Nietzsche and the Politics of Nihilism

Authors

  • Kyle Pooley Kingston University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33182/agon.v17i2.3078

Keywords:

Nietzsche, Jacobi, Nihilism, God, piety, Spinoza

Abstract

This essay aims to provide another perspective on how the problem of nihilism operates within Nietzsche’s works by reading him against the thought of Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi, one of the first philosophers to introduce the classical modern sense of nihilism. Since Nietzsche makes no mention of Jacobi, this essay reads Nietzsche’s analysis of nihilism as a silent reply to the founding problem of nihilism as Jacobi conceived it, namely the crisis of piety, and against the historical backdrop from which Nietzsche first truly encountered nihilism as a phenomenon, namely the 1881 assassination of Russian Tsar Alexander II. This essay will, additionally, briefly outline the various sources (historical, literary) Nietzsche had access to and contributed to his knowledge of nihilism.

Metrics

Metrics Loading ...

Downloads

Published

2023-12-04

How to Cite

Pooley, K. (2023). Nietzsche and the Politics of Nihilism . The Agonist, 17(2), 55–62. https://doi.org/10.33182/agon.v17i2.3078

Issue

Section

Articles