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The wanderer’s promise: Nietzsche’s philosophy of the "nearest things"
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

The wanderer’s promise: Nietzsche’s philosophy of the "nearest things"

Jill Marsden
Nietzsche-Studien : Internationales Jahrbuch für die Nietzsche-Forschung, Vol.48(1), pp.727-736
04/2019

Abstract

Nearest Things The Body Epicurus Eternal Return
In this essay I explore what might be meant by the “nearest things” in Nietzsche’s philosophy. In the first part of the essay I contextualise Nietzsche’s concerns with “the closest things of all” in the “free spirit” period (1878-1882) and raise the question of how knowledge of them is possible. This idea is developed in the second part of the paper in relation to the claim that dominant (Platonic/Christian) habits of thought impede our understanding of the body. In the third section, I suggest that Nietzsche’s interest in Epicurean thinking in this period enables us to situate the nearest things within the political aesthetics of a transfigured physis. In the final section, I examine how Nietzsche’s 1881 notes on eternal return provide a less-well known locus for his philosophy of the nearest things, one which suggests that to “incorporate” eternal return we need to become “good neighbours” to what is close.
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