Nietzsche, Democracy and Transcendence

Original Articles

Nietzsche, Democracy and Transcendence

Published in: South African Journal of Philosophy
Volume 26 , issue 1 , 2007 , pages: 78–89
DOI: 10.4314/sajpem.v26i1.31458
Author(s): Paul van Tongeren Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands / Department of Philosophy, South Africa

Abstract

Socialism, utilitarianism and democracy, are according to Nietzsche secularised versions of Christianity. They have continued the monomaniac one-sidedness of the Christian idea of what a human being is and should be, and they have even strengthened this monomania through its ‘immanentisation’. The article shows that this ‘immanentisation’ has a crucial importance for Nietzsche’s critique of democracy. This critique may suggest that Nietzsche’s alternative for the disappeared Christian faith is not only a more radical nipture from the religious past, but also a re-interpretation or recreation of the notion of transcendence that was implied in that faith.

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