Dancing in Chains: A History of Friedrich Nietzsche's Physiological Relativism

dc.contributor.advisorSteigerwald, Joan
dc.creatorMitchell, Benjamin David
dc.date.accessioned2017-07-26T15:29:17Z
dc.date.available2017-07-26T15:29:17Z
dc.date.copyright2016-09-01
dc.date.issued2017-07-26
dc.date.updated2017-07-26T15:29:17Z
dc.degree.disciplineScience & Technology Studies
dc.degree.levelDoctoral
dc.degree.namePhD - Doctor of Philosophy
dc.description.abstractThis study examines the historical development of Friedrich Nietzsches physiological relativism through a reading of his private and published works as well as several of the periodicals and scientific popularizations with which he was familiar. Nietzsches early interest in the relationship between genius and physiology was influenced by Arthur Schopenhauers insistence that geniuses were able to intuitively understand the objective world because of their unique physiological organization. However, the more physiology Nietzsche encountered the more doubts he had about Schopenhauers philosophical claims and Richard Wagners re-articulation of them. Nietzsches rejection of Schopenhauer and Wagner can be seen in his changing assessment of the limits of knowledge and the meaning of genius, of physiological, moral, and psychological vivisection, and how he came to see a close relationship between cruelty, necessity, and knowledge. Nietzsches understanding of life as a process of dynamic self-regulation featured many similarities with other physiological thinkers of his age including Claude Bernard and his idea of the milieu intrieur and Hermann von Helmholtzs account of the active nature of perception. Nietzsches interest in educational reform, experimentation, and self-fashioning was a further development of his exploration of how organisms and individuals achieved a state of relative freedom and independence through their interdependence from their physical and cultural environments. His interest in the intersection of physiology, aesthetics, and epistemology led him to define meaningful freedom and creativity in terms of how individuals related to their own limitations and crafted new limitations for themselves. Even basic physiological perceptions were creative, for just as perceptions shaped ideas and experiences, ideas and experiences shaped perceptions. Nietzsches understanding of creativity within limits was the compliment of his idea of how an individuals independence was achieved through more refined forms of interdependence with their physical, perceptual, cultural, and cosmic environments. The bermensch was the culmination of this process. Just as organisms and individuals achieved states of relative independence through interdependence with their environments, the bermenschs independence was achieved through how they tamed contingency by assimilating the cosmos in its entirety by willing the eternal return of the same.
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10315/33337
dc.language.isoen
dc.rightsAuthor owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests.
dc.subjectHistory of education
dc.subject.keywordsNietzsche
dc.subject.keywordsFriedrich Nietzsche
dc.subject.keywordsArthur Schopenhauer
dc.subject.keywordsSchopenhauer
dc.subject.keywordsRichard Wagner
dc.subject.keywordsWagner
dc.subject.keywordsVivisection
dc.subject.keywordsantivivisection
dc.subject.keywordsRelativism
dc.subject.keywordsPhysiological Relativism
dc.subject.keywordsLange
dc.subject.keywordsFriedrich Lange
dc.subject.keywordsvon Baer
dc.subject.keywordsClaude Bernard
dc.subject.keywordsHermann von Helmholtz
dc.subject.keywordsHelmholtz
dc.subject.keywordsGrant Allen
dc.subject.keywordsHarald Høffding
dc.subject.keywordsHøffding
dc.subject.keywordsFriedrich Zöllner
dc.subject.keywordsZöllner
dc.subject.keywordsBernhard Förster
dc.subject.keywordsErnst von Weber
dc.subject.keywordsEpistemology
dc.subject.keywordsAesthetics
dc.subject.keywordsPhysiology
dc.subject.keywordsDynamic Self-Regulation
dc.subject.keywordsHomeostasis
dc.subject.keywordsCybernetics
dc.subject.keywordsMilieu intérieur
dc.subject.keywordsÃœbermensch
dc.subject.keywordsThe Ãœbermensch
dc.subject.keywordsEducation Reform
dc.subject.keywordsEducation
dc.subject.keywordsFreedom
dc.subject.keywordsDeterminism
dc.subject.keywordsAnti-Semitism
dc.subject.keywordsGenius
dc.subject.keywordsFree Spirit
dc.subject.keywordsNeo-Kantian
dc.subject.keywordsNeo-Kantianism
dc.subject.keywordsCurare
dc.subject.keywordsJustus Liebig
dc.subject.keywordsLiebig
dc.titleDancing in Chains: A History of Friedrich Nietzsche's Physiological Relativism
dc.typeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation

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