Rit like the greeks is his big, you know, in a distract, that's two out of three verses. Zarathustra, tarathustra ando, the gay science io, sound like a spaniard having a strikratut. These chapters have a kind of unity, or a kind of, at least coherence, i think. Now, he takes shots at a lot of things. They range far and wide. But i think thatis a common thread that ties together all of these things that nitha shows so much contempt for. I think he sees them all as as a dishonest form of escapeism.
Socrates was ugly and tired of life, so he made a tyrant of reason. Philosophers are mummies who hate the body and the senses. Reason is a tricky old woman. Morality is a misunderstanding. Kant is a sneaky Christian. And don't even get Nietzsche started on "free will" or the "self" - just excuse for priests to punish people, a hangman's metaphysics. David and Tamler dive into Friedrich Nietzsche's Twilight of the Idols, a fascinating set of aphorisms brimming with passion, provocation, questions without answers.
Plus, a professor is sanctioned for sex talk with his students - fair or coddling foul?
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