The Apollonian and Dionysian is a philosophical and literary concept , or dichotomy , based on certain ... the use of the concepts of the Apollonian and Dionysian is famously related to Nietzsche s The Birth ... of Dionysian and Apollonian Kunsttrieben artistic impulses forms dramatic arts, or tragedies ... and reason robs tragedy of its foundation, namely the fragile balance of the Dionysian and Apollonian ... the Apollonian and Dionysian juxtapositions is apparent, Nietzsche claimed in The Birth of Tragedy ... to make order in the Apollonian sense of his unjust and chaotic Dionysian Fate, though he dies unfulfilled ... in Apollonian ideals, which in turn separate him from his essential connection with self. The Dionysian ... connected with the Apollonian. The Dionysian magnifies man, but only so far as he ... experience is of utmost importance in viewing the Dionysian as it is related to the Apollonian ... American humanities scholar Camille Paglia writes about the Apollonian and Dionysian in her controversial ... significantly. The Apollonian and Dionysian concepts comprise a dichotomy that serves as the basis of Paglia s theory of art and culture. For Paglia, the Apollonian is light and structured while the Dionysian ..., 1990, p. 40 ref She argues that there is a biological basis to the ApollonianDionysian dichotomy ..., and turning instead to the Apollonian trait of ordered creation. The Dionysian is a force of chaos ... According to Peter Sloterdijk , the Dionysian and the Apollonian form a dialectic they are contrasting ... being is determined by the DionysianApollonian dialectic. Extending the use of the Apollonian and Dionysian .... Stephen King s usage American novelist Stephen King uses Apollonian and Dionysian analysis in Danse ... the terms Apollonian to suggest reason and the power of the mind and Dionysian to suggest emotion ... DEFAULTSORT Apollonian And Dionysian Category Friedrich Nietzsche Category Classical Greek philosophy ... sici?sici 0022 5037 28198910 2F12 2950 3A4 3C589 3ADCONAO 3E2.0.CO 3B2 T&size LARGE Dionysian Classicism ... more details
Merisi Caravaggio alt Painting of Dionysus with garland, food and wine The Dionysian Mysteries were ... reserved for the initiated, many aspects of the Dionysian cult remain unknown and were lost with the decline ... studies. Origins The Dionysian Mysteries of mainland Greece and the Roman Empire are thought to have ... cult of Morocco although this cult may have been influenced by the Dionysian one . In any case Minoan ... among agricultural cults and spirit possession the Osiris Osirian Mysteries paralleled the Dionysian ... Saturnalia . Although the Greek Dionysian rites were associated with women freeing themselves from suppressive ... found preserved in Greek prose referring to the Dionysian rites such as Euripides Bacchae . This collection ... of Dionysus evolved, probably in the civilization of Minoan Crete. The rationale for the Dionysian ... crafts sacred to Dionysus, in the forms of tragedy and comedy . The Dionysian Mysteries were seen not only ... of the Dionysian Mysteries . In these narratives someone or something is sought after ... a basic ordeal at least for women, according to depictions of Dionysian initiations , and there may have been ritualised hangings. The female rituals took place at the same time as the traditional Dionysian ... against a cult perceived as a danger to the state. The Roman Senate sought to ban Dionysian rites ... rites The Dionysian Mysteries are believed to have consisted of two sets of rites the secret ... the Dionysian ecstasy and kept their sanity. While the Athenians celebrated Dionysus in various one ... Dionysian rites reflected stages in the wine production process only later did the Athenians ... mother Semele , a moon goddess was performed in the earliest Dionysian temples usually located ... of the Dionysian Mysteries have varied over time and place, as the rituals themselves have. The earliest ... with the Dionysian Mysteries. The Orphic texts of the late period record a boukolos or cowherd ... roles in this process. Ritual details Dionysian paraphernalia Kantharos Drinking cup with large ... more details
Dionysian imitatio is the influential literary method of imitation as formulated by Greek author Dionysius of Halicarnassus in the first century BCE, which conceived it as the rhetoric practice of emulating, adaptating, reworking and enriching a source text by an earlier author. ref name Ruthven79 ref name West79p5 8 It marked the beginning of the doctrine of imitation art imitation , which dominated the Western history of art up until 18th century, when the notion of Romanticism romantic originality was introduced. Dionysius concept marked a significant depart from the concept of mimesis formulated by Aristotle s in the 4th century BCE, which was only concerned with imitation of nature instead of the imitation of other authors. ref name Ruthven79 Latin orators and rhetoricians adopted the literary method of Dionysius imitatio and discarded Aristotle s mimesis . ref name Ruthven79 In Aristotle s Poetics Aristotle Poetics , lyric poetry , epic poetry , drama , dancing , painting are all described as forms of mimesis . History Three centuries after Aristotle s Poetics , from the 4th century BCE to the 1st century BCE, the meaning of mimesis as a literary method had shifted from imitation of nature to imitation of other authors . ref name Ruthven79 No historical record is left to explain the reason of this change. Dionysius of Halicarnassus Dionysius three volume work On mimesis On imitation , which was the most influential for Latin authors, is lost. ref name Ruthven79 Most of it contained advice on how to identify the most suitable writers to imitate and the best way to imitate them. ref name Ruthven79 Ruthven 1979 pp. 103 4 ref ref name West79p5 8 For Dionysian imitatio , the object of imitation was not a single author but the qualities of many. ref name West79p5 8 West 1979 pp.5 8 ref Latin orators and rhetoricians adopted the literary method of Dionysius imitatio and discarded Aristotle s mimesis the imitation literary approach is closely linked with the widespread ... more details
Wikibooks Fractals Apollonian fractals In mathematics , an Apollonian gasket or Apollonian net is a fractal ... after Greece Greek mathematician Apollonius of Perga . Construction Image Apollonian gasket.svg thumb An example of an Apollonian gasket An Apollonian gasket can be constructed as follows. Start with three ... these are called Apollonian circles see Descartes theorem . Adding the two Apollonian circles to the original three, we now have five circles. Take one of the two Apollonian circles &ndash say C sub ... 1 sub and C sub 2 sub has its own two Apollonian circles. We already know one of these &ndash it is C ... a total of 3 sup n 1 sup     2 circles after n stages. In the limit, this set of circles is an Apollonian gasket. The Apollonian gasket has a Hausdorff dimension of about 1.3057 http abel.math.harvard.edu .... This circle is in the interior of circle with negative curvature. Variations Image Apollonian spheres.jpg thumb left Apollonian sphere packing An Apollonian gasket can also be constructed ... s. The three dimensional equivalent of the Apollonian gasket is the Apollonian sphere packing . Symmetries ... a radius that is two thirds of this, then the Apollonian gasket has two lines of reflective symmetry ... the Apollonian gasket also has rotational symmetry of degree 2 the symmetry group of this gasket is D sub 2 sub . If all three of the original generating circles have the same radius then the Apollonian ... of the first two Apollonian circles. These lines of symmetry are at angles of 60 degrees to one another, so the Apollonian gasket also has rotational symmetry of degree 3 the symmetry group of this gasket ... which maps any two Apollonian gaskets to one another. M bius transformations are also isometries of the Hyperbolic geometry hyperbolic plane , so in hyperbolic geometry all Apollonian gaskets are congruent. In a sense, there is therefore only one Apollonian gasket, which can be thought of as a tessellation of the hyperbolic plane by circles and hyperbolic triangles. The Apollonian gasket ... more details
File Apollonian network.svg thumb 240px An Apollonian network File Goldner Harary graph.svg thumb The Goldner Harary graph , a non Hamiltonian Apollonian network In combinatorics combinatorial mathematics , an Apollonian network is an undirected graph formed by a process of recursively subdividing a triangle into three smaller triangles. Apollonian networks may equivalently be defined as the planar ... of Perga , who studied a related circle packing construction. Definition An Apollonian network may ... , are both Apollonian networks. math K sub 3 sub is formed by starting with a triangle and not performing .... The Goldner Harary graph is an Apollonian network that forms the smallest Hamiltonian cycle ... 357. ref Another more complicated Apollonian network was used by harvtxt Nishizeki 1980 to provide ... Apollonian networks are examples of maximal element maximal planar graph s, graphs to which ... that forms an Apollonian network is an elimination ordering as a chordal graph. This forms an alternative characterization of the Apollonian networks they are exactly the chordal maximal planar graphs ... . ref In an Apollonian network, every maximal clique is a complete graph on four vertices, formed by choosing ... tree math k tree , and Apollonian networks are examples of 3 trees. Not every 3 tree is planar, but the planar 3 trees are exactly the Apollonian networks. Every Apollonian network is also a uniquely ..., but also true, that every uniquely 4 colorable planar graph is an Apollonian network. Therefore, Apollonian networks may also be characterized as the uniquely 4 colorable planar graphs. Apollonian ... k 4 . ref For the characterization of Apollonian networks via unique 4 colorability, see harvtxt Fowler 1998 . The fact that Apollonian networks also minimize the number of colorings with larger numbers of colors was shown in a dual form for colorings of maps by harvtxt Birkhoff 1930 . ref The Apollonian ... 2009 . ref The Apollonian networks do not form a family of graphs that is closed under the operation ... more details
Image Apollonian circles.svg thumb right 350px Some Apollonian circles. Every blue circle intersects every red circle at a right angle. Every red circle passes through the two points, C and D , and every blue circle separates the two points. This article discusses a family of circles sharing a radical axis , and the corresponding family of orthogonal circles. For other circles associated with Apollonius of Perga , please see the disambiguation page, circles of Apollonius . Apollonian circles are two families of circle s such that every circle in the first family intersects every circle in the second family orthogonal ly, and vice versa. These circles form the basis for bipolar coordinates . They were discovered by Apollonius of Perga , a renowned Ancient Greece Greek geometer . Definition The Apollonian circles are defined in two different ways by a line segment denoted CD . Each circle in the first family the blue circles in the figure is associated with a positive real number r , and is defined as the locus of points X such that the ratio of distances from X to C and to D equals r , math left X mid frac d X,C d X,D r right . math For values of r close to zero, the corresponding circle is close to C , while for values of r close to , the corresponding circle is close to D for the intermediate value r     1, the circle degenerates to a line, the perpendicular bisector of CD ... k pi right math Pencils of circles Both of the families of Apollonian circles are called pencils ... parabolic pencil. It is relatively easy to show using inversion that, in the Apollonian circles ... of the blue Apollonian circles with respect to a circle centered on point C results in a pencil of concentric ... coordinates bipolar coordinate system defined by the Apollonian circles into a polar coordinates ..., so the original Apollonian circles also meet at right angles. Alternatively, ref harvtxt Akopyan ... pencil is hyperbolic, and vice versa in this case the two pencils form a set of Apollonian circles ... more details
Image Apollonian spheres.jpg thumb right Apollonian sphere packing Apollonian sphere packing is the three dimensional equivalent of the Apollonian gasket . The principle of construction is very similar with any four spheres that are cotangent to each other, it is then possible to construct two more spheres that are cotangent to four of them. The fractal dimension is 2.473946. ref Citation first M. last Borkovec first2 W. last2 De Paris first3 R. last3 Peikert author link publication date date year 1994 title The Fractal Dimension of the Apollonian Sphere Packing periodical Fractals series publication place place publisher volume 2 issue 4 pages 521 526 url http graphics.ethz.ch peikert papers apollonian.pdf issn doi 10.1142 S0218348X94000739 oclc accessdate 2008 09 15 ref Software for generating and visualization of the apollonian sphere packing ApolFrac. ref http thomasbonner.heliohost.org apolfrac.htm ApolFrac ref References references Category Hyperbolic geometry Category Fractals geometry stub it Impacchettamento di sfere apolloniano ... more details
Pierrot is a short poem written by the African American author Langston Hughes . It was first published in the anthology The Weary Blues in 1926. In 30 lines, it describes contrasts the characters of Simple John, who adheres to an ethic of hard work and traditional virtues, and Pierrot , who leads a Apollonian and Dionysian Dionysian and carefree life. In the end, Pierrot runs away with John s wife. References The Collected Poems of Langston Hughes . ed. Arnold Rampersad. New York Alfred A. Knopf. 1997. Category 1926 poems Category American poems poem stub ... more details
country Germany language German language German series subject Classical Athens Athenian tragedy , Apollonian and Dionysian the ApollonianDionysian opposition genre Dramatic theory publisher release ... the Apollonian and DionysianDionysian and the Apollonian very loosely reality undifferentiated ... s words, Wherever the Dionysian prevailed, the Apollonian was checked and destroyed.... wherever the first Dionysian onslaught was successfully withstood, the authority and majesty of the Delphic god ... of Ancient Greece was the highest form of art due to its mixture of both Apollonian and Dionysian ... condition . The Dionysian element was to be found in the music of the Greek chorus chorus , while the Apollonian element was found in the dialogue which gave a concrete symbolism that balanced the Dionysiac revelry. Basically, the Apollonian spirit was able to give form to the abstract Dionysian ... the Apollonian view of the world. The Dionysian element was to be found in the wild revelry .... Nietzsche concludes that it may be possible to reattain the balance of Dionysian and Apollonian ... and understand the Dionysian side of life without destroying the obvious values of the Apollonian ... tragic drama suggests exactly how, before Euripides and Socrates, the Dionysian and Apollonian ... direct experience of the Dionysian within the protective spirit of tragedy on the Apollonian stage. Influences ..., they have an Apollonian dream vision of themselves, of the energy they re embodying. It s a vision ... underlies Citation needed date November 2010 the tripartite division of art into the Apollonian, its Dionysian antithesis, and their synthesis in Greek tragedy . Of great importance are the works of Arthur Schopenhauer , especially The World as Will and Representation . The Apollonian ... s sense, and the experience of the Dionysian bears similarities to the identification with the world ... formulas. An idea the antithesis of the Dionysian and the Apollinian translated into the metaphysical ... more details
the influence of Friedrich Nietzsche s theory of the Apollonian and DionysianApollonian versus Dionysian spirit is evident. The polarization of Narcissus s individualist Apollo Apollonian character ... a Dionysus Dionysian endeavour balanced out by Narcissus, the structured and stable priest monk an Apollonian approach , and highlighting the harmonizing relationship of the main characters. Goldmund is presented as an evolving seeker who attempts to embody both Apollonian and Dionysian elements ... more details
Unreferenced stub auto yes date December 2009 The Athens Conservatoire Lang el is the oldest conservatoire in modern Greece. It was founded in 1871 by the Athens Music and Drama Society. Initially, the musical instruments that were taught there were limited to the violin and the flute , representative of the ancient Greek Apollonian and Dionysian aesthetic principles. Significantly, piano lessons were not included in the program. In 1881 its new Germany German taught director Georgios Nazos , in a controversial at that time move, expanded the conservatoire s program by introducing modern European classical music Western European style instruments and theory material. Among the musicians who have taught at the Athens Consevatoire are Manolis Kalomiris , Felix Petyrek , Elvira de Hidalgo , and Yannos Margaziotis . Notables who were taught at Athens Consevatoire include Spyridon Samaras 1875 1882 , Maria Callas 1938 , Dimitri Mitropoulos 1919 , Gina Bachauer , Nana Mouskouri , Dimitris Sgouros , Mikis Theodorakis . Its As of 2006 alt current artistic director is Aris Garoufalis . See also National Conservatoire Greece Hellenic Conservatory Category Greek music Greece stub de Athener Konservatorium ru uk vi Nh c vi n Athena ... more details
Infobox Book See Wikipedia WikiProject Novels or Wikipedia WikiProject Books name Gertrude title orig Gertrud translator Hilda Rosner image Image GertrudBookCover.jpg image caption author Hermann Hesse country Germany language German language German genre Philosophical novel publisher Albert Langen release date 1910 english release date 1955 London edition in English predates the 1969 edition media type Print Hardcover Hardback & Paperback isbn NA Released before ISBN system implemented oclc 1845263 Gertrud is a novel by written by Hermann Hesse , first published in 1910. Plot summary Styled as the memoir of a famous composer named Kuhn, Gertrud tells of his childhood and young adult years before it comes to the heart of the story his relationships to two troubled artists, the eponymous Gertrud Imthor, and the opera singer Heinrich Muoth. Kuhn is drawn to Gertrud upon their first encounter, but she falls in love with and marries Muoth, whom the composer befriended as well some years before. The two are hopelessly ill matched, and their destructive relationship provides the basis for Kuhn s Masterpiece magnum opus . Analysis Like many of Hesse s novels, there is a strong influence derived from Nietzsche, specifically his work The Birth of Tragedy . Muoth represents the passionate Dionysian elements of art, while Gertrud represents the more refined Apollonian elements. The fact that Kuhn s opera is the result of their relationship suggests the combining of the two elements to form a work of high art. Hermann Hesse Category 1910 novels Category Philosophical novels Category Novels by Hermann Hesse Category Novels about composers 1910s novel stub de Gertrud Hesse he ja fi Gertrud ... more details
Image destroyermag.jpg frame right Infobox magazine title Destroyer editor Karl Andersson frequency Twice a year category Gay country Czech Republic language English language English website http www.destroyerjournal.com destroyerjournal.com firstdate 2006 lastdate 2010 issn 1801 8203 Destroyer was a Sweden Swedish based gay magazine published by Karl Andersson, containing features, photos, essays, interviews, reviews, columns, culture articles and fiction. Unlike most gay magazines, it focused exclusively on boys and younger men, who, says the editor, were once a part of gay culture, but have vanished in recent years. Destroyer was the brain child of Karl Andersson, a Swedish magazine professional. In 1999 he headed Straight , Sweden s first glossy gay magazine, and he has since then worked for Aftonbladet , Sweden s biggest daily, Slitz , the biggest men s magazine in Scandinavia , and for IDG Sweden. He has a bachelor of arts degree in language consultancy and lives in Berlin . The magazine was printed and officially published in the Czech Republic , but distributed globally through its website, http www.destroyerjournal.com destroyerjournal.com . It contained no nude boys under 18, and is legal in all countries where homosexuality is legal. It has received a lot of criticism from the media and child protection professionals for allegedly sexualising children, but Andersson has been quick to defend his publication and gives interviews to argue against his critics. Destroyer is sometimes called Destroyer Magazine , Gay Magazine Destroyer , twink magazine Destroyer and even pederast magazine Destroyer . The correct title is Destroyer Journal of Apollonian Beauty and Dionysian Homosexuality . Destroyer s final issue 10 , published in January 2010, was limited to 1,000 copies. See also List of LGBT publications External links http www.destroyerjournal.com Category Swedish magazines Category LGBT related magazines Category LGBT related media in Sweden Category Czech m ... more details
the term skepticism as he uses it and identifies two types of skeptic, the Apollonian , who is committed to clarity and rationality and the Dionysian , who is committed to passion and instinct. William James , Bertrand Russell , and Friedrich Nietzsche exemplify the Apollonian skeptic, Carroll says, and Charles Sanders Peirce , Tertullian , S ren Kierkegaard , and Blaise Pascal are Dionysian ... more details
Refimprove date July 2008 In the First Folio , the Play theatre plays of William Shakespeare were grouped into three categories comedies, Shakespearean history histories , and Shakespearean tragedy tragedies . Comedy , in its Elizabethan usage, had a very different meaning from modern comedy. A Shakespearean comedy is one that has a happy ending, usually involving marriages between the unmarried characters, and a tone and style that is more light hearted than Shakespeare s other plays. Patterns in the comedies include movement to a green world , ref Regan, Richard. http www.faculty.fairfield.edu rjregan rrScom.htm Shakespearean comedy . Retrieved on 11 January 2007. ref both internal and external conflicts, and a tension between Apollonian and Dionysian values. Shakespearean comedies tend to also include A greater emphasis on situations than characters this numbs the audience s connection to the characters, so that when characters experience misfortune, the audience still finds it laughable A struggle of young lovers to overcome difficulty, often presented by elders Separation and re unification Deception among characters especially mistaken identity A clever servant Disputes between characters, often within a family Multiple, intertwining plots Use of all styles of comedy slapstick, puns, dry humour, earthy humour, witty banter, practical jokes Pastoral element courtly people living an idealized, rural life , originally an element of Pastoral Romance, exploited by Shakespeare for his comic plots and often parodied therein for humorous effects Happy Ending, though this is a given, since by definition, anything without a happy ending can t be a comedy. Several of Shakespeare s comedies, such as Measure for Measure and All s Well That Ends Well , have an unusual tone with a difficult mix of humour and tragedy which has led them to be classified as Shakespearean problem play problem plays . It is not clear whether the uneven nature of these dramas is due to an imperfec ... more details
Fabrice Hybert born 1961 in Lu on , Vend e is a France French artist . Overview Internationally renowned artist, he works in many diverse ways accumulation, proliferation, hybridization sliding between painting, sculpture, installation and video. In 1994, he created UR Unlimited Responsibility , an organisation with the goal of building links between artists and enterprises. Works Hybert has suggested that his work explores the enormous reservoir of the possible Eyestorm 2007 via a deconstruction of language and communication. To this end he deploys a very wide range of media for the purpose of expanding the range of his creative practice, deconstructing language in order to present the viewer with puzzles. He abjures the coherent, instantly understandable, text and the consistent oeuvre in favour of a proliferation that reflects the fundamentally nonlinear character of cognition. This is art in the tradition of the Surrealist object and stream of consciousness. It is more akin to James Joyce s Finnegans Wake than it is to classic narrative, it is Dionysian rather than Apollonian . On the other hand some of his projects look like exercises in visual language, his square football is not especially bewildering. It is quite simply a functional object that is turned into an ideal form the cube . His idealised, cubed football maps onto the horror of function that characterises post Duchampian fine art that rose into dominance in the international art world in the 1960s. Fabrice ironically refers to such functionless objects as Prototypes d objects en fonctionnement prototypes of working objects , or POF. Another instance of connecting the previously unconnected cf. Simon Starling is Hybert s Swing POF No 3 , 1990. This is a playground swing with the addition of two phallic protuberances on the seat, one hard, one soft Eyestorm 2007 . The pedophilic connotations appear to escape the artist or the art world for that matter. Another work Roof Ceiling POF No 10 , 1995, consi ... more details
Image Henryk Tomaszewski tablica.JPG thumb 225px right The plaque for Henryk Tomaszewski in Wroc aw Henryk Tomaszewski aka Heinrich Karl Koenig 1919&ndash 2001 was a mime artist and theatre director, born in Pozna , Poland . He settled in Cracow in 1945 to study theatre after the end of World War II during which he studied at Iwo Gall s Theatre Studio from 1945 to 1947 and ballet under Feliks Parnell . Tomaszewski left Parnell s company in 1949 and resettled in Wroc aw , where he taught ballet and began to develop his concepts in mime. In 1956, Tomaszewski s Mime Studio had its premiere performance at the Polski Theatre in Wroc aw. In 1958 the Mime Studio was renamed the Wroclaw Mime Theatre and was granted the status of State theatre in 1959. Tomaszewski ceased performing in the mid 1960s but continued to direct, train, and choreograph the ensemble and all productions. Tomaszewski s conceptions of mime technique are modern much in the same way as Etienne Decroux s or Jacques Lecoq s but developed along different lines owing to the differences in Polish and French theatre traditions. Little reference is made to commedia dell arte traditions. Two of Tomaszewski s thoughts concerning theatre Always this contact or clash of these two poles these two elements, which can be classically named as Apollonian and Dionysian have been for me, even from the point of view of pure movement, a sort of leading motive of my stage works, the whole of my way of seeing and thinking 1976 . Citequote date May 2011 I see the theatre as twofold as a dream, which is an activity of man in an unreachable sphere of his dreams, vision, intimacy, and as a circus with the whole of its corporeality, muscles and strength. When I introduce this dream on the stage, at this moment, I wonder where the truth of life is, where its dangers are and where its breakneck somersault is... or the opposite 1976 . Citequote date May 2011 Notable students and members of his company include Stanis aw Brzozowski mi ... more details
about the book by H. L. Mencken Nietzsche s philosophy Philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche The Philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche is a book by H. L. Mencken , the first edition in 1907. The book covers both wider and lesser known areas of Friedrich Nietzsche s life and philosophy, notable both for its suggestion of Mencken s still developing literary talents at the age of 27 and for its impressive detail as a book written in the United States on only the seventh year of Nietzsche s death considering the lack of reliable interpretations of Nietzsche in the American sphere of letters at the time Mencken prepared for writing this book by reading all of Nietzsche s published philosophy , including several works in the original German. ref http www.seesharppress.com nietzscheintro.html Introduction to The Philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche , See Sharp Press, December 14, 2005. Retrieved April 27, 2008. ref ref http www.ipgbook.com showbook.cfm?bookid 1884365310&userid 3BC2DED5 803F 2B7A 709CF839AD96C1AA The Philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche , Independent Publishers Group . Retrieved April 27, 2008. ref Contents Part 1 Nietzsche the Man Boyhood And Youth The Beginnings Of The Philosopher Blazing A New Path The Prophet Of The Superman The Philosopher And The Man Part 2 Nietzsche the Philosopher Apollonian and Dionysian Dionysus vs. Apollo The Origin Of Morality Beyond Good and Evil The bermensch Superman Eternal return Eternal Recurrence Christianity Truth Civilization Philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche Views on women Women and Marriage Government Crime and Punishment Education Sundry Ideas Nietzsche vs. Richard Wagner Wagner Part 3 Nietzsche the Prophet Nietzsche s Origins Nietzsche and His Critics Literary Reception Some of the book s biographical details, despite the best available information at the time, are now known to be false, yet Mencken s examination is accurate, as indeed are his personal translations of Nietzsche for which one may see his translation of The Antich ... more details
Apollonian and DionysianDionysian Greek who affirmed life in spite of its many horrors and terrors .... Like the ancient Dionysian Greeks, we have known the terrible truth about life and now appreciate ... of the Richest In a Dionysian Dithyramb, Nietzsche used poetic imagery from Thus Spoke Zarathustra ... more details
in The Birth of Tragedy 1879 . Ogun, he argues, is a totality of the Apollonian and DionysianDionysian, Apollonian and Prometheus Promethean virtues. ref Soyinka 1973, 120 . ref He develops an aesthetic ... more details