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Keyword: friedrichnietzsche

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  • Today's Quotefall Puzzle by Friedrich Nietzsche

    11/17/2019 7:39:24 AM PST · by GOP Congress · 5 replies
    Self-Published | 11/17/2019 | Self-Published
    Today's Quotefall Puzzle features a quote by Friedrich Nietzsche. Click puzzle (or click here) for full size rendition, then use your browser's print command to print puzzle. Friedric Nietzsche was a philosopher and individualist who tragically died with medical problems. Unfortunately, after his death his sister appropriated his works and associated them with German nationalism and socialism, which led ultimately to the Nazi Party and the ensuing war, committing perhaps the most devastating instance of intellectual misappropriation in human history. All hints, along with the answer, are provided in the first reply comment below, using filtered font to prevent accidental spoilers. Please...
  • Today's Quotefall Puzzle by Friedrich Nietzsche

    09/16/2019 8:21:38 AM PDT · by GOP Congress · 1 replies
    Self-Published | 9/16/2019 | Self-Published
    Today's Quotefall Puzzle features a quote by Friedrich Nietzsche. Click puzzle (or click here) for full size rendition, then use your browser's print command to print puzzle. Friedrich Nietzsche was a 19th Century German philosopher who was a deep critic of government control and group mentality. All hints, along with the answer, are provided in the first reply comment below, using filtered font to prevent accidental spoilers. Please refrain from disclosing the full answer in comments to prevent spoilers.To solve the puzzle: Enter the letters in the top half (letter columns) of the puzzle into the white squares on the bottom half...
  • The blood sport of Iowa: A squeaker victory, losers who "win" and the msm's bizarre caucus narrative

    02/03/2016 1:01:12 AM PST · by Cincinatus' Wife · 37 replies
    Salon ^ | February 2, 2016 | Andrew O'Hehir
    It was getting on toward 2 o'clock on Tuesday morning after the bewildering Iowa caucuses, so I can't be too sure about anything. As the TV coverage wound down into nothingness, Chris Matthews of MSNBC became increasingly disgruntled about the lack of clear winners and losers in the Hawkeye State, at least in the Democratic photo finish between Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders. Getting to hear the losers make concession speeches is what makes our democracy exciting, he insisted. Iowa in 2016, according to the Matthews worldview, was not exciting. "This was just vague," he muttered. He may actually have...
  • Raising little Nietzsches: How public schooling contradicts itself

    04/23/2013 3:05:46 PM PDT · by SincerelyAmanda · 12 replies
    The Communities at The Washington Times ^ | April 22, 2013 | Amanda Read
    The Western world since Nietzsche is on a path to collectively and systematically "amoralize" culture to somehow generate a better populace... ...It has been said that all education is inescapably religious. If we take that statement to its logical conclusion, it might as well be a constitutional argument for the separation of school and state under First Amendment provisions...
  • Martin Gross, Obama is the master of Deceit

    12/10/2009 3:17:01 PM PST · by FromLori · 3 replies · 590+ views
    Newsmax ^ | 12/10/09
    Martin Gross, Social Scientist and NY Times best-selling author, calls Obama, Congress, and mainstream media "masters of deceit" with no restraints and no conscience. "There is no responsible group in America taking care of the middle class." Gross reports what he was told when, on several occasions, he personally called the Bureau of Public Debt to question Obama's fuzzy accounting regarding the deficit. Video at site
  • Thinkers Behind the Culture of Death (Part 1 or 3)

    08/20/2005 8:41:27 PM PDT · by Murtyo · 87 replies · 2,319+ views
    Catholic Online ^ | 11/12/2004 - 6:00 AM PST | www,Catholic.org
    KITCHENER, Ontario, NOV. 12, 2004 (Zenit) - Karl Marx, Friedrich Nietzsche, Ayn Rand and Wilhelm Reich may have had therapeutic aims to cure the world of its ills. But instead they contributed immensely to the modern sickness that John Paul II has identified as the "culture of death." So says Donald DeMarco, who co-authored a book investigating the dysfunctional lives and theories of the "Architects of the Culture of Death" (Ignatius) with Benjamin Wiker. DeMarco is an adjunct philosophy professor at Holy Apostles College and Seminary, in Connecticut, and professor emeritus at St. Jerome's University, in Ontario. In this three-part...
  • Camus as Conservative: A post 9/11 reassessment of the work of Albert Camus

    12/20/2003 12:47:34 PM PST · by bdeaner · 79 replies · 1,062+ views
    Orthodoxy Today ^ | 12/20/03 | Murray Soupcoff
    Camus as Conservative: A post 9/11 reassessment of the work of Albert Camus Murray Soupcoff The Guardian -- that last fanatical bastion of English left-wing obstinacy and foolishness -- published a unique book review honouring the latest Penguin edition of The Plague, the enduring fictional allegory of human suffering and sacrifice, written by French existentialist novelist Albert Camus. It was particularly surprising that The Guardian, of all publications, would publish what was really a revised introduction to the latest English-language edition of The Plague, since Camus' unique philosophical and political point of view was always so different from that of...