Egyptian Etiquette: A Historical Rebuttal to the Genealogy of Morals
Location
Statesboro Campus, Russell Union, Room 2084, Session 4
Document Type and Release Option
Thesis Presentation (Open Access)
Faculty Mentor
Dr. Daniel Larkin
Faculty Mentor Email
dlarkin@georgiasouthern.edu
Presentation Year
2022
Start Date
22-4-2022 4:00 PM
End Date
22-4-2022 5:00 PM
Description
This project seeks to explore some of the critical points of weakness within Nietzsche's concept of the development of morality. Specifically, it attends to how his usage of history potentially undermines his psychological theories and how, likewise, his psychological theories undermine his historical arguments.
Academic Unit
College of Arts and Humanities
Egyptian Etiquette: A Historical Rebuttal to the Genealogy of Morals
Statesboro Campus, Russell Union, Room 2084, Session 4
This project seeks to explore some of the critical points of weakness within Nietzsche's concept of the development of morality. Specifically, it attends to how his usage of history potentially undermines his psychological theories and how, likewise, his psychological theories undermine his historical arguments.
Comments
Honors thesis is available: https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/honors-theses/715/