tied between ape and the "superman". This view sounds a bit too scientific for a guy who openly denounces scientific progress claiming that science takes away who we are by turning us into equations and labels. He basically asserts science and religion are both incorrect methods of finding answers even though his views reflect both. It also seems as if he steals some aspects of Rationalism claiming answers can only come from you, which sounds a lot like A Priori, or innate knowledge.
For a guy who says "God is dead" because he is afraid of losing our humanity replacing god with science, I think it's rather counteractive to then claim that 'there is no universal moral and ultimately we make the rules > rules are written by people > rules are written by those in power > everyone seeks powers so they may write the rules'
His views on wealth/status vs. charity/compassion are at best conspiracy theories.
The final prophet? Ha. I understand we develop ideas today by standing on the shoulders of the ideas of those who came before us, but this guy's a ripoff. I can't believe he's actually considered a prominent philosopher.