Description
Book Synopsis In recent years, both analytic thinkers and postmodern theorists have looked at Friedrich Nietzsche''s epistemology from the perspectives of their philosophical traditions. Michael Steven Green''s penetrating study tries instead to do justice to Nietzsche''s views on truth and knowledge by looking at them from the perspective of his contemporaries, particularly the Neo-Kantian philosopher Afrikan Spir, whose ideas exerted a tremendous influence on Nietzsche''s thought.
Despite his generally naturalist outlook, Nietzsche was committed to an antinaturalist theory of cognition inherited from Kant and Spir. Green shows how this fundamental tension in Nietzsche''s thought led him to present not only the antirealism that has commonly been attributed to him in the past, but two other epistemological positions. These are a denial of the possibility of human thought entirely, and an error theory–-the argument that all of our judgments are false–-that has strong parallels
Trade Review
"A very powerful and philosophically sophisticated presentation of a position in the interpretation that has never to my knowledge had such an able advocate. . . . [Green] shows that there is more than one might think to the version of Nietzsche that has been popularized by the post-structuralists." –- Richard Schacht, author of Nietzsche and Making Sense of Nietzsche
"Green's book makes an important contribution to Nietzsche scholarship by offering the first account in English of Afrikan Spir's philosophy and demonstrating its influence on Nietzsche's thinking about truth." –- Maudemarie Clark, author of Nietzsche on Truth and Philosophy