The world is tragic Nietzsche said, it does not mean we are condemned to eternal melancholy. Citing
of Dionysus, he wants to make the world a continuous theater festival day and wrote in his book lyrical, playful and sometimes naughty, The Gay Science.
"... If they let me choose I would choose willingly
a small square
For me, in the midst of paradise:
And still more willingly - in front of his door! ..."
"... Our virtues, they too, must rise with a light foot: Such
the verses of Homer, they must come and go ... ... "
Any metaphysical concepts using superior to man, God or others, seek firstly to reduce human, to deny his true nature which is "to be" fully what it is, and secondly to try to raise unduly, while its rightful place is to be a factor among others in the vast universe.
of Dionysus, he wants to make the world a continuous theater festival day and wrote in his book lyrical, playful and sometimes naughty, The Gay Science.
"... If they let me choose I would choose willingly
a small square
For me, in the midst of paradise:
And still more willingly - in front of his door! ..."
"... Our virtues, they too, must rise with a light foot: Such
the verses of Homer, they must come and go ... ... "
Any metaphysical concepts using superior to man, God or others, seek firstly to reduce human, to deny his true nature which is "to be" fully what it is, and secondly to try to raise unduly, while its rightful place is to be a factor among others in the vast universe.
.
. . .
Do not take the man for more than it is.
Accept the human tragedy, tragedies of the world, taming effects, sometimes the consequences.
Learning to be, with fullness.
Appealing to Dionysus and idealize his life, plunge into the present, in the joy, sensuality, in generosity.
A program that I like. And you? ...
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