Neitzsche and Jung aren't really "solutions" philosophers. They are just recognizing the German instinct as an abstraction that is distinct from, say, Jewish instinct, which, at the time was revolutionary. They tell you what a hammer is. But, what you build with it is out of scope of their work. And even then, they were too cutting edge to realize exactly what they were getting themselves into. So, to expect a "solution" from them is unreasonable.
Our job as Germans is to use Neitzsche's and Jung's and Darwin's and Nash's works to solve ourselves.
Master_Foo 0 points 1.3 years ago
Neitzsche and Jung aren't really "solutions" philosophers.
They are just recognizing the German instinct as an abstraction that is distinct from, say, Jewish instinct, which, at the time was revolutionary.
They tell you what a hammer is. But, what you build with it is out of scope of their work.
And even then, they were too cutting edge to realize exactly what they were getting themselves into.
So, to expect a "solution" from them is unreasonable.
Our job as Germans is to use Neitzsche's and Jung's and Darwin's and Nash's works to solve ourselves.