The claim that Nietzsche was aware of Buddhist, Vedic, or Eastern thought more generally is uncontroversial. However, any stronger claims about the sphere of influence remain niche in Nietzsche studies. Any non-Western flavors in Nietzsche’s writings are most often considered ornamental and wholly unnecessary in the quest to interpret what Nietzsche means. To the contrary, in Nietzsche and Buddhism: How One Becomes What One Is, Sarah Jacob argues that Nietzsche’s work is further illuminated when seen as an endeavor that seriously engages with Buddhist ontology, and that Nietzsche’s philosophy marks a paradigm shift in “Western” thought because of this encounter. Though the second half of this book offers a thorough comparative analysis between Nietzsche and Buddhism, its validity rests upon the often understated importance of Indian thought for German intellectuals prior to and during Nietzsche’s life. Indeed, the author argues that Nietzsche’s “philosophy of the future” should be recognized as a transcultural contribution to the history of ideas, one that has import for the perplexed global zeitgeist in the twenty-first century.
Sarah Jacob is associate professor of philosophy at Miami Dade College, Miami, Florida, USA.
ContentsAcknowledgmentsList of AbbreviationsA Note about Translations and Use of QuotesIntroductionPart I: The Historical ChaptersChapter 1: The Impact of the East on Early Nineteenth-Century German ThoughtChapter 2: The Impact of Buddhism on Schopenhauer and WagnerChapter 3: Nietzsche and Indian Thought Beyond Schopenhauer and WagnerPart II: The Comparative ChaptersChapter 4: How One Becomes What One Is: Impermanence and the Selfless SelfChapter 5: How One Becomes What One Is: Suffering, Desire, and Self-OvercomingChapter 6: How One Becomes What One Is: Honesty, Compassion, and Love of Thy NeighborChapter 7: How One Becomes What One Is: Zen and ZarathustraPostscriptBibliography
Nietzsche and Buddhism offers a structurally robust and philosophically sophisticated re-evaluation of Friedrich Nietzsche's project ... This definitive work compels a re-examination of traditional philosophical boundaries.