Description
About the Author
Elijah Millgram is E. E. Ericksen Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at the University of Utah. A former fellow of the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, and the Guggenheim Foundation, he thinks mainly about rationality and about the meaning of life. His most recent book is John Stuart Mill and the Meaning of Life.
Reviews
A strikingly original book. It stakes out a unique position in Nietzsche scholarship; the readings are always illuminating. The analyses of drives, perspectives, the institutionalization of values, and of unified and disunified selfhood are particularly rich and should spark discussion among Nietzsche scholars. One of the best monographs I've read in recent years. * Paul Katsafanas, Professor of Philosophy, Boston University *
Elijah Millgram offers us a very challenging and powerful reading of Nietzsche. The book deserves to make a substantial impact, both within Nietzsche studies and more broadly in philosophy. Millgram's approach is highly unusual; he forces us to pay serious attention to the authorial voices, or personae, that Nietzsche adopted in his various works, and to ask after the point of those bravura performances. His large-scale argument-that they operated collectively as Nietzsche's creative way of coping with his own psychological disintegration-is sure to be controversial, but Millgram shows that there is considerable intrinsic philosophical insight to be gained from this way of thinking about Nietzsche. * R. Lanier Anderson, J.E. Wallace Sterling Professor in Humanities, Stanford University *
Book Information
ISBN 9780197669303
Author Elijah Millgram
Format Hardback
Page Count 352
Imprint Oxford University Press Inc
Publisher Oxford University Press Inc
Weight(grams) 652g
Dimensions(mm) 242mm * 163mm * 28mm