About This Book
A biographical-critical study portrays the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche by mapping three principal phases of his intellectual development and treating his writings as intimate self-confessions rather than purely systematic theories. The author highlights the close unity of inner experience and literary form, reads aphoristic writings as sustained monologues, and identifies recurring themes and stylistic features. The book downplays external anecdote in favor of tracing mental transformations, warns against fragmentary appropriation of isolated ideas, and offers a concise account of the evolution of central doctrines alongside reflections on the limits of interpretation.
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