Religion as a Source of Conflict in Nietzsche’s Writings

Main Article Content

Enrique Borrego

Abstract

Nietzsche’s work contains contradictions and paradoxes that reveal the most effective keys to interpreting his personality. Nietzsche has often been regarded as a cynic—mad or a genius—rather than as a man entangled in his own anguish, a transmitter of desperate signals that he himself does not fully believe. Few see him as a fighter for life, a seeker of the “meaning of the earth,” which he never quite comes to possess to his satisfaction—a cynic, yes, but more as a victim of his own inner demons.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Article Details

How to Cite
Borrego, E. (1996). Religion as a Source of Conflict in Nietzsche’s Writings. Proyección. Teología Y Mundo Actual, (182), 203–219. Retrieved from https://revistas.uloyola.es/ptma/article/view/6255
Section
Artículos

References

CURT PAUL JANZ, Friedrich Nietzche, vol. I, Infancia y juventud, Madrid, Alianza Universidad, Madrid 1991.

F NIETZSCHE, Correspondencia, Aguilar 1989.

- Epistolario, Biblioteca Nueva, Madrid 1932.

- Ecce homo, Busma, Madrid 1984.

- Más allá del bien y del mal, Alianza Editorial, Madrid 1980.

- El gay saber, Bitácora, Madrid 1973.

- Obras Completas, Aguilar 1967.

LOU ANDREAS SALOMÉ, Nietzsche, Zero, Bilbao 1978.

- Friedrich Nietzsche in seinen Werken, Viena 1911.

- Mirada retrospectiva. Compendio de algunos recuerdos de la vida, Ernst Pfeiffer, Alianza Editorial, Madrid 1980.

MALWIDA VON MEYSENBURG, Lebensabend einer Idealistin, Schusterg u. Loeffler, Berlin 1900.

E. COLOMER, El pensamiento alemán de Kant a Heidegger, Herder, Barcelona 1986-1990.