%0 Generic
%T Reading Nietzsche through the Ancients An Analysis of Becoming, Perspectivism, and the Principle of Non-Contradiction
%A Meyer, Matthew
%I De Gruyter
%@ 9781934078433
%@ 9781934078419
%K Philosophy, Ancient
%K Philosophy, Comparative
%K Friedrich Nietzsche
%K Electronic books
%K Nietzsche, Friedrich
%K Werden
%K Perspektivismus
%K Principium contradictionis
%K Heraclitus
%K Protagoras
%K Ontologie
%K Rezeption
%K Plato
%K Aristoteles
%K Vergleichende Philosophie
%K Griechenland Altertum
%K Philosophie
%D 2014
%D , ©2014
%X Description based upon print version of record
%X Preface and Acknowledgements; Abbreviations; Contents; Introduction; Reading Nietzsche's Philosophy; Reading Nietzsche's Published and Unpublished Writings; Reading Nietzsche's Project through the Ancient Greeks; Chapter One. Becoming, Being, and the Problem of Opposites in Philosophy in the Tragic Age of the Greeks; 1.1 Introduction; 1.2 Tragic Philosophy in The Birth of Tragedy; 1.3 A Turn to Philosophy in the Tragic Age of the Greeks; 1.4 Nietzsche's Doctrine of Heraclitean Becoming in the Secondary Literature; 1.4.1 Christoph Cox on Heraclitean Becoming
%X 1.4.2 John Richardson on Heraclitean Becoming1.5 Heraclitean Becoming in Philosophy in the Tragic Age of the Greeks; 1.6 The Response of Nietzsche's Parmenides to Nietzsche's Heraclitus; 1.7 A Rebirth of Antiquity?; Chapter Two. Aristotle's Defense of the Principle of Non-Contradiction in Metaphysics IV; 2.1 Introduction; 2.2 Nietzsche's Critique of Logic; 2.3 An Overview of Aristotle's Defense of the Principle of Non-Contradiction; 2.4 Three Formulations of the Principle of Non-Contradiction in Metaphysics IV; 2.5 Aristotle's Elenctic Defense
%X 2.6 The Devastating Consequences of Denying PNC-Ontological2.7 Empiricism, Naturalism, and the Denial of PNC-Ontological; 2.8 Aristotle's Critique of the Heraclitean-Cratylean Theory of Change; 2.9 Aristotle's Critique of Protagoras on Perception; 2.10 Some Concluding Remarks; Chapter Three. Naturalism, Becoming, and the Unity of Opposites in Human, All Too Human; 3.1 Introduction; 3.2 Maudemarie Clark on the Falsification Thesis; 3.3 Natural Science, Heraclitean Ontology, and the Falsification Thesis; 3.4 Natural Science and Heraclitean Ontology in The Pre-Platonic Philosophers
%X 3.5 A Turn to Human, All Too Human3.6 Natural Science and Heraclitean Ontology in Human, All Too Human 1-2; 3.7 Heraclitean Ontology and the Falsification Thesis in Human, All Too Human; 3.8 The Tragic Philosophy of Human, All Too Human; 3.9 Human, All Too Human and the Development of the Free Spirit; Chapter Four. Heraclitean Becoming and Protagorean Perspectivism in Plato's Theaetetus; 4.1 Introduction; 4.2 Justifying the Turn to Plato's Theaetetus; 4.3 Knowledge is Perception and the Four Theses; 4.4 Knowledge is Perception; 4.5 From Knowledge is Perception to Protagoras' Homo Mensura
%X 4.6 From Homo Mensura to the Secret Doctrines of Heraclitus4.7 A Preliminary Account of Perception and a Puzzle; 4.8 Heraclitean Ontology and a Secret Theory of Perception; 4.9 The Final Stage of the Secret Doctrine; 4.10 Some Preliminary Objections to Protagoras' Homo Mensura; 4.11 Protagoras' Homo Mensura and the Problem of Self-Refutation; 4.12 The Incompatibility of Heraclitean Ontology and Knowledge is Perception; 4.13 The Refutation of Knowledge is Perception; 4.14 Some Concluding Remarks
%X Chapter Five. Heraclitean Becoming, Protagorean Perspectivism, and the Will to Power in Beyond Good and Evil
%C De Gruyter
%C Boston [u.a.]
%U http://slubdd.de/katalog?TN_libero_mab2
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