Forward from: Arktos
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"Nietzsche's basic concept of the state is Germanic and not German, if by German we want to understand the ultimate form of what has grown on Germanic soil under Christian-Roman influence in the course of our history. The constant tension in which Nietzsche finds himself with regard to "Germany" is based on the fact that he goes back to the Germanic subsoil of the German character with an imperturbability and strength like no one before him."
— Alfred Baeumler, Nietzsche: Philosopher & Politician
Presented for the first time in English and republished for the first time in the postwar world is Alfred Baeumler's Nietzsche: Philosopher and Politician (1931). Herein are ideas the postwar world meant to kill — because they are deemed disagreeable, dangerous. Dangerous to what? Dangerous to ideologies that intern and censor to death. This book, more than anything, is a mirror.
Order it here:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/1915755859
"Nietzsche's basic concept of the state is Germanic and not German, if by German we want to understand the ultimate form of what has grown on Germanic soil under Christian-Roman influence in the course of our history. The constant tension in which Nietzsche finds himself with regard to "Germany" is based on the fact that he goes back to the Germanic subsoil of the German character with an imperturbability and strength like no one before him."
— Alfred Baeumler, Nietzsche: Philosopher & Politician
Presented for the first time in English and republished for the first time in the postwar world is Alfred Baeumler's Nietzsche: Philosopher and Politician (1931). Herein are ideas the postwar world meant to kill — because they are deemed disagreeable, dangerous. Dangerous to what? Dangerous to ideologies that intern and censor to death. This book, more than anything, is a mirror.
Order it here:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/1915755859