Friedrich Nietzsche

E11204

Friedrich Nietzsche was a 19th-century German philosopher known for his critiques of traditional morality and religion, the concept of the "will to power," and the proclamation that "God is dead."

Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

Observed surface forms (3)


Statements (86)

Predicate Object
instanceOf aphorist
essayist
human
philologist
philosopher
writer
burialPlace Röcken
causeOfDeath pneumonia
stroke
countryOfCitizenship German Empire
Prussia
surface form: Kingdom of Prussia
dateOfBirth 1844-10-15
dateOfDeath 1900-08-25
educatedAt University of Bonn
University of Leipzig
employer University of Basel
familyName Friedrich Nietzsche self-linksurface differs
surface form: Nietzsche
father Carl Ludwig Nietzsche
fieldOfWork aesthetics
ethics
metaphysics
philology
philosophy of culture
philosophy of religion
fullName Friedrich Nietzsche self-linksurface differs
surface form: Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche
givenName Friedrich
healthIssue mental breakdown in 1889
progressive mental illness after 1889
influenced Albert Camus
Franz Kafka
Gilles Deleuze
Jean-Paul Sartre
Martin Heidegger
Michel Foucault
Sigmund Freud
Thomas Mann
influencedBy Arthur Schopenhauer
Charles Darwin
Immanuel Kant
Richard Wagner
Søren Kierkegaard
languageOfWorkOrName German
mother Carl Ludwig Nietzsche
surface form: Franziska Nietzsche
movement existentialism
modernism
nihilism
perspectivism
nativeLanguage German
notableIdea death of God
eternal recurrence
master–slave morality
perspectivism
revaluation of all values
will to power
Übermensch
notableWork Beyond Good and Evil
Ecce Homo
On the Genealogy of Morality
The Antichrist
The Birth of Tragedy
The Gay Science
Thus Spoke Zarathustra
Twilight of the Idols
notedFor aphoristic writing style
critique of Christianity
critique of traditional morality
genealogical method in moral philosophy
proclamation that God is dead
occupation classical philologist
composer
philosopher
poet
university professor
placeOfBirth Prussia
surface form: Kingdom of Prussia

Province of Saxony
Röcken
placeOfDeath Grand Duchy of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach
Weimar
positionHeld Professor of classical philology at the University of Basel
religion Lutheranism
residence Basel-Stadt
surface form: Basel

Naumburg
Sils Maria
Turin
sexOrGender male
sibling Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche

Referenced by (80)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Carl Jung influencedBy Friedrich Nietzsche
D. H. Lawrence influencedBy Friedrich Nietzsche
Death in Venice influencedBy Friedrich Nietzsche
Emil Cioran influencedBy Friedrich Nietzsche
Eros and Civilization influencedBy Friedrich Nietzsche
Frankfurt School influencedBy Friedrich Nietzsche
Gabriele D'Annunzio influencedBy Friedrich Nietzsche
Gabriele Rapagnetta influencedBy Friedrich Nietzsche
subject surface form: Gabriele D'Annunzio
Gilles Deleuze influencedBy Friedrich Nietzsche
James Joyce influencedBy Friedrich Nietzsche
Jean-Paul Sartre influencedBy Friedrich Nietzsche
John Gray influencedBy Friedrich Nietzsche
Karl Jaspers influencedBy Friedrich Nietzsche
Martin Heidegger influencedBy Friedrich Nietzsche
Max Weber influencedBy Friedrich Nietzsche
Michel Foucault influencedBy Friedrich Nietzsche
Otto Rank influencedBy Friedrich Nietzsche
Rainer Maria Rilke influencedBy Friedrich Nietzsche
Theodor W. Adorno influencedBy Friedrich Nietzsche
Thomas Mann influencedBy Friedrich Nietzsche
Walter Benjamin influencedBy Friedrich Nietzsche
existential psychotherapy influencedBy Friedrich Nietzsche
Allama Muhammad Iqbal inspiredBy Friedrich Nietzsche
this entity surface form: Nietzsche
The Birth of Tragedy laterPrefaceAddedBy Friedrich Nietzsche
Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche managedEstateOf Friedrich Nietzsche
University of Leipzig notableAlumnus Friedrich Nietzsche
Carl Ludwig Nietzsche notableRelative Friedrich Nietzsche
Thus Spoke Zarathustra philosophicalSchool Friedrich Nietzsche
this entity surface form: Nietzschean philosophy
will to power proposedBy Friedrich Nietzsche
Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche sibling Friedrich Nietzsche