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Friedrich Nietzche


Don't just accept the changes that make up the world, decide for yourself what you want to believe. Pain is not something that needs to be avoided. This process that you go through, making your own choices not just looking for answers from others, is a process that most will not make in through, many will not even try. After this research process, Nietzsche believes that many will not longer believe in religion. .
             The "Ubermensch" is what represented his ideal, the person strong enough to create his own values, strong enough to live without the consolation of traditional morality. "Ubermensch is the German term for "Overman" or "Superman." Meaning an extraordinary individual who transcends the limits of traditional morality to live purely by the will to power. The opposite of the "Ubermensch was the coy individual Nietzsche called "the last man." This "super-man" is the individual who always surpass the limits of men, the one "who always affirms." The big question this "super-man" asks, "What am I going to do with my life?" This individual is free from resentment, the master of morality, and has no need for norms. In particular do not be concerned with what others think. Above all you must create our own values. .
             In a Nietzschean world, morality is another big idea. Morality is a set of rules by which one lives, a set of values, or a set of virtues or could we conceive morality as a set of rules, values, or virtues by which one limits the pursuit of self-interest. Nietzsche does not attempt to disprove of the Christian's morality; instead, he points outs what type of constitution produces this moral system. He also indicates that other moral systems exist that express the perspective of other kinds of humans, and while he seems to attack what he labels the "slave morality" and applauds the "master morality," he is simply showing that for some types, the master morality is more appropriate that the slave morality.


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