Twilight of the Idols/The Anti-Christ Introduction
Translator's Note
Twilight of the Idols, or How to Philosophize with a
Hammer
Foreword
Maxims and Arrows
The Problems of Socrates
"Reason" in Philosophy
How the "Real World" at last Became a Myth
Morality as Anti-Nature
The Four Great Errors
The "Improvers" of Mankind
What the Germans Lack
Expeditions of an Untimely Man
What I Owe to the Ancients
The Hammer Speaks
The Anti-Christ
Foreword
The Anti-Christ
Glossary of Names
Frederich Nietzsche was born in Leipzig in 1844, the son of a
Lutheran clergyman. At the age of twenty-four he became the chair
of classical philology at Basel University until his bad health
forced him to retire in 1879. He divorced himself from society
until his final collapse in 1899 when he became insane. He died in
1900.
M. Tanner is Lecturer in Philosophy at Cambridge.
R.J. Hollingdale has translated eleven of Nietzsche's books and
published two books about him.
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