New York: Cambridge University Press (
2019)
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BIBTEX
Abstract
Introduction
1 Précis
2 Methodology: Introducing digital humanities to the history of philosophy
2.1 Introduction
2.2 Core constructs
2.3 Operationalizing the constructs
2.4 Querying the Nietzsche Source
2.5 Cleaning the data
2.6 Visualizations and preliminary analysis
2.6.1 Visualization of the whole corpus
2.6.2 Book visualizations
2.7 Summary
Nietzsche’s Socio-Moral Framework
3 From instincts and drives to types
3.1 Introduction
3.2 The state of the art on drives, instincts, and types
3.2.1 Drives
3.2.2 Instincts
3.2.3 Types
3.3 The semantic neighborhood of drive, instinct, and type
3.4 A theory of (the relations among) instincts, drives, and types
3.4.1 Drives are act-directed rather than outcome-directed dispositions
3.4.2 The reflexive turn in Nietzsche’s drive psychology
3.4.3 Triggers of drive-displacement
3.4.4 Instincts are innate drives
3.4.5 Types are constellations of instincts and other drives
3.4.6 To what extent are types, instincts, and drives fixed?
3.5 Summary
4 From types to virtues
4.1 Introduction
4.2 The state of the art on virtues and values
4.2.1 Virtues
4.2.2 Values
4.3 The semantic neighborhood of virtue and value
4.4 On (the relations among) instincts, drives, types, values, virtues, and values
4.4.1 Virtues are well-calibrated drives
4.4.2 Nietzsche’s type-relative unity of virtue thesis
4.4.3 The type of the criminal
4.4.4 Nietzschean exemplarism and his ad hominem attacks
4.5 Summary
5 Socializing Nietzschean virtues
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Higher-order types
5.2.1 Social character construction
5.2.2 Reflexive character construction
5.3 Eponymous trait terms and Nietzschean summoning
5.3.1 Eponymous trait terms
5.3.2 Nietzschean summoning
5.4 Summary
Nietzschean virtues
6 Curiosity
6.1 Introduction
6.2 Curiosity in virtue epistemology
6.3 Curiosity and its affiliated emotions
6.4 Curiosity, perspectivism, and inquiry
6.5 Curiosity as a virtue
6.5.1 A preliminary characterization
6.5.2 Curiosity in the middle through late works
6.6 Summary
7 Courage
7.1 Introduction
7.2 Intellectual courage in contemporary virtue epistemology
7.3 Courage as a virtue
7.3.1 A preliminary characterization
7.3.2 Courage in the middle through late works
7.4 Summary
8 Pathos of distance
8.1 Introduction
8.2 Contempt and disgust in contemporary moral psychology
8.3 The semantic neighborhood of contempt, disgust, and the pathos of distance
8.4 Nietzsche on contempt
8.4.1 Spernere mundum
8.4.2 Spernere neminem
8.4.3 Spernere se ipsum
8.4.4 Spernere se sperni
8.4.5 Nietzsche aims to induce what he considers fitting contempt in receptive readers
8.5 Nietzsche on disgust
8.5.1 The use of disgust: detaching from an ideal
8.5.2 The danger of disgust
8.6 The pathos of distance
8.7 Prospects for a Nietzschean democratic ethos
8.8 Summary
9 Sense of humor
9.1 Introduction
9.2 The semantic neighborhood of laughter, humor, and comedy
9.3 The Nietzschean sense of humor and its functions
9.3.1 From episodic laughter to the sense of humor
9.3.2 Affirmation and inquiry
9.3.3 Negation and inquiry
9.3.4 Affiliation with like-minded inquirers
9.4 Summary
10 Solitude
10.1 Introduction
10.2 Solitude in virtue theory and Nietzsche scholarship
10.3 The semantic neighborhood of solitude
10.4 An account of Nietzschean solitude
10.5 Summary
Conclusion
11 Conscience & integrity
11.1 Introduction
11.2 Conscience and integrity in contemporary moral psychology and Nietzsche scholarship
11.2.1 Conscience and integrity in contemporary moral psychology
11.2.2 Conscience and integrity in Nietzsche commentary
11.3 The semantic neighborhood of conscience and integrity
11.4 Distinguishing conscience, good conscience, bad conscience, and intellectual conscience
11.4.1 Conscience
11.4.2 Good conscience
11.4.3 Bad conscience
11.4.4 Intellectual conscience and integrity
11.5 Summary
12 Prospectus
12.1 Future directions in moral psychology
12.2 Future directions in Nietzsche scholarship
12.3 Future directions in digital humanities and the history of philosophy