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Nietzsche, Politics and Modernity
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Nietzsche, Politics and Modernity



November 1995 | 192 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
Written in a clear and engaging style, this text demonstrates Nietzsche's significance as a philosopher and as a political theorist by highlighting his critique of liberalism (in both its philosophical and political forms) and by elaborating the form of ethical and political understanding which his philosophy discloses.

In describing Nietzsche's diagnosis of the modern condition, this book explains the central aspects of his thought including the will to power, the Overman and amor fati. David Owen traces the relevance of Nietzsche's philosophy to current debates in political theory and engages with key figures such as MacIntyre, Taylor, Rorty and Rawls. Owen argues that the liberalism of the latter two can be seen as the contemporary expression of Nietzsche's dystopian vision of the Last Man and develops Nietzsche's political agonism as articulating a cogent alternative to liberal political theory.

 
Introduction
 
Nietzsche contra Liberalism
Reflections on the Character of Contests in Political Theory

 
 
Truth and Eros
A Critique of the Philosophical Commitments of Liberal Reason

 
 
On the Genealogy of Modernity
A Critical History of the Philosophical Commitments of Liberal Reason

 
 
Modernity and the Destruction of the Ascetic Ideal
Nihilism, Decadence and the Necessity of a Counter-Ideal

 
 
Modernity, Ethics and Counter-Ideals
Amor Fati, Eternal Recurrence and the Overman

 
 
Agonism, Liberalism and the Cultivation of Virtu
Ethics, Politics and the Critique of Political Liberalism

 
 
Conclusion

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