Ecce Homo is an autobiography like no other. Deliberately provocative, Nietzsche subverts the conventions of the genre and pushes his philosophical positions to combative extremes, constructing a genius-hero whose life is a chronicle of incessant self-overcoming. Written in , a few weeks/5(46). Ecce Homo: How One Becomes What One is - Friedrich Nietzsche - Google Books. In late , only weeks before his final collapse into madness, Nietzsche (–) set out to compose his 3/5(3). Ecce Homo: How One Becomes What One Is is the last original book written by philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche before his death in It was written in and was not published until „All idealism is mendacity in the face of what is necessary.“.
Ecce Homo: How One Becomes What One Is (German: Ecce homo: Wie man wird, was man ist) is the last original book written by philosopher www.doorway.ruibe f. Ecce Homo.: Friedrich Nietzsche. Penguin Books Limited, - Biography Autobiography - pages. 7 Reviews. In late , only weeks before his final collapse into madness, Nietzsche () set out to compose his autobiography, and Ecce Homo remains one of the most intriguing yet bizarre examples of the genre ever written. Ecce Homo, or How One Becomes What One Is (Wie Man Wird, Was Man Ist) was the last book that Nietzsche wrote before his death and gives insight into the man, his ideas and his works. The words "Ecce Homo" are taken from the words Pontius Pilate used when he delivered Jesus, scourged and bleeding, to a riotous crowd right before he was taken.
Ecce Homo: How One Becomes What One is. Ecce Homo.: Friedrich Nietzsche. Penguin Books Limited, - Biography Autobiography - pages. 7 Reviews. In late , only weeks before his final. Ecce Homo: How One Becomes what One Is, trans. R. J. Hollingdale, Penguin, Excerpt: The happiness of my existence, its unique character perhaps, lies in its fatefulness: expressing it in the form of a riddle, as my own father I am already dead, as my own mother I still live and, grow old. The fact that one becomes what one is, presupposes that one has not the remotest suspicion of what one is. From this standpoint even the blunders of one's life have their own meaning and value, the temporary deviations and aberrations, the moments of hesitation and of modesty, the earnestness wasted upon duties which lie outside the actual life-task.
0コメント