Antisocial Commonly known as Sociopaths,
people with antisocial disorder lack any
remorse for the things they have caused. You
have a constant pattern of disregard for
other people's rights and emotions. You feel
people that are weak deserve being treated
cruely and enjoy exploiting or abusing them.
Repeatedly performing aggresive and socially
hostile acts is like an adrenaline rush for
you. You have a reckless disregard for others
and are prone to being manipulative,
deceitful and imtimidating.
Friedrich Nietzsche
(1844-1900)
Life and Works
. . Transvaluation
. . Slave Morality
Bibliography
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Born the son of a Lutheran pastor in Röcken, Saxony, Friedrich Nietzsche was raised by female relatives after his father's death in 1849. He quickly abandoned his initial pursuit of theology in order to specialize in philology at Bonn and Leipzig, where he studied with Friedrich Ritschl. Nietzsche's mastery of classical literature led to an early academic appointment at Basel and the publication of Die Geburt der Tragödie aus dem Geiste der Musik (The Birth of Tragedy) (1872), with its distinction between Apollonian and Dionysian cultures. When ill health forced an early end to his teaching career, Nietzsche began to produce the less scholarly, quasi-philosophical, and anti-religious works for which he is now best known, including Menschliches, allzumenschliches (Human, All Too Human) (1878), Also Sprach Zarathustra (Thus Spoke Zarathustra) (1883), Die Fröhliche Wissenschaft (The Gay Science) (1882), and Jenseits von Gut und Böse (Beyond Good and Evil) (1886). Nietzsche never recovered from a serious physical and mental collapse he suffered in 1889; his Der Wille zur Macht (Will to Power) (1901) and the autobiographical Ecce Homo (Ecce Homo) (1908) were published posthumously.
Nietzsche sharply criticized the Greek tradition's over-emphasis on reason in his Die Götzendämmerung (Twilight of the Idols) (1889). Reliance on abstract concepts in a quest for absolute truth, he supposed, is merely a symptom of the degenerate personalities of philosophers like Socrates. From this Nietzsche concluded that traditional philosophy and religion are both erroneous and harmful for human life; they enervate and degrade our native capacity for achievement.
Progress beyond the stultifying influence of philosophy, then, requires a thorough "revaluation of values." In Zur Geneologie der Moral (On the Genealogy of Morals) (1887) Nietzsche bitterly decried the slave morality enforced by social sanctions and religious guilt. Only rare, superior individuals—the noble ones, or Übermenschen—can rise above all moral distinctions to achieve a heroic life of truly human worth
what is love without trust?
why is there love
no1 can trust eachother
what is trust?
what is friendship?
what is family?
what is bonding with eachother?
does any1 know?
what is love?
what is love without trust?
if u do not have trust in a relationship
then you have no love
in which u have nothing
so next time u think of love
ask yourself
"what is love without trust?"
Twice i tried to kill myself
I cut myself and bled
I cursed aloud, and cried real hard
And wished that i was dead
I talked to stacks of doctors
told my story, they took my meds
And i spent 7 long days in 3 diffrent hospital beds
They said i had depression
And reckoned i had low selfesteem
But I've lernt so much since then
I feel like i've woke from a horrible dream
I'll never cut myself again
I know its just not worth it
And even though i cry sometimes
I know that i'll get through it
Life is hard, yeah i agree
But you shouldn't have to die
I know wat its like, I've been there
I'm telling the truth, no lie
You're so much better than people would have you think
And if you hit rock bottom
Don't ever do drugs, or drink
Just pick up the phone and call me
Cause ill always
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