RE: Atheism, Evidence and the God-of-the-Gaps
June 15, 2015 at 1:46 pm
(This post was last modified: June 15, 2015 at 1:48 pm by Crossless2.0.)
*Crossless1 mounts his hobby horse and glares at Randy*
It drives me to distraction that you and countless other dipshits who obviously have never read a single book by Nietzsche -- let alone all of his books, in the order they were published -- then besmirch the man with guilt by association because Hitler (whose reading skills and intellectual honesty seem on a par with yours) thought he understood the couple of Nietzsche's books he may have read.
You have to be utterly ignorant of the works in question or dishonest in a way I hadn't yet credited you as being to suppose that Nietzsche would have been anything but appalled and disgusted by the Third Reich. Two points: (1) Would anyone who consistently railed against Bismarck's regime and all forms of nationalism (while extolling the need for people to become more cosmopolitan -- to become 'Good Europeans') have welcomed Hitler's regime? Think, Randy! (2) Nietzsche, nearly alone among major 19th Century European intellectuals, was outspokenly anti-anti-Semitic. Quite simply, the Holocaust would have broken his heart.
Yes, Otto, apes read philosophy. They just don't understand it.
Then again, you didn't actually read it, did you, ape?
It drives me to distraction that you and countless other dipshits who obviously have never read a single book by Nietzsche -- let alone all of his books, in the order they were published -- then besmirch the man with guilt by association because Hitler (whose reading skills and intellectual honesty seem on a par with yours) thought he understood the couple of Nietzsche's books he may have read.
You have to be utterly ignorant of the works in question or dishonest in a way I hadn't yet credited you as being to suppose that Nietzsche would have been anything but appalled and disgusted by the Third Reich. Two points: (1) Would anyone who consistently railed against Bismarck's regime and all forms of nationalism (while extolling the need for people to become more cosmopolitan -- to become 'Good Europeans') have welcomed Hitler's regime? Think, Randy! (2) Nietzsche, nearly alone among major 19th Century European intellectuals, was outspokenly anti-anti-Semitic. Quite simply, the Holocaust would have broken his heart.
Yes, Otto, apes read philosophy. They just don't understand it.
Then again, you didn't actually read it, did you, ape?