

#16246
Mentioned in 3 episodes
On the advantage and disadvantage of history for life
Book • 1980
In this work, Nietzsche examines the proper functioning of history in service to human life and culture.
He distinguishes between three types of history: monumental, antiquarian, and critical, and argues that an over-saturation with history can be hostile to life and culture.
Nietzsche criticizes his contemporaries for misjudging the importance of history and discusses the psychological and epistemological problems that arise from an excessive focus on the past.
He advocates for a balance between remembering and forgetting to ensure the health of individual and collective life.
He distinguishes between three types of history: monumental, antiquarian, and critical, and argues that an over-saturation with history can be hostile to life and culture.
Nietzsche criticizes his contemporaries for misjudging the importance of history and discusses the psychological and epistemological problems that arise from an excessive focus on the past.
He advocates for a balance between remembering and forgetting to ensure the health of individual and collective life.
Mentioned by
Mentioned in 3 episodes
Recommended by 

as a book that helped him articulate how history can either drain life or enliven it.


Alex Petkas

622 snips
The Rise of History’s Greatest Emperor: An Untold Story - Alex Petkas - #1085
Mentioned by 

and 

in relation to Kierkegaard's ideas and the concept of the death of God.


Brett McKay


Jacob Howland

46 snips
Kierkegaard on the Present (Passionless) Age
Mentioned by 

as an essay exploring the uses and disadvantages of history for life.


Marci Shore

42 snips
Class 6: Nietzsche and the Death of God
Mentioned by ![undefined]()

as a text of Nietzsche with rhetoric appealing to the far right.

August Baker

Ronald Beiner, "Dangerous Minds: Nietzsche, Heidegger, and the Return of the Far Right" (U Pennsylvania Press, 2018)







