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Whoever gives advice to a sick person acquires a feeling of superiority over him, whether the advice be accepted or rejected.
Friedrich Nietzsche
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Friedrich Nietzsche
Age: 55 †
Born: 1844
Born: October 15
Died: 1900
Died: August 25
Author
Classical Philologist
Classical Scholar
Composer
Music Critic
Pedagogue
Philologist
Philosopher
Poet
University Teacher
Writer
Frîdrîk Nîtşe
Fridrih Wilhelm Niče
Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche
Federico Nietzsche
Frédéric Nietzsche
Friederich Nietzsche
Fryderyk Nietzsche
Fridrikh Nitche
Frederic Nietzsche
Phreiderikos Nitse
Feeling
Superiority
Whether
Rejected
Feelings
Whoever
Persons
Acquire
Person
Accepted
Giving
Sick
Advice
Gives
Acquires
More quotes by Friedrich Nietzsche
The devotion of the greatest is to encounter risk and danger, and play dice for death.
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if we possess a why of life we can put up with almost any how.
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Winter, a bad guest, sitteth with me at home blue are my hands with his friendly handshaking
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Every man is a creative cause of what happens, a primum mobile with an original movement.
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When somebody dies we usually need reasons for consolation, not so much to alleviate our pain as to excuse ourselves for so readily feeling consoled.
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The gilded sheath of pity sometimes covers the dagger of envy.
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Whoever writes in blood and aphorisms wants not to be learned but to be learned by heart.
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Christians call it faith ... I call it the herd.
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The man who sees little always sees less than there is to see the man who hears badly always hears something more than there is to hear.
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Posthumous men-myself, for example-are not as well understood as timely ones, but we are listened to better. More precisely: we are never understood-hence our authority.
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Socrates and Plato are right: whatever man does he always does well, that is, he does that which seems to him good (useful) according to the degree of his intellect, the particular standard of his reasonableness.
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A very popular error: having the courage of one's convictions rather it is a matter of having the courage for an attack on one's convictions.
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In order for once to get a glimpse of our European morality from a distance, in order to compare it with other earlier or future moralities, one must do as the traveller who wants to know the height of the towers of a city: he leaves the city.
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You say it is the good cause that hallows even war? I say unto you: it is the good war that hallows any cause.
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Moral sensibilities are nowadays at such cross-purposes that to one man a morality is proved by its utility, while to another its utility refutes it.
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You implanted your highest goal into the heart of those passions: then they became your virtues and joys.
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Rendering oneself unarmed when one had been the best-armed, out of a height of feeling-that is the means to real peace, which must always rest on a peace of mind.
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If you know the why, you can live any how.
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Sometimes it just takes stronger eyeglasses to cure those who are in love--and someone with the ability to imagine a face or a figure twenty years older might perhaps pass through life quite undisturbed.
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The lie is a condition of life.
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