Infectious Nietzsche is simply one of the most interesting and engaging works to appear on Nietzsches philosophy in years.
David Allison
Krell explores health, illness, and creativity in the life and thought of Friedrich Nietzsche. Drawing on a varied literature of philosophical reflections on health, and analyzing Nietzsches confrontation with traditional values, Krell skillfully engages the legacy of Platonism and Western metaphysics that is at the core of Nietzsches thought. Nietzsches genealogical critique, his doctrine of eternal recurrence of the same, and the Nietzschean physiology and psychology of decadence are principal foci. Anyone interested in a philosophical reflection on questions of genius and pathology, and all readers of Nietzsche, will find Krells new book compelling reading.
Preface
Introduction
One. Critica genealogica I: Inventories of Decadence
Ressentiment and Decadence
The Genealogy of Ground; the Grounds of Genealogy
Ground as the Cartesian Cogito
Transcendental versus Genealogical Critique
Genealogy as Fatality
Two. Critica genealogica II: The Decadence of Inventories
Deleuze, Foucault, and Genealogy
A Nietzschean Inventory?
Will to Power as Genealogical Fa(c)tum
The Genealogy of Language; the Language of Genealogy
Styles of Excessive Wisdom: Nietzsche as Pierre dattente
Three. Critica genealogica III: The Decadence of Redemption
Redeeming the World for the First Time
Shades of Decadence
Radiant Affirmation versus Paltry Consolation
Descensional Reflection
Four. The Cock: Reading Plato (after Nietzsche)
Dialogue and Dialectic: Platos Mixed Form
Three Accounts of Phaedo
Teaching Plato (after Nietzsche)
Five. Der Maulwurf/The Mole: Reading Kant and Hegel (after Nietzsche)
Auszuge/Extracts
Vorwurf/Prelude and Plaint
Allerlei Maulwurfsgange bei Kant/All Kinds of Mole Tunnels in Kant
Der Maulwurf in Siebenmeilenstil³