Criticism > Nineteenth-Century Literary Criticism > Schopenhauer, Arthur - Friedrich Nietzsche (essay date 1887)
Schopenhauer, Arthur - Friedrich Nietzsche (essay date 1887)
Friedrich Nietzsche (essay date 1887)
SOURCE: "What Do Ascetic Ideals Mean?" in The Birth of Tragedy and The Genealogy of Morals, translated by Francis Golffing, Anchor Books, 1956, pp. 231-99.
[In the following excerpt from The Genealogy of Morals, which was originally published in 1887, Nietzsche contends that although Schopenhauer's aesthetic theory seemingly stresses disinterestedness, Schopenhauer instead considered art as a means to intellectual empowerment.]
Schopenhauer made use of the Kantian version of the esthetic problem, though he certainly did not look upon it with the eyes of Kant. Kant had thought he was doing an honor to art when, among the predicates of beauty, he gave prominence to those which flatter the intellect, i.e., impersonality and universality. This is not the place to inquire whether Kant did not attack the whole problem in the wrong way; all I wish to point out here is that Kant, like all philosophers,...
[The entire page is 1767 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
Criticism
- John Oxenford (essay date 1853)
- Friedrich Nietzsche (essay date 1874)
- Friedrich Nietzsche (essay date 1887)
- H. N. Gardiner (essay date 1888)
- T. Bailey Saunders (essay date 1890)
- Josiah Royce (essay date 1892)
- William Caldwell (essay date 1896)
- Arthur O. Lovejoy (essay date 1911)
- Irwin Edman (essay date 1928)
- Thomas Mann (essay date 1939)
- Radoslav A. Tsanoff (essay date 1942)
- Bertrand Russell (essay date 1945)
- Frederick Copleston, S. J. (essay date 1946)
- John Bowle (essay date 1954)
- Georg Lukács (essay date 1954)
- Max Horkheimer (essay date 1960)
- Patrick Gardiner (essay date 1963)
- Paul Gottfried (essay date 1974)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
