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- Title
"EN SESSİZ ZAMAN" OLARAK NIETZSCHE'NİN ZERDÜŞT İLE YÜZLEŞME ÂNI.
- Authors
ÇAKIR, Burak
- Abstract
The aim of this paper is to analyse the chapter titled "The Stillest Hour" in Thus Spoke Zarathustra [Also sprach Zarathustra] by Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche. For this, firstly, the last chapter of the first book, "On the Bestowing Virtue" ["Von der schenkenden Tugend"] will be examined. It will be explained that Zarathustra was not a teacher and that teaching was not his main task. Secondly, the outline of the section "The Stillest Hour" will be drawn. Thirdly, the eleven speeches of "the stillest hour" will be discussed. This section comes before the release of the eternal return, which is located in the middle of the text and one of the main themes of the text. This chapter is difficult to understand because it has an esoteric nature. However, this section is one of the key sections to understand the entire text. Here, it will be argued that the voice heard eleven times as the voice of the "the stillest hour" is Nietzsche himself. He adds his own voice to the text with words alongside Zarathustra, and he interferes in the text. Thus, Nietzsche can describe the critical points for understanding the Zarathustra stand between the reader and the text. He also presents the symbolic signs he uses on the theme of time in the text.
- Subjects
NIETZSCHE, Friedrich Wilhelm, 1844-1900; CHILDREN'S books; TIME management; VIRTUE; VIRTUES; HUMAN voice
- Publication
Academic Journal of Philosophy / Felsefi Düşün, 2022, Issue 18, p52
- ISSN
2148-0958
- Publication type
Article