Resumen
The Second Untimely Meditation establishes a functional relation to history: the latter benefits life when it is considered from an illusory, dissimulated, and strategic perspective. The article analyzes two consequences of this: the critique of history as an objective science and the nuances entailed by considering it as a narrative. If G. Agamben has shown how history arises in the interstice between language and discourse, the debate should focus on the process through which subjectivity acquires a language that must be "historicized". This implies exploring the relations between happiness and history as a repository of meaning and hope.
Título traducido de la contribución | Nietzsche and history: The unhappiness of the animal and the hope of man |
---|---|
Idioma original | Español |
Páginas (desde-hasta) | 191-205 |
Número de páginas | 15 |
Publicación | Ideas y Valores |
Volumen | 63 |
N.º | 156 |
DOI | |
Estado | Publicada - 1 jul. 2014 |
Palabras clave
- F. Nietzsche
- G. Agamben
- Happiness
- History