why did he hate stoics?

why did he hate stoics? i don't understand the difference between what he prescribes to people for life and what stoics say.
im a brainlet and want to be a contrarian towards all the npc's getting into watered down stoicism now.

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  1. 10 months ago
    Anonymous

    It's a special time of year whenever my fiancée has diarrhea. During the holiday season, when families come together to cherish the warmth and comfort of that year's memories and the promise and hope of the year to come, my fiancée consumes three blisters of laxatives containing 20 tablets each. For the next three days, I harvest her diarrhea in mason jars and she uses it as a base for her famous, hearty holiday stew. I can hardly wait for the holiday season to arrive - The laxatives rest peacefully atop the shelf in our cupboard waiting to be opened; the mason jars are in the garage, clear and clean. The soup pots clank and jingle, as if to also express anticipation for the gourmand thrill to come, as my fiancée prepares other dishes less sumptuous than our holiday treat. Thank you.

  2. 10 months ago
    Anonymous

    It's pretty explicitly stated in that one aphorism at the beginning of BGE. They're being dishonest with themselves when they state that their philosophy is based on nature rather than them projecting onto nature their own desires. "Every philosophy is a desire of the heart sifted and made abstract" or something.

  3. 10 months ago
    Anonymous

    Nietzsche on the passions and self-cultivation: contra the Stoics and Spinoza
    By Keith Ansell-Pearson

    https://www.researchgate.net/publication/357005175_Nietzsche_on_the_passions_and_self-cultivation_contra_the_Stoics_and_Spinoza

    >Although the literature on Nietzsche is now voluminous one area where there has surprisingly been very little research concerns Nietzsche on the passions. This essay aims to correct this neglect. My focus is on illuminating Nietzsche on the passions in relation to his primary teaching on self-cultivation. To illuminate his position, I focus attention on examining his relation to Stoic teaching on the passions. If for Nietzsche the Christian mind-set involves a disturbing pathological excess of feeling, the Stoic way of living results for him in a petrified of life devoid of movement and growth. After a consideration of his relation to Stoic teaching I then examine his relation to Spinoza on the emotions or affects. Whilst I acknowledge the affinities between the two thinkers and their criticisms of Stoic teaching, I maintain that it is an error to seek to construe Nietzsche and Spinoza as having an identical teaching on the passions. In the final section of the essay, I provide an appreciation of Nietzsche’s recommendation that instead of demonising the passions in the manner of the Christian psyche and its legacy, or extirpating our passions as recommended by the Stoics, we need to learn how to transform them into joys or delights.

  4. 10 months ago
    Anonymous

    Same reason he hates chrustgays: they are life-denying

    • 10 months ago
      Anonymous

      because stoics think everything is in its right possition because of natural-schematic-order, and Nietzsche thinks order has to be created and schematics is for slaves that don't create the order schematics replicate.

      this. He did like Seneca though. Moreso as a man than a philosopher

  5. 10 months ago
    Anonymous

    because stoics think everything is in its right possition because of natural-schematic-order, and Nietzsche thinks order has to be created and schematics is for slaves that don't create the order schematics replicate.

    • 10 months ago
      Anonymous

      >creates schematic used for literal millennia
      >SLAVES!!!!

  6. 10 months ago
    Anonymous

    >why did he hate stoics?
    If the stoics of the past are anything like today's internet stoics than I understand him. E-stoics are some of the cringiest and dumbest people you can find online.
    Also I recently stopped believing in freewill, there's too many outside factors beyond my command so I kind of understand stoicism but I also don't think there's absolutely no freedom so we must do what we can to improve whenever possible.

    • 10 months ago
      Anonymous

      >than
      It's usually the other way around misspelling this
      Congratulations, you're that special kind of stupid

      • 10 months ago
        Anonymous

        Found the braindead e-stoic projecting his stupidity on those who make typos.
        Stay dumb and stay mad.

  7. 10 months ago
    Anonymous

    I’ve really enjoyed Nietzsche and his works but sometimes the only type of man I can respect is the stoic. I’ve seen too many childish “men” who all they know is impotent rage at even the most minor things.

  8. 10 months ago
    Anonymous

    Because they're pussies. If Uncle Patrician tells little Marcus to take it up the ass, you take it and tell him how grateful you are in your little pillow diary. Frick you pussies, you'll be grateful for it
    Maybe actually read the Nietz., the explanation is in every fricking line. Love of life, not sufferance.

    • 10 months ago
      Anonymous

      Instead you should compose and perform an opera about the assrape that ends with your ritual suicide.

  9. 10 months ago
    Anonymous

    He doesnt hate them. He criticizes them for their lack of intellectual honesty in the opening pages of BGE, but he later in the same book calls himself and his followers "the last stoics". He takes a lot from the stoics: amor fati, the idea that perception defines our understanding of reality (perspectivism), the pathos of duty and responsibility, the ideas about self-control, hardness and yes, the ideal of living according to nature (even if nature is now understood as will to power).

  10. 10 months ago
    Anonymous

    From what I know about stoics and Neitzsche (which is a surface level grasping of their ideas without reading either in depth), one point of disagreement I believe is Neitzsche emphasizes his perceived importance of both feeling and acting on anger while the stoics urge people to resist anger, and not to act on it, for the benefit of themselves and others.

    • 10 months ago
      Anonymous

      Nietzsche doesn’t believe in acting like a moron, don’t get it twisted. Nietzsche is still about self control at the end of the day.

      • 10 months ago
        Anonymous

        Anger is a healthy emotion. If expressing your anger makes you look like a moron it's not the fault of the emotion.

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