Reha Kuldaşlı
- Middle East Technical University, Philosophy. Ph.D. (C) (2019)
- Middle East Technical University, Philosophy. M.A. (2014)
- Middle East Technical University, Pol. Sci. B.Sc. (2010)
- Middle East Technical University, Philosophy. M.A. (2014)
- Middle East Technical University, Pol. Sci. B.Sc. (2010)
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Papers by Reha Kuldaşlı
his critique of anthropocentric and anthropomorphic interpretations of existence
in the context of his grand project of the transvaluation of all values. I will
problematize humanism with respect to the Nietzschean notions of will to
power, nihilism, and evaluative thinking in an attempt to show its shortcomings
from a Nietzschean perspective. Then, I will attempt to offer a reading of
Nietzsche’s reinterpretation of nature in terms of the will to power as a radical
multiplicity that exceeds humanistic interpretations and investigate Nietzsche’s
conception of the human being with respect to his physiological and
genealogical analyses that emphasize the human being as a multiplicity of
unconscious drives. Finally, I will discuss to what extent Nietzsche’s critique of
humanism, which consists in the deanthropomorphization of nature and the
renaturalization of human being, constitutes an overcoming of humanism.
Drafts by Reha Kuldaşlı
his critique of anthropocentric and anthropomorphic interpretations of existence
in the context of his grand project of the transvaluation of all values. I will
problematize humanism with respect to the Nietzschean notions of will to
power, nihilism, and evaluative thinking in an attempt to show its shortcomings
from a Nietzschean perspective. Then, I will attempt to offer a reading of
Nietzsche’s reinterpretation of nature in terms of the will to power as a radical
multiplicity that exceeds humanistic interpretations and investigate Nietzsche’s
conception of the human being with respect to his physiological and
genealogical analyses that emphasize the human being as a multiplicity of
unconscious drives. Finally, I will discuss to what extent Nietzsche’s critique of
humanism, which consists in the deanthropomorphization of nature and the
renaturalization of human being, constitutes an overcoming of humanism.