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  1. He identified at least four key developments as the source of relation-ship problems, including warped ideas about femininity, unwarranted popularity of agape, Christianity’s demonizing of sex, and the malfunc-tioning institution of marriage. Scattered throughout his works, Nietzsche proposed suggestions about how to strengthen relationships.

    • Skye Cleary
    • 2015
  2. Nietzsche famously follows Goethe in his verdict that Romanticism is a form of sickness and classicism a form of strength, and commentators, for the most part, have accepted this self-description.2 That is, they do not blithely identify Nietzsche. with that nineteenth-century artistic movement, whose proponents include Victor.

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  4. Oct 10, 2011 · PDF | On Oct 10, 2011, Eva Cybulska published Nietzsche: Love, Guilt and Redemption | Find, read and cite all the research you need on ResearchGate

  5. Nietzsche and Early Romanticism Judith Norman Nietzsche was, in many ways, a quintessentially romantic figure, a lonely genius with a tragic love-life, wandering endlessly (through Italy, no less) before going dramatically mad, “taken by his gods into the protection of madness” (to quote Heidegger’s epithet on Hölderlin, one of Nietzsche’s child...

    • Judith Norman
    • 2002
  6. The fact that Nietzsche’s discussion on love comes after his discussion on the impact of language, history and culture on our perception of reality, is not a coincidence: it’s to demonstrate that the gender roles men and women play in love are shaped by those forces too.

  7. What were the most important loves in Nietzsche’s life? By his own admission, the composer Richard Wagner was the only man he truly loved. The other great love (and hate) of his life was Christianity. Sometimes (as we shall see) Wagner and Christianity coalesced into a single target to be attacked.

  8. Mar 17, 2017 · Friedrich Nietzsche. Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900) was a German philosopher and cultural critic who published intensively in the 1870s and 1880s. He is famous for uncompromising criticisms of traditional European morality and religion, as well as of conventional philosophical ideas and social and political pieties associated with modernity ...

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