The Pre-Platonic Philosophers (International Nietzsche Studies)
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About this book
This extraordinary document supplies to English-language readers a missing link in the chain of development of a preeminent nineteenth-century philosopher. "The Pre-Platonic Philosophers" reproduces the text of a lecture series delivered by the young Friedrich Nietzsche (then a philologist) at the University of Basel between 1872 and 1876. In these lectures Nietzsche surveys the Greek philosophers from Thales to Socrates establishing a new chronology for the progression of their natural scientific insights. Roughly formulating many of the themes he later developed at length Nietzsche sketches concepts such as the will to power eternal recurrence and self-overcoming and links them to specific pre-Platonics. Greg Whitlock is the first scholar to have wrestled Nietzsches difficult manuscript into English. This superbly readable translation complete with Nietzsches own extensive sidenotes and philological citations is accompanied by a prologue an introductory essay commentary on the lectures and voluminous bibliographical materials. Whitlocks translation confirms that Nietzsche grouped Socrates with the earlier Greeks rather than with Plato and other "mixed character philosophers" as many interpreters have claimed. That Nietzsches philosophical sympathies lay with the pre-Platonics as opposed to the pre-Socratics bears substantially on his later rejection of absolutes such as Truth Knowledge Beauty and Being. An overlooked major text of classical studies "The Pre-Platonic Philosophers" is invaluable both as a record of Nietzsches views on the early Greek thinkers and as a prefigurement of key aspects of his mature philosophy.
