On October 15th, 1844, Friedrich Nietzsche was born. The German philosopher, cultural critic, and classical philologist lived and worked socially isolated for the most time and faced mainly criticism until his mental breakdown in 1889.
If the world is at base a primary flux of matter without form or constant, then things are always a temporary product of a channelling of this flux in what Deleuze and Guattari call ‘assemblages’ or ‘arrangements’...
Peter Bergmann, Teodor Münz, Frantisek Novos%C3%A1d%2C, Paul Patton, Richard Rorty, Jan Sokol, Leslie, Paul Thiele, What does Nietzsche mean to philosophers today? Excessively, sensitive, anti-liberal, and irrelevant or radical, prescient and misunderstood? Six philosophers answer Kritika&Kontext questions on Nietzsche.Their responses make one thing clear: Nietzsche still divides opinion.
D. Smith. (1996)David C. Smith was born on August 10, 1952, in Youngstown, Ohio. He is the author or coauthor of 18 adventure-fantasy and horror novels. He has also written Understanding English, an English grammar textbook, and many short stories. He and his wife, Janine, live just outside Chicago, Illinois, where Smith works as a medical editor.
This article originally appeared in slightly different form in Bocere, volume 1, number 3 (August 1995) through volume 2, number 1 (April 1996), as a contribution to the Robert E. Howard United Press Association..