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A being whose lightness cannot be tolerated

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A being whose lightness cannot be tolerated Details

ISBN 13
9789953682716
ISBN 10
9953682712
Book Description
Eternal return is an idea shrouded in mystery, which has perplexed many philosophers, including Nietzsche: to imagine that everything will repeat one day as we have lived it before, and that this very repetition will go on endlessly! What does this mad myth mean? The myth of eternal return confirms, negatively, that life which disappears completely and does not return is more like a shadow, weightless and already dead. No matter how terrible, beautiful, or wonderful this life is, that terribleness, beauty, and wonder mean nothing; they are as insignificant as a war that took place in the fourteenth century between two African kingdoms, which changed nothing in the face of history, even though three hundred thousand Africans perished in it, enduring unspeakable suffering. Would anything have changed if this war between the two African kingdoms in the fourteenth century had been repeated countless times in the context of eternal return? Let's say that the idea of eternal return defines a horizon where things do not appear as we know them: they present themselves without the mitigating circumstances of their contingency, and these mitigating circumstances actually prevent us from making a specific judgment. Is it possible to condemn what is ephemeral? The orange twilight clouds cast a nostalgic glow on everything, even on the guillotine. In a world of eternal return, every movement carries an unbearable weight of responsibility. This is what made Nietzsche say, "The idea of eternal return is the heaviest burden."
Author
Ù
Language
Arabic
Publication Date
1/1/2012
Number of Pages
320.0