Siblings
Common Sense
Consilience
Duality
Education
The Enlightenment
Faust
Free Will
Functional Equivalent
Gordian Knot
Logical Positivism
Mind-Body Problem
Objective Experience
Searle, John
Simple Minded School
Singularity
Subjective Experience
Turing Machine
Turing Test
Reason
Deduction
Determinism
Epistemology
Induction
Lao Tzu
Ontology
Reduction
Aesthetics
Rand, Ayn
Boden, Margaret
Bostrom, Nick
Eschatology
Ethics
Logic
Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm
Metaphysics
Plato
Socrates
Aristotle
Existentialism
Holism
Kant, Immanuel
Spinoza, Benedict de
Wittgenstein, Ludwig
Zen
Swami Vivekananda
Descartes, Rene
Paradox
Dembski, William
Functional Isomorphism
Functionalism
Materialism
Vitalism
Alexander's Solution
Pascal, Blaise
Heidegger, Martin
Nietszche, Friedrich
Philosopher whose writings greatly influenced what would become a school of thought known as Existentialism. His work is generally centered on the idividual overcoming moral and societal hurdles to achieve the ends of one's will. Nietszche's work has been misconstrued by political groups as a justification for oppression.
Related Links
Nietszche at Britannica.com
Nietszche