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Didn't Nietzsche Cause the Crisis?
"I didn't understand everything. I was 18 years old, but there was this real sense that there was something important going on," he says. "From page to page, you can swing from, oh my God, that's the most brilliant insight I've ever encountered ... and then on the next page, it's like, ooh, yikes."
Sean Illing talks with political science professor Matt McManus about the political thought of Friedrich Nietzsche, the 19th-century German philosopher with a complicated legacy, despite his crossover into popular culture. They discuss how Nietzsche's work has been interpreted — and misinterpreted — since his death in 1900, how his radical political views emerge from his body of work, and how we can use Nietzsche's philosophy in order to interpret some key features of our contemporary politics.
Host: Sean Illing (@seanilling), host, The Gray Area
Guest: Matt McManus (@MattPolProf), lecturer, University of Michigan; author
Referenced works by Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900):
References:
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