
19: Arthur Schopenhauer, part 2: The Great Pessimist
The Nietzsche Podcast
00:00
The Fear of Death, a Pervasive Force in the Human Mind
Schopenhauer: Man alone carries with him, in abstract concepts, the certainty of his own death. Yet this can frighten him only very rarely, and at particular moments when some occasion calls it up to the imagination against the mighty voice of nature. By virtue of this, no one is noticeably disturbed by the thought of certain and never distant death. But everyone lives on as though he is bound to live forever. So perhaps it's not really like a a language to talk about this, but a so he writes in section 54, for it is true that every one is transitory only as phenomenon. But also, as individual thing in itself, he is timeless and so endless.
Transcript
Play full episode