Wednesday, November 6, 2019
Free Essays on Nietzsche, Schopenauer And Faust
ââ¬Å"Enter: Philosopher, and lo! He proves to you it must be soâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ (Faust: 1928-29) Can Faust, pre and post Mephistopheles, be seen in an either Nietzschean or Schopenhauerian light? Introduction. This piece of work grew out of reading chapters four and five of Walter Kaufmannââ¬â¢s book The Owl and the Nightingale. These chapters deal largely with Goethe and his relation to Faust and Faustââ¬â¢s redemption; the following two quotes are largely responsible for the enquiry: ââ¬Å"â⬠¦Schopenhauer found the quintessence of human nature-indeed, of the universe-in Faust. His metaphysical conception of the ultimate reality as relentless striving, blind will may be considered a cosmic projection of Faustââ¬â¢s ceaseless aspiration.â⬠(Kaufmann p54, 1959) And ââ¬Å"â⬠¦the clue to Faustââ¬â¢s redemption should be found in Goetheââ¬â¢s faith and not in Faustââ¬â¢s moral merits.â⬠(Kaufmann p68 1959) Kaufmann believes Goetheââ¬â¢s faith to be that, concurrent with his anti-otherworldliness, striving in life is the only redemption we have. This prompts a dissonance between equating Faustian striving with a Schopenhauerian position, whilst trying to equate Faustââ¬â¢s redemption with his continuing striving. To be fair to Kaufmann, none of his argument turns on the truth or falsehood of this dissonance, yet nevertheless it remains the notion that sparked this particular enquiry. Prompted originally by this, the paper expands the enquiry to examine Faustââ¬â¢s position both pre and post Mephistopheles, comparing his position first with Schopenhauer and then with the early Nietzsche (a la Birth of Tragedy). The structure is roughly as follows. The first part begins by delineating Faustââ¬â¢s position as we find at the start of the text. The despairing state that we find him in is given first a Schopenhauerian reading and then a Nietzschean one. The Nietzschean reading is longer and deals with Faust as an incarnation of Socratism (leading to nihi... Free Essays on Nietzsche, Schopenauer And Faust Free Essays on Nietzsche, Schopenauer And Faust ââ¬Å"Enter: Philosopher, and lo! He proves to you it must be soâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ (Faust: 1928-29) Can Faust, pre and post Mephistopheles, be seen in an either Nietzschean or Schopenhauerian light? Introduction. This piece of work grew out of reading chapters four and five of Walter Kaufmannââ¬â¢s book The Owl and the Nightingale. These chapters deal largely with Goethe and his relation to Faust and Faustââ¬â¢s redemption; the following two quotes are largely responsible for the enquiry: ââ¬Å"â⬠¦Schopenhauer found the quintessence of human nature-indeed, of the universe-in Faust. His metaphysical conception of the ultimate reality as relentless striving, blind will may be considered a cosmic projection of Faustââ¬â¢s ceaseless aspiration.â⬠(Kaufmann p54, 1959) And ââ¬Å"â⬠¦the clue to Faustââ¬â¢s redemption should be found in Goetheââ¬â¢s faith and not in Faustââ¬â¢s moral merits.â⬠(Kaufmann p68 1959) Kaufmann believes Goetheââ¬â¢s faith to be that, concurrent with his anti-otherworldliness, striving in life is the only redemption we have. This prompts a dissonance between equating Faustian striving with a Schopenhauerian position, whilst trying to equate Faustââ¬â¢s redemption with his continuing striving. To be fair to Kaufmann, none of his argument turns on the truth or falsehood of this dissonance, yet nevertheless it remains the notion that sparked this particular enquiry. Prompted originally by this, the paper expands the enquiry to examine Faustââ¬â¢s position both pre and post Mephistopheles, comparing his position first with Schopenhauer and then with the early Nietzsche (a la Birth of Tragedy). The structure is roughly as follows. The first part begins by delineating Faustââ¬â¢s position as we find at the start of the text. The despairing state that we find him in is given first a Schopenhauerian reading and then a Nietzschean one. The Nietzschean reading is longer and deals with Faust as an incarnation of Socratism (leading to nihi...
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.