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Cargando... La voluntad de poder (Biblioteca Edaf) (Spanish Edition) (1901)por Friedrich Nietzsche
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. It's very interesting to compare this translation with the one my mother owns. This is newer than hers and it's based on more recent scholarship and a more complete original version. This translation negates much of the interference of Nietzsche's sister and her husband (who edited and reorganized his work to push their own antisemitic beliefs). The sense of Nietzsche's meaning and values in this newer version is profoundly different - and sometimes contradictory - to the translation that was standard when my mother was in college. This is, perhaps, Nietzsche's most outrageous work. It's a singular vision that has something to offend the convictions of both the left and the right. Such contemporary obsessions as identity politics and conservative nostalgia are objects of his withering, dismissive scorn. The fragmentary nature of the work precludes sustained argument, but the rationale of his critiques is easily discerned. The new translation published in Penguin Classics strips away the anachronisms of earlier versions giving clear access to Nietzsche's thought. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)193Philosophy and Psychology Modern western philosophy German and AustrianClasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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To start with, this isn't really a book, but it's rather a collection of notes that would have been a book. Probably the most notorious thing of this is the fact his sister edited it to fit her Nazi ideas. This edition makes sure her fingerprints are not to be found.
With that said, this is still a messy book. It has a ton of ideas thrown at you. Nietzsche likes to rant like he's on social media. This book is very critical to Christianity. I was surprised or forgot he was into Buddhism though. Kind of makes sense.
While I liked this, I wouldn't recommended this as your first Nietzsche read. ( )