Fr. Nietzsche as German thinker who lived in the second half of the Nineteenth Century. The essence of the concept of nihilism. Peculiarities of the philosophy of Socrates. Familiarity with Nietzsche. Analysis of drama Conscience as Fatality.
Modern Nihilizm thinker nihilism philosophy Gabriela Pohoata In philosophy, the relationship between a thinker and divinity is essential for defining his own identity and, implicitly, his general view of world. Nae Ionescu supports that there is no philosophic system completely finished that, sooner or later, will not arrive at a certain critical point to God, regardless if this God is matter, the Universe of the Pantheists, the supreme Idea of Good by Plato, etc.. All of them reach a certain dead-end, ultimate spring of life and reality [1, p. 116]. But, on the other hand, as E. Cioran writes, it is not easy to talk of God when you are not a believer, nor an atheist; and it is, without a shadow of doubt, our own tragedy, including here theologians as well, that we can be neither [2, p. 76]. The way in which this issue was approached until now determined specialized criticism to associate our two protagonist thinkers as landmarks of contemporary Nihilism: Fr. Nietzsche - German thinker who lived in the second half of the Nineteenth Century (1844-1900) and Emil Cioran - Romanian thinker (1911-1995), viewed as the greatest western Nihilist since Nietzsche [3, p.
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