Title of article
The Nietzschean Verification of the Missing God and Steps to a Completest Self
Author/Authors
Hoxha ، Mirushe Ss. Cyril and Methodius University in Skopje
Pages
19
From page
49
To page
67
Abstract
This paper aims to present Friedrich Nietzsche’s critique of Christianity as a Western example that reconfirms the necessity for man’s inner development up to the stage of the Completest Self (nafsi safiyya). With the advent of Christianity and the resultant triumph of its “morality of slave” (1886, sec. 260), the “death of God” (1882) becomes the “fundamental event of Western history” and its “intrinsic law” so far (Heidegger 1977, 67). The central question is how the West shall return the lost God, and so answer adequately to the drive of the eternal return? Nietzsche’s answer is expressed within the concepts of the “death before death,” the “man of Greek tragedy,” the “nomad” (“traveler”), and the “overman,” while this paper identifies their essence in the teachings of Sufism. The “death before death” declared by Prophet Mohammad (s), the Sufi exercise Stop, the background of Sufi teaching, and the seven stages of nafs, including the Completest Self, are juxtaposed to the concepts of the German philosopher. It results that according to Nietzsche, what the West should bring from the state of absence to the state of presence is the summarizing truth of Sufism.
Keywords
“Death of God , ” Nihilism , “Death before Death , ” Sufism , Overman , Completest Self.
Journal title
Religious Inquiries
Serial Year
2016
Journal title
Religious Inquiries
Record number
2474849
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