Nietzsche'S Beyond Good and Evil
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Edinburgh University Press
Published:31st Jan '22
Should be back in stock very soon

A critical introduction and guide to one of the most clearly developed statements of Nietzsche's mature philosophy Beyond Good and Evil (1886) offers an excellent, albeit challenging, introduction to the philosophical concerns of the Nietzsche's post-Zarathustran work. It is also exemplary of Nietzsche's period of greatest clarity and sophistication. Adopting an interpretative approach throughout, Daniel Conway assumes no previous knowledge of the text. He treats it as a coherent, unified and carefully crafted complete text. When read in this way, Beyond Good and Evil reveals itself as a guide to the education that Nietzsche prescribes for his best readers, at the brink of the new, post-moral era. Conway makes sense of the overarching aims and structure of the book while providing a broader context for Nietzsche's arguments and positions. As you progress through the text, you will be rewarded with a more developed reading of the distinctly political agenda that emerges in the second half of Beyond Good and Evil.
Daniel Conway’s Nietzsche’s Beyond Good and Evil is an extremely helpful, admirably erudite and deeply persuasive commentary on Nietzsche’s book. He takes more seriously than anyone known to me Nietzsche’s professed intention to help his readers become the kind of readers that his Thus Spoke Zarathustra needed but lacked, and thereby to prepare them to live some day in the distant future in a world beyond the polarity of good and evil. He thus introduces the topic of what it is for a philosophy to change a life, and he follows that theme brilliantly throughout his book. -- Robert Pippin, University of Chicago
Daniel Conway’s study of Beyond Good and Evil is a notable example of how contemporary academic commentators can address a specialized, academic audience while also reaching out to the 'free spirits' of a much wider, global readership -- Paul Bishop, University of Glasgow * Filozofia *
ISBN: 9781474435468
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
208 pages