Politics, Friendship and Solitude in Nietzsche (Confronting Derrida’s reading of Nietzsche in ‘Politics of Friendship’)

Original Articles

Politics, Friendship and Solitude in Nietzsche (Confronting Derrida’s reading of Nietzsche in ‘Politics of Friendship’)

Published in: South African Journal of Philosophy
Volume 19 , issue 3 , 2000 , pages: 209–222
DOI: 10.4314/sajpem.v19i3.31316
Author(s): Paul J.M. van Tongeren Visiting Scholar, Department of Philosophy,

Abstract

The paper offers a counter-reading to Derrida’s “utopian” reading of Nietzsche, focussing instead on Nietzsche’s cynical view of friendship, based on the impossibility of being a friend to oneself. Unlike Aristotle, who sees the basis of human political nature in their shared rationality and mutual friendship, Nietzsche sees not only politics, but human beings themselves as being constituted by a violent act of submission, and characterised by an ongoing struggle for power.

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