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  1. 4 de jun. de 2018 · O anticristo, de Friedrich Nietzsche, é uma das obras mais polêmicas e provocativas da história da filosofia.

    • Christianity as Harbinger of Decadence
    • The Falsification in Biblical History
    • Paul The Villain, Christ as The Misunderstood
    • The Dubiousness of Christian Values
    • Christianity as An Expression of Ressentiment
    • The Dishonesty Behind Christian Faith
    • The Slave Morality Behind Christianity

    Right from the jump, Nietzsche introduces his condemnation of modern morality in shocking, provocative language. He associates modern morality with an overarching anti-life sentiment that suppresses the instinct of man to survive and express himself. The elevation of principles like pity and charity are only fated to hasten the demise of mankind. N...

    Nietzsche then traces a smooth transition between Jewish morality and Christian morality. The Jewish priest class aligned itself with the lowly and took advantage of the ressentiment found in this disadvantaged class to gain power for themselves. This class subverted the original conception of God as brave, strong, and powerful by introducing the t...

    Nietzsche’s “The Antichrist” can be read as his condemnation of the religion of Christianity as a purveyor of false morality that degrades and sickens the human race. In laying such charges at Christianity, Nietzsche differentiates the prevailing Christian ideology as constructed and propagated by the Apostles of Jesus Christ- Paul especially- from...

    Nietzsche opposes Christianity on multiple grounds. One such ground is his observation that Christians typically profess faith without doing much to demonstrate their belief and piety asides from engaging in performative religious activities like taking communion and going to the church, or giving to charity. Nietzsche blames Christ’s Apostles, mos...

    Next Nietzsche examines how the feeling of ressentiment or resentful opposition to the dominant order, crept into Christianity. Nietzsche saw Jesus’ behavior at his trial and eventual execution on the cross as his most important legacy, his message of perfect acceptance and a disinclination to feelings of resentment, revenge, or envy on display to ...

    Next, Nietzsche refuted the doctrine of faith as being a substitute for truth, a copout for intellectually dishonest people who cannot prove their position by force of evidence and logical reason. Nietzsche saw the concept of a higher truth, vis a vis the “wisdom of God” as opposed to the “wisdom of men” as a false standard that demands that normal...

    Ultimately Christianity fosters slave morality, which is a morality occasioned and structured by the response of the oppressed, the lowly, and disadvantaged to their situation. It is the morality that preaches humility, weakness, and pity because the slave cannot be otherwise. For Nietzsche, slave morality is borne out of resentment, anger, and des...

  2. In The Antichrist, Nietzsche wields his philosophy in a full-force attack on Christianity and its effects on Western civilization, arguing for the eradication of Christian morality among the philosophical elite.

  3. archive.org › download › nietzsche_friedrich_1844The Antichrist - Archive.org

    Dionysus: the Philosophy of Eternal Recurrence. The first sketches for “The Will to Power” were made in 1884, soon after the publication of the first three parts of “Thus Spake Zarathustra,” and thereafter, for four years, Nietzsche piled up notes.

  4. In outlining Christianity’s tendency to glorify suffering, Nietzsche notes that “The most famous formula for this is to be found in the New Testament, in the Sermon on the Mount, where, incidentally, things are by no means looked at from a height.”

  5. Friedrich Nietzsche reveals the dishonest, sinister, and vengeful motivations behind seemingly noble Christian ethics and then notes their influence on contemporary Western philosophy and morality. Nietzsche believes that Christian morality targets the strong and so delegitimizes the values associated with them by designating them as sin.

  6. O Anticristo (em alemão: Der Antichrist) é um livro do autor alemão Friedrich Nietzsche, escrito em 1888 e publicado em 1895. [1] É considerado uma das mais ácidas críticas de Nietzsche ao cristianismo, célebre pela frase: "O Evangelho morreu na cruz".