i like to dream, dream of a perfect world
one day my dream will come true
you won't be there
~offtop~ is the part of the "about me" section that has nothing to do with me trying to describe myself, it's just a collection of random things i decide to share that no one gives a damn about, especially the recent content.
~offtop~:
i don't, i know why they do it and given the power - i would do exactly the same thing, maybe worse, yet all the "pure hearted" people(read as: simple minded) just can't get it through their heads that the only way is, according to the most propagated human morals, cruel. (c)
think 5 times before you start reading this, the following article contains swearing and might be offensive to jews, niggers, white trash and brutally slaughtered innocent children. it contains enough boring material to discourage you from reading any further by the time you're down to the 5th line. viewer's discretion is walking the fucking dog.
chapter 2
The death of God, nihilism, and perspectivism
The statement "God is dead," occurring in several of Nietzsche's works (notably in The Gay Science), has become one of his best-known remarks. On the basis of this remark, most commentators regard Nietzsche as an atheist. In Nietzsche's view, recent developments in modern science and the increasing secularization of European society had effectively 'killed' the Christian God, who had served as the basis for meaning and value in the West for more than a thousand years.
Nietzsche claimed the 'death' of God would eventually lead to the loss of any universal perspective on things, and along with it any coherent sense of objective truth.
Instead we would retain only our own multiple, diverse, and fluid perspectives. This view has acquired the name "perspectivism".
Alternatively, the death of God may lead beyond bare perspectivism to outright nihilism, the belief that nothing has any importance and that life lacks purpose. As Heidegger put the problem, "If God as the suprasensory ground and goal of all reality is dead, if the suprasensory world of the Ideas has suffered the loss of its obligatory and above it its vitalizing and upbuilding power, then nothing more remains to which man can cling and by which he can orient himself." Developing this idea, Nietzsche wrote Thus Spoke Zarathustra, therein introducing the concept of a value-creating Ãœbermensch. According to Lampert, "the death of God must be followed by a long twilight of piety and nihilism (II. 19; III. 8). Zarathustra's gift of the superman is given to a mankind not aware of the problem to which the superman is the solution."