... Though it is generally accepted that Nietzsche's so-called 'theory of will ... more ... Though it is generally accepted that Nietzsche's so-called 'theory of will to power' represents his attempt to go beyond existing models of organic development, an account of its relation toteleology and mechanism - how his alternative meets the challenges facing those models ...
... Page 9. Acknowledgments I am grateful to Steven Calm for suggesting I consider the project, t... more ... Page 9. Acknowledgments I am grateful to Steven Calm for suggesting I consider the project, to Eve DeVaro for her reception to the idea, and, especially, to Tessa Fallon and Emily Ross for assistance with a variety of technical questions and tasks. ...
... not in terms of lack but rather as being drawn into a process of becoming other than what one... more ... not in terms of lack but rather as being drawn into a process of becoming other than what one is, and this new conception of desire and love recasts the significance of the feminine. Shapiro frames Nietzsche's sense of becoming-animal as an Orphean trope, and it is precisely ...
... Though it is generally accepted that Nietzsche's so-called 'theory of will ... more ... Though it is generally accepted that Nietzsche's so-called 'theory of will to power' represents his attempt to go beyond existing models of organic development, an account of its relation toteleology and mechanism - how his alternative meets the challenges facing those models ...
... Page 9. Acknowledgments I am grateful to Steven Calm for suggesting I consider the project, t... more ... Page 9. Acknowledgments I am grateful to Steven Calm for suggesting I consider the project, to Eve DeVaro for her reception to the idea, and, especially, to Tessa Fallon and Emily Ross for assistance with a variety of technical questions and tasks. ...
... not in terms of lack but rather as being drawn into a process of becoming other than what one... more ... not in terms of lack but rather as being drawn into a process of becoming other than what one is, and this new conception of desire and love recasts the significance of the feminine. Shapiro frames Nietzsche's sense of becoming-animal as an Orphean trope, and it is precisely ...
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