
The Antichrist (Combray Media Edition)
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Narrado por:
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Joseph Kent
The Antichrist is a book by the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, originally published in 1895. The reference to the Antichrist is not intended to refer to the biblical Antichrist but is rather an attack on the slave morality and apathy of Western Christianity.
Nietzsche's basic claim is that Christianity is a poisoner of western culture and perversion of the words of and practice of Jesus. In this light, the provocative title is mainly expressing Nietzsche's animus toward Christianity, as such.
In this book, Nietzsche is very critical of institutionalized religion and its priest class, from which he himself was descended. The majority of the book is a systematic, logical, and detailed attack upon the interpretations of Christ's words by St. Paul and those who followed him.
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I was given this free review copy audio book at my request and have voluntarily left this review.
An Interesting Listen
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I was given this free review copy audiobook at my request and have voluntarily left this review.
Interesting take, but was difficult for me...
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Good Value
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I've been trying to read my way through Nietzche's works for a while now, and audiobooks have been the perfect format through which to do so. The Antichrist is one of Nietzche's best works, and I very much enjoyed this rendition of it.
One minor qualm is the narrator's tonal inflections. He consistently ends every sentence with a high note. That said, I adapted quickly and enjoyed the clear narration and excellent content.
Wonderful book!
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I was given this free review copy audiobook at my request and have voluntarily left this review
great
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Bad recording
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well
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He makes some arguments against the Church that may have some validity at the time (although I think some of them might have been issues at writing that aren’t now) but then translates those issues to be issues with Christianity. He confused the Church of flawed people with the doctrine of Christianity. He misrepresents the beliefs, history, teaching of Christianity and then knocks down those wrong beliefs with his unfounded statements.
Her states 'Divine Providence, which every third man in 'educated Germany' still believes in, is so strong an argument against God that it would be impossible to think of a stronger. And in any case it is an argument against Germans!'. Prior to this he gives some extreme examples (but even with examples he doesn't actually reason out how they are 'wrong', just that he thinks it is silly) that were either very strange beliefs/teaching of the times, or they are complete misunderstandings of what Christianity believes. So the statement is either very dated or a poor strawman,
I'll give one more example of issues in the writing: the claim that Christianity was ‘mortally hostile to the 'wisdom of this world', which means science’. Basically saying that Christianity is anti-science. This is one claim that gets trotted out even now, with no understanding of Christian belief (which is not anti-science at all) or history (where the belief in the ordered nature of the world – ordered by God – was the basis for much of the scientific revolution of the enlightenment period. It was only because people believed God has made an ordered, logical, understandable world was things like the scientific method believed to actually produce ordered, logical, repeatable results). Not to mention that he hasn’t understood the original verse from Paul about ‘wisdom of the world’ correctly anyway – it is not talking about science to begin with. So the whole ‘anti-science’ argument here is a strawman to begin with.
Oh, and just to add to the ick factor a lot of Nietzsche’s problems and claims against Christianity come from the whole ‘Jewishness’ of it. The text here (as a product of its time) is rather anti-Semitic.
Maybe the scrambled, disjointed, unsupported arguments in this book have something to do with the fact that this was his last work produced before he had a psychotic break and spent the rest of his life in an asylum.
Narration by Joseph Kent is good. It is a little quicker paced, but not too much so. He is highly energetic in his reading, almost over-annunciating some words, which may actually be a good thing as it keeps your attention. Generally he is easy to listen to and follow. A good reading.
I was given this free review copy audiobook at my request and have voluntarily left this review.
I expected more from Nietzsche
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Awful narration
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