Book description
No modern philosopher has been more maligned and misunderstood or more
cynically exploited than Friedrich Nietzsche. Physically handicapped by
weak eyesight, violent headaches and bouts of nausea, this paradoxical
thinker fashioned a philosophy, which made short shrift of self-pity and
the ostentatious display of compassion. The son of a Lutheran clergyman,
whom he adored, he became a fearless agnostic who proclaimed, in Thus
Spake Zarathustra that 'God is dead!' Of modest bourgeois origins, he
detested middle-class conformity, and turned to an uncompromising cult
of 'aristocratic radicalism'. Nietzsche was the first major philosopher
to place psychology, rather than mathematics, logic, physics, or
history, at the very centre of his thinking. The wealth and diversity of
Nietzsche's aphorisms and brief essays - close to 2,700 - make him the
most seminal and provocative thinker of modern times. Many of his
aphorisms, highly personal statements of his likes and dislikes, are
puzzling. They become truly comprehensible only within the context of
his restless life, revealed in this enthralling biography. Born of
American parents in Paris, Curtis Cate was educated in France, England,
and the United States. He is the holder of three university degrees -
from Harvard (History), the -cole des Langues Orientales, Paris
(Russian), and Magdalen College, Oxford, where he read Politics and
Economics and studied English and German philosophy with Harry Weldon.
After serving as a correspondent in the Middle East, he joined the staff
of the Atlantic Monthly, and was for eight years its European Editor in
Paris. His published works include three highly acclaimed biographies
(of Antoine de Saint-Exup-ry, George Sand, and Andr- Malraux), a
harrowing description of Napoleon's disastrous invasion of Russia in
1812, and The Ides of August, which he wrote to condemn the building of
the Berlin Wall in August 1961. This is his seventh book.