•  1
    Bevis E. McNeil, Nietzsche and Eternal Recurrence
    New Nietzsche Studies 11 (3): 152-172. 2021.
  •  6
    The Foundations of Nietzsche’s Psychological Critique of Moral Equality in Ecce Homo
    Proceedings of the XXIII World Congress of Philosophy 25 43-56. 2018.
    Ecce Homo/Wise 4 & 5 contain Nietzsche’s unmasking critique of the psychology of pity and moral egalitarianism. The foundation of his critique is in his own experience of mastering life-weakening ressentiment as came to him from his father. The brain damage which claimed Karl Ludwig Nietzsche’s life in 1849 must have had an early psycho-traumatic effect on Nietzsche in his infancy. In his psycho-autobiography Ecce Homo, Nietzsche reveals how he imposed a regimen of second-order psychological str…Read more
  •  9
    Francesca Ferrando, "Philosophical Posthumanism." Reviewed by
    Philosophy in Review 40 (1): 7-9. 2020.
  • A Commentary on Nietzsche's Ecce Homo
    Journal of Nietzsche Studies 22 145-146. 2001.
  •  11
    Kate Miliett's book, The Loony-Bin Trip, is an extraordinary account of her personal experience with involuntary psychiatric commitment. The drama of her conflict with professional psychiatry is so tense, so enraging, that one is likely to find oneself having to set the book aside from time to time just to calm down.
  •  3
    Leibniz: Unity, Thought, and Being
    Dissertation, University of Massachusetts Amherst. 1981.
    This work is an investigation of Leibniz's concern with the problems of unity. His concern with these problems is understood to be central to his metaphysics. His distinction between the unity of the individual as true unity and the unity of the general as a unity only of thought is seen to decisively condition his treatment of the problem of the composition of the continuum, his determination of the being space and time, of number, quality, and relation, and his effort to introduce the scholast…Read more
  •  21
    In this commentary on chapter one, "Why I am So Wise," of Nietzsche's Ecce Homo, the author dispels the long-standing impression that Ecce Homo is an irrational book in which the madness that claimed Nietzsche only months after he began writing it had already begun its work. Ecce Homo, it is alleged, is not egotistical, or narcissistic, or megalomaniacal. It is not a work of madness. In his linear exposition of this first chapter, the author presents Nietzsche's revelation of the tragic fact tha…Read more
  •  10
    Letters to the Editor
    with Alan Gewirth and Werner Leinfellner
    Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 65 (1). 1991.
  •  68
    Kate Millett's book, The Loony-Bin Trip, is an extraordinary account of her personal experience with involuntary psychiatric commitment. The drama of her conflict with professional psychiatry is so tense, so enraging, that one is likely to find oneself having to set the book aside from time to time just to calm down.