This site is dedicated to exploring and sharing ideas. It is also an online filing cabinet and dorm room door.
Feel free to be in touch.
Lars Nowen
RevLFNowen (at) gmail (dot) com
This site is dedicated to exploring and sharing ideas. It is also an online filing cabinet and dorm room door.
Feel free to be in touch.
Lars Nowen
RevLFNowen (at) gmail (dot) com
love your site! great mix of stuff! — lisa, citylife, melbourne, AU
Thanks Lisa! Have a good holy week and Easter.
LfN.
Looks quite well done. Read just a little, but added to my blogroll. Will go through and comment on posts inn due course. Keep going!
Thanks for dropping in bc. I look forward to your comments.
Lfn, a request. I have been reading Colin Wilson’s The Outsider and have found it extremely intriguing, amazing, and a very deep and brilliantly done study. I have never read Nietzsche, though he has been in my intended reads for quite sometime. However, I want to understand, in brief, what exactly does the term “Pure Will” means. Since it seems you have read him, I would like to know how you would explain it to a lay man or beginner. You may reply or still better write a post about it, if you have time. Thanks!
Hi bc,
It would be misleading to say that I’ve read lots and lots of Nietzsche, but I’ll have a think and ask a couple of people and then get back to you.
Are you the Jonathan Mills who wrote LOVE, COVENANT, AND MEANING?
Hi Gabriel,
No, I’m not JM, but I know him.
LN
Lfn, a request. I have been reading Colin Wilson’s The Outsider and have found it extremely intriguing, amazing, and a very deep and brilliantly done study. I have never read Nietzsche, though he has been in my intended reads for quite sometime. However, I want to understand, in brief, what exactly does the term “Pure Will” means. Since it seems you have read him, I would like to know how you would explain it to a lay man or beginner. You may reply or still better write a post about it, if you have time. Thanks!
+1
Hi Florinda,
“Pure will” is not an easily defined phrase as far as I know. I have spoken with a Nietzsche scholar that I know and he said it would depend upon which text you are referring to as to the meaning. He said,
“I think “pure” usually means impersonal, universal, not involving anyone’s valuational choice, not expressing anyone’s valuational biography, utterly necessary, somehow “neutral.” which Nietzsche reveals isn’t possible BGE [Beyond Good and Evil] ¶6…” He wrote more, but this is the main bit.
Hope this helps… I’m too buried under other things to give a response out of my own studies at the moment.
Cheers,
LfN