Introduction to Nietzsche  

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-:There is a suggestion by Mario Praz in ''The Romantic Agony'' that what [[Blake]], [[De Sade]], [[Nietzsche]], [[Swinburne]], [[Dostoyevsky]], [[Gide]], essentially have in common is that they were all [[sadist]]s, sadism being at best a mere psychological quirk of certain personalities. But then it could well be that the kind of temperament here labelled 'sadistic' is the best equipped for the kind of insight that is at issue. --''Introduction to Nietzsche'', [[John S. Moore]], 1974+:There is a suggestion by [[Mario Praz]] in ''[[The Romantic Agony]]'' that what [[Blake]], [[De Sade]], [[Nietzsche]], [[Swinburne]], [[Dostoyevsky]], [[Gide]], essentially have in common is that they were all [[sadist]]s, sadism being at best a mere psychological quirk of certain personalities. But then it could well be that the kind of temperament here labelled 'sadistic' is the best equipped for the kind of insight that is at issue. --''Introduction to Nietzsche'', [[John S. Moore]], 1974
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There is a suggestion by Mario Praz in The Romantic Agony that what Blake, De Sade, Nietzsche, Swinburne, Dostoyevsky, Gide, essentially have in common is that they were all sadists, sadism being at best a mere psychological quirk of certain personalities. But then it could well be that the kind of temperament here labelled 'sadistic' is the best equipped for the kind of insight that is at issue. --Introduction to Nietzsche, John S. Moore, 1974




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