Ecce Homo

Ecce Homo

by Friedrich Nietzsche

Narrated by TimSC

Unabridged — 5 hours, 38 minutes

Ecce Homo

Ecce Homo

by Friedrich Nietzsche

Narrated by TimSC

Unabridged — 5 hours, 38 minutes

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Overview

The philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche's autobiography, Ecce Homo, was the last prose work that he wrote before his illness in 1889. Coming at the end of an extraordinarily productive year in which he had produced The Twilight of the Idols and The Antichrist, Nietzsche shuns any pretense at modesty with chapter titles include "Why I am so Wise", "Why I am so Clever" and "Why I Write Such Excellent Books". His translator Anthony M. Ludovici states, Ecce Homo "is not only a coping-stone worthy of the wonderful creations of that year, but also a fitting conclusion to his whole life, in the form of a grand summing up of his character as a man, his purpose as a reformer, and his achievement as a thinker."

Editorial Reviews

Nietzsche scholar Richard Oehler

Nietzsche had an unusual capacity for bringing his life and work clearly before the eyes of others. Ecce Homo is the final testimony to his gift of his, the last link in a long chain of introspective development.”

Dead Letters to Nietzsche Joanne Faulkner

Nietzsche presents himself not as a person, but as an explosive force fomented within the belly of European culture. Ecce Homo bears witness to Nietzsche’s destruction of himself that he might release a capacity to deconstruct (or revalue) all values.”

Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

[A] fateful intellectual biography.”

Nietzsche and the Problem of Sovereignty Richard J. White

A fantastic piece of self-celebration…Nietzsche deliberately aggrandizes himself, not in order to impress us, but precisely so that we will not take his self-presentation so seriously. Through exaggeration and hyperbole…he offers us a self-portrait that calls itself into question at the same time that it focuses our attention.”

Living with Nietzsche Robert C. Solomon

Nietzsche’s somewhat narcissitic concern is his own enormous sense of potential and the grave responsibility it engenders. But it also becomes our concern, and…means taking our own potential—and our responsibility for that potential—seriously. And if Nietzsche sometimes describes all of this a bit pretentiously as a ‘destiny,’ then that underscores not only his fatalism but also his existential resolve.”

Product Details

BN ID: 2940175436748
Publisher: Erika
Publication date: 04/10/2022
Edition description: Unabridged
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