Beyond Good And Evil -
On the Prejudices of Philosophers — Critiques past thinkers for being "dishonest" and presenting their personal prejudices as objective truth.
Friedrich Nietzsche's (1886) is a seminal work of modern philosophy that serves as a "prelude to a philosophy of the future". It marks a radical break from traditional Western thought, dismantling established moralities and challenging the very foundations of "truth". Beyond Good and Evil
The book is composed of a preface and organized into nine thematic parts: On the Prejudices of Philosophers — Critiques past
Apophthegms and Interludes — A collection of short, witty, and often paradoxical maxims. The book is composed of a preface and
The Free Spirit — Describes a new kind of thinker who can transcend the "herd" mentality.
These sections delve into the history of morals, the nature of scholarship, national identities, and Nietzsche's definition of "nobility". 2. Core Philosophical Concepts Perspectivism and the Will to Truth
A central theme is the distinction between two competing moral frameworks: