
Nietzsche: Biografija njegove misli
Rüdiger Safranski, known for his works on Schopenhauer, Heidegger, and Goethe, presents an intimate "biography of thought" of Friedrich Nietzsche. The study traces the evolution of his ideas through key events, contradictions, and creative crises.
Safranski, a German philosopher and biographer, debunks the myths surrounding Nietzsche’s work—from his sister’s manipulation of his inheritance to Nazi abuses—and shows Nietzsche as an “artist of thought” who lived his ideas, carrying the burden of the “immeasurable” like Atlas.
The book is divided into three stages of development:
- Early Stage: Tragedy and Wagner’s Influence (1860s–1870s). A young philologist, obsessed with Wagner and Greek culture, Nietzsche writes The Birth of Tragedy (1872), revealing a Dionysian-Apollinian dualism: the chaos of passion and the order of form. Music is the key—Wagner’s opera “pleases him immeasurably,” but the breakup in 1876 marks a turning point. Nietzsche, sick and lonely, sees art as a salvation from nihilism.
- Middle Stage: The Critique of Morals and the Eternal Return (1878–1882). In "Human, All Too Human" (1878), "Dawn" (1881) and "Joyful Science" (1882) he becomes an aphorist, criticizing Christian morality as "slavish" and celebrating the freedom of the spirit. "Thus Spoke Zarathustra" (1883–1885) introduces the superman (Übermensch) as the creator of values and the eternal return: "To live so that you want life to be repeated forever". The will to power becomes the central idea: not the tyranny of morality over life, but the affirmation of life through the overcoming of all values.
- Final phase: Critique of culture and collapse (1886–1900). In "Beyond Good and Evil" (1886), "Twilight of the Idols" (1889) and "Antichrist" (1888) Nietzsche destroys idols: "God is dead", and European culture is decadent. The Will to Power (posthumously) synthesizes all these ideas, but Nietzsche suffered a mental breakdown in 1889, spending the last decade of his life in silence. Safranski emphasizes Nietzsche's tragic nature: ecstasy, pathos, and illness shaped his thought.
Safranski concludes with a balance of reception – from existentialists (Kierkegaard's influence) to postmodernists (Foucault) – emphasizing Nietzsche's relevance: a fight against nihilism, an encouragement to self-overcoming, and a warning about the dangers of the "last man." The book is lucid, didactic, written with a gentle irony, ideal for those who want to understand why Nietzsche is the "most widely read philosopher": his imagination makes him an eternal challenge.
One copy is available





