
Contents
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Three Kinds of Recovery Three Kinds of Recovery
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The Genealogical Recovery of Responsibility The Genealogical Recovery of Responsibility
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The Re-covery of Responsibility: Against Remorse The Re-covery of Responsibility: Against Remorse
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The Re-covery of Responsibility: Eternal Recurrence The Re-covery of Responsibility: Eternal Recurrence
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Alternative Responsibilities: The Self as a Work of Art Alternative Responsibilities: The Self as a Work of Art
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Nietzsche’s Re-covery of Virtue as Virtù Nietzsche’s Re-covery of Virtue as Virtù
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Nietzsche’s Reverence for Institutions Nietzsche’s Reverence for Institutions
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Three Nietzsche and the Recovery of Responsibility
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Published:March 2023
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Abstract
This chapter explores Friedrich Nietzsche's criticism of traditional moral values for their unethical qualities and his proposed recovery of responsibility. Nietzsche recovers each traditional virtue by restructuring and recasting them to counter Immanuel Kant's ideals. Meanwhile, Nietzsche argues that the only way to get past passive nihilism is to relentlessly uncover the remnants and shadows of god. The chapter introduces the concept of eternal recurrence, which provides a surefire test for resentment and the overman as a personification of the parts of the self resistant to the formation of responsible subjectivity. It cites virtù as the ethical perspective sometimes adopted by Nietzsche to unveil the cruelties of virtue's morality.
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