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5 - Nietzsche on the Contest between Homer and Plato

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 August 2022

Peter J. Ahrensdorf
Affiliation:
Davidson College, North Carolina
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Summary

Nietzsche criticizes Plato for having praised the philosophic life in such a way as to deprive the active political and military life of the honor and vitality it enjoyed in the Greek culture founded by Homer and therefore seems to call for a reversal of the moral and political legacy of Platonism and Christianity and a revival of Homeric culture. But Nietzsche ultimately criticizes Plato more seriously, not for explicitly celebrating the philosophic life as the best way of life for a human being, but rather for presenting the philosopher as a champion of morality and religion and thereby obscuring the skeptical nature of the philosopher and he therefore seeks, through his rhetorical presentation of philosophy as emphatically opposed to morality and religion, to reintroduce the radical moral and religious skepticism of philosophy to a world that has lost sight of it.

Type
Chapter
Information
Homer and the Tradition of Political Philosophy
Encounters with Plato, Machiavelli, and Nietzsche
, pp. 247 - 305
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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