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/lit/ - Literature


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23487266 No.23487266 [Reply] [Original]

>But friends, to tell you what I really think: if there were a God, how could I bear l not being one? Therefore there is no God.

Was Nietzsche a Mormon?

>> No.23487273

>>23487266
>Was Nietzsche a Mormon?
Mormons essentially don't have tuckoos
The idea of the tuckoo is that not being a tuckoo is better
the concept of the tuckoo is actually a grammatical error

>> No.23487333
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23487333

>>23487266
>how could I bear l not being one?
Then do I a have religion for you, N.

>> No.23487338

>>23487333
riddle me this? but don't let someone own it

>> No.23487391

>>23487266

A moron.

>> No.23487400

>>23487266
That would make a cute Instragram quite for normies.

>> No.23487404

>>23487266
>if there were a God, how could I bear l not being one? Therefore there is no God
Stunning and brave argument.

>> No.23487602

>>23487266
The master moralists of antiquity thought the same, which is why they modeled their gods after themselves, killed and sacrificed delightfully in honor of their gods, and held festivals as though their gods were their friends, and why they rejected the God of the Hebrews, who demanded prostration, servitude, and guilt in comparison.

>> No.23487611

>>23487602
But they never claimed they were Gods. There are examples in Greece of mortals being punished for claiming so.

>> No.23487623

>>23487611
Modeling the gods after yourselves is just an indirect way of claiming yourselves as gods. Nietzsche's statement possesses the Enlightenment era notion of the individual in comparison, but it's still that same expression of master morality at its base.

>> No.23488958

>>23487266
There is a very specific similarity Friedrich Nietzsche and Joseph Smith, the third commonality is Abraham Abulafia. If you know you know (and no one really has noticed it so you people on this site probably won't know).

>> No.23489534

>>23488958
>There is a very specific similarity Friedrich Nietzsche and Joseph Smith, the third commonality is Abraham Abulafia

Will you elaborate on this for me, or suggest where in Abraham Abulafia to look (I've never heard of him before)?

Besides the literal aspirations for theosis (which might be contested on account of his atheism but becomes undeniable in Nietzsche's "madness letters") I see affinities in the hypermodern aspects and in the search to recover the primordial rites and understanding--for Nietzsche in relation to the Greeks and for Smith to the Hebrews

>> No.23490745

>>23487400
Normies arent like that wdym