Fredrich Nietzsche concurred ... that without Christian morals (in the case were God truly dead) the world would be a horrific place. But this is not the point: this is not the root of the ...
The Übermensch. Nietzsche’s concept of the Übermensch describes the individuals who transcend ordinary humanity, who create their own value system and live beyond conventional morality, religious ...
More and more people, especially those between the ages of 20 and 35, are investing in cryptocurrencies. They have lost ...
If Friedrich Nietzsche were to be in Kenya today, he would confidently say that God is dead. And, as if to echo St Paul in the Acts of the Apostles, Nietzsche argued that God is dead because the ...
Scientists have shattered our self-image as principled beings, motivated by moral truths. Some wonder whether our ideals can ...
Chapter 9 gives a reading of Nietzsche’s account of nihilism based on his unfinished work known as The Will to Power. Given the death of God and the collapse of traditional values, people are ...
The continued “unconscious unchurching” of the faithful to the extent of turning churches into political campaign grounds would vindicate Nietzsche’s “death of God.” It is not just ...
Whether you are already familiar with him or not, prepare to be amazed at the man who was Friedrich Nietzsche ... "Is man one ...
Amid the luxuriant concepts, Newell opens sudden vistas of perfect clarity, explaining how Nietzsche’s “death of God” happened: ‘…the God of the Torah was still a person - he walked in the Garden, he ...
A philosophical and theological exploration of the age-old dilemma: How can a loving, all-powerful deity coexist with the harsh realities of evil and suffering in the world? The ‘Problem of Evil’ is a ...
Kant reconciles these views with the ultimate philosophical cop out—he turns to God—but these ... Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche ...
Alone in my home office, I feel unprepared to be wrestling with the death of God ... career burnt brilliantly but short. Nietzsche famously declared God a fiction and, as Peterson tells ...