Nietzsche Horse

Dark Horse
Dark Horse
Two girlsTwo lives apartTwo girlsBoth traumatized. Adrianne Perez was once a girl who had everything a girl could ever ask for. Perfect life and perfect parents. Until her life turned around one night and she believes it's all her fault.Rebecca Jones has never known peace. A psychotic maniac has been on her tail since she was fourteen. She has lost everything. Innocence, trust, peace and her father. After being kidnapped by him, she barely escapes and her captor is never found and her story slowly fades away. Now, just when she thinks she's free from him, things start going wrong and soon, the lives of all she holds dear are in danger. Her best guess is that her captor is after her, but what if he isn't?An unlikely friendship blossoms between the two girls and together they unravel a dark, evil secret buried in the bowels of their little town. Becca's stalker is after her and only Adrianne can save her.
10
13 Chapters
HIS DARK HORSE
HIS DARK HORSE
Guns, katanas, arrows, bows, bullets, and strings were her ideal instrument of choice. While the youth her age was in a classroom studying, she was busy raising a child and training to be an assassin. Albeit having it rough almost all her life, she was a cheerful secretary to one of the most eligible bachelor CEO in town by day and a deadly assassin by night. Things were going smoothly for a while until she fell for the CEO. Xander was a man known for his charm and his wealth. Women loved his physique and wealth. Men were jealous of his gains in life. ................ Gunshots rang in the once peacefully chaotic room: A tremendous change from the blazing and super hype partying atmosphere to a battlefield. Alexander got lost in his mind for a few minutes. Shortly after, the nightmare from the past took the reign over his conscious mind. The momentary lapse in focus almost cost him his life: as a bullet came flying towards him. "Nooo...." came a familiar feminine voice running towards his form and then .....
Not enough ratings
26 Chapters
To tame the wild horse
To tame the wild horse
Being the daughter of a mafia, Grusha Aslanov didn't lead the typical luxury, spoiled life. Not when she was accused of her mother's death which made her hate herself more than her family did. She lived with the worst emotion one could ever have. Regret. She regretted her birth. She was not satisfied with the mental damage her mother's death caused as she thought she deserved a worse punishment. That is why she didn't even protest when her brother and father abused her every day and night until her body went numb because she thought she deserved it. She had no feelings, no emotions, nothing. She was a numb body with scars on her that each contained a tragic tale. She was a living death until the devil takes interest in unfolding her every story. Mature content warning!!! Triger warnings: physical abuse, mention of blood, mention of self harming, torture!!!
10
65 Chapters
Fate's Pawn: Four Horsemen
Fate's Pawn: Four Horsemen
Holly is on the run, she knows the Chasers track her by night. To stay ahead of them she needs to push herself far away from where she has been resting.Her cabbit companion is at her side willing to help, but things get strange when a new person arrives and tells Holly that she has an important fate. Holly takes this news in stride until she finds out the Chasers have been sent to deliver her to one of the four horsemen.Fortunately for Holly, her spirit seems to draw some of the Chasers to her side, but will her kind spirit be enough when all four horsemen descend to try to capture her, and even worse when the King of Hell himself sets his sights on her?
9.5
46 Chapters
Beautiful Disaster
Beautiful Disaster
What does the underboss of an infamous crime family have in common with a spirited primary school teacher? Absolutely nothing, except a marriage of convenience, of course. When Lionel Tyson defaults on a gambling debt and offers his most prized possession as collateral, Austin Hawthorne is underwhelmed. But in desperate need of a housekeeper and permanent child minder, he knows he’d be an idiot to look a gift horse in the mouth. So, against his better judgement, he accepts an offer he should absolutely refuse. Marybeth Tyson is horrified to learn that not only is her father wanted by loan sharks, but he has also sold her off to a mafia boss. Bound by duty and pushed by guilt, she agrees to give Austin Hawthorne one year of her life, despite common sense screaming at her to run the other way. After all, how hard can pretending to be madly in love with someone be? It’s all fun and games until play pretend becomes all too real, and an earth-shattering secret from Austin’s past comes to light, threatening to destroy his second chance at love with his dogged pursuit for answers. Betrayal, especially at the hands of his older brother Blake and long-time friend, Andrei Ivanov, is a bitter pill to swallow for Austin, and letting them off scot-free is not an option. Driven by his unquenchable thirst for revenge, Austin will stop at nothing to get to the truth, even if it means destroying decade-old friendships and fragile ties to The Corporation. 2022 Val Sims. All rights reserved. No part of this novel may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the author and publishers.
9.9
300 Chapters
The Destroyer
The Destroyer
Androkles: I am Lord Androkles, heir of Ares and son of former Lord Zeus. I've spent a lifetime in the shadow of a prophecy told long ago. All of Olympus believes I am the harbinger of their doom, The Destroyer. Is my fate set in stone? It always felt like it until I met her. Ismene-Eirene: I am Ismene-Eirene, daughter of a prominent horse breeder of House Poseidon. My life has been spent feeling like a bird in a cage. I thought nothing could ever free me from that cage. A night of chaos and bloodshed led me to The Destroyer. Can he destroy this cage?
10
67 Chapters

What Nietzsche Quotes Are Best For Motivational Posters?

5 Answers2025-09-12 20:34:52

If you're after bold, poster-ready Nietzsche lines, I tend to reach for the blunt aphorisms that double as rallying cries. My top three that always look good on a wall are: 'That which does not kill us makes us stronger.' (from 'Twilight of the Idols'), 'Become who you are.' (you'll find echoes of it across 'Thus Spoke Zarathustra' and his notebooks), and 'He who has a why to live can bear almost any how.' These cut straight to motivation without sounding preachy.

Design-wise, I like pairing the rawness of Nietzsche with clean typography: heavy sans-serif for the first, a script or monoline for 'Become who you are' to give it an intimate feel, and a smaller serif caption for the 'why/how' line so it reads like a private mantra. I also think context matters — a plain black-and-white print feels stoic and serious, while a textured background or subtle color gradient turns the same quote into something hopeful rather than combative. Personally, seeing those lines above my desk pushes me to accept struggle as part of growth, which is strangely uplifting.

How Has Young Nietzsche Been Represented In Modern Media?

5 Answers2025-10-13 23:12:47

it's fascinating to see him reinterpreted. For instance, take the anime 'KonoSuba.' Kazuma, the protagonist, embodies a youthful Nietzschean spirit—his constant struggle against an absurd world and his desire for self-improvement resonate with Nietzsche's ideas. The humor in the series often underscores this battle, creating a blend of philosophy and comedy that feels fresh. I found his perspective particularly intriguing in the context of video games; the main characters often push against societal norms, mirroring Nietzsche's rebellious philosophy. You can really feel a connection to that untamed youth—the sense of frustration, the search for meaning, all wrapped up in hilarious quests.

Another interesting adaptation is seen in the graphic novel scene. Works like 'Berserk' reflect Nietzschean themes, especially through the character of Guts, whose struggle against destiny and the weight of his choices evokes the idea of 'becoming who you are.' At the same time, these modern titles sometimes simplify Nietzsche's complex ideas, turning them into a trope rather than exploring their richness. Still, the creativity of bringing such legendary thinkers into contemporary stories keeps their philosophy alive and accessible, and just makes me want to dig deeper into what they offer us today.

What Is White Horse Black Nights About?

4 Answers2025-10-17 13:24:19

I fell into 'White Horse Black Nights' the way you fall into a dark alley with a neon sign — hesitant at first, then unable to look away. It's a story that mixes folktale echoes with hard-boiled urban noir: a lone protagonist wandering a city where night stretches like ink and a mysterious white horse appears in alleys and rooftops. The plot threads a detective-like search for lost memories, a string of quiet miracles, and a few brutal revelations about who the protagonist used to be. Characters are shaded rather than bright — a bar singer with a past, a crooked official who still keeps small kindnesses, and the horse, which feels more like a symbol than a literal animal.

Stylistically, the book leans into mood over exposition. Scenes are described with sensory precision — rain on iron, the metallic taste of fear, neon reflecting in puddles — and there are intentional gaps where the reader fills in the blanks. The narrative structure skips time, drops in dreams, and lets supernatural ambiguity sit beside mundane cruelty. For me, that mix makes it linger: I find myself thinking about a single line or image hours later, like a melody I can't stop humming. Overall, it's melancholic, strangely hopeful, and beautifully haunted by memory.

Which Anime Soundtrack Evokes Overman Nietzsche Concepts Best?

3 Answers2025-09-07 11:23:29

When music and philosophy tangle in my head, the soundtrack I reach for most is the one from 'Berserk' — especially the 1997 series material and Susumu Hirasawa's later contributions. There's something about Hirasawa's mix of electronic pulses, ritualistic chanting, and fractured melodies that feels like a soundtrack for someone trying to break every chain around them. Nietzsche's idea of the Übermensch isn't just brute strength; it's an aesthetic, a reinvention of values after catastrophe. Hirasawa's tracks sound like that reinvention — beautiful, impulsive, and weirdly triumphant in a landscape that has been burned down.

I often put on 'Forces' or the darker, more ambient pieces when I'm sketching characters or revisiting themes of self-overcoming in fiction. The music frames struggle as something almost sacred: pain becomes a forge, solitude becomes discipline. Compared to more orchestral or cinematic scores, this OST feels intimate and abrasive at once, which to me maps onto Nietzsche's push to create meaning in the aftermath of nihilism. If you want a soundtrack that smells of scorched earth and possibility, 'Berserk' is the place to start; others like 'Akira' or 'Ghost in the Shell' lean into the apocalyptic and the metaphysical, but Hirasawa nails that raw, trembling insistence to become more than you were.

Honestly, sometimes I play it while reading passages from 'Thus Spoke Zarathustra' and laugh at how perfectly a synth stab can underline Zarathustra's contempt for the herd — it's music that makes you want to stop apologizing for your ambitions.

What Merchandise Features Overman Nietzsche Iconography Legally?

3 Answers2025-09-07 14:59:11

Okay, quick confession: I get a little giddy hunting down legit merch, so this question made me smile. If you want legally produced items that feature 'Overman Nietzsche' iconography, the safest bet is official licensed merchandise sold through the series' rights holders or their authorized retailers. That includes things like scale figures, model kits, art prints, t-shirts, enamel pins, posters, phone cases, and special edition Blu-rays/DVDs that reproduce the mecha art or logo under license. Official product pages will typically carry copyright notices (© or ®) and list the production company, studio, or licensee—those little lines are your best proof that something’s aboveboard.

Another solid route is licensed collaborations and limited-run collabs with trusted brands: think apparel lines, premium watch or bag collaborations, and sanctioned convention exclusives run by the licensor. Licensed video game tie-ins, tabletop releases, and soundtrack albums also legally use the iconography when they're produced under contract. On the flip side, be wary of mass-market knockoffs and unauthorized reproductions on generic marketplaces; they often lack the copyright markings and come from sellers who won’t provide licensing info.

If you want to create or sell something yourself, you either need explicit permission from the IP owner or to stick to wholly original designs inspired by themes rather than copying specific visual elements. In Japan there's also a large doujin culture where fan goods circulate—it's culturally tolerated in many circles but still technically derivative unless the rights holder permits it. Personally I browse official store feeds and collector forums, check packaging for © lines, and avoid anything that looks too bootleggy. It keeps my shelves legit and my conscience clear.

Is Will To Power By Nietzsche A Complete Work Or Fragments?

3 Answers2025-09-04 02:00:45

I get a little giddy talking about Nietzsche like this, because it's one of those topics that sits between philosophy and literary detective work.

'The Will to Power' is not a finished book Nietzsche himself prepared for publication — it's a posthumous compilation of his notebooks. After Nietzsche's collapse in 1889, his unpublished notes (the Nachlass) were gathered and organized by editors, most famously his sister Elisabeth and a circle of associates, into a volume titled 'Der Wille zur Macht' and released in 1901. The tricky part is that Nietzsche wrote these entries across several years (roughly 1883–1888) as aphorisms, drafts, and sketches rather than as a continuous, polished treatise.

Because of that editorial assembly, many scholars treat 'The Will to Power' as fragments arranged to form a supposed systematic work — a construction that Nietzsche never finalized. If you want a clearer picture of his developed positions, it's better to read his published books like 'Beyond Good and Evil' or 'On the Genealogy of Morals', and then dip into the notebooks with a critical edition (Colli and Montinari’s scholarship is a good reference) to see how his thoughts moved and mutated. Personally, I like reading the notebooks like director's cut extras: they reveal raw impulses and half-formed ideas that can feel electrifying, but they shouldn't be taken as a single finished manifesto.

What Passages Make Will To Power By Nietzsche Controversial?

3 Answers2025-09-04 14:52:34

I get energized thinking about how controversial 'The Will to Power' can be, because a lot of the friction comes from a few intertwined things: the rawness of Nietzsche's fragments, the editorial choices that shaped the book we know, and passages that read like a manifesto for elites. When I first dug into those notebooks, what jumped out were repeated endorsements of a kind of aristocratic ideal — lines where Nietzsche insists that the 'noble' spirit creates values and that 'mass' morality (what he calls slave morality) stifles life. Those aphoristic provocations, especially where pity and equality are castigated as life-denying, feel blunt and can be seized by political movements that want a permission slip for elitism or cruelty.

On top of that, there are passages where Nietzsche frames the world through a metaphysical 'will to power' — not merely ambition but an interpretive key that replaces more familiar causal explanations. That move unsettles philosophers: some read it as a poetic psychological insight, others as an ontological claim that risks justifying domination. Then there's the ugly historical layer: his sister's role in assembling and sometimes reshaping the notebooks into 'The Will to Power' created distortions. Lines that look like praise for strength and hierarchy were cherry-picked and amplified by ideologues in the 20th century, even though Nietzsche himself attacked antisemitism and vulgar nationalism.

What I keep returning to is nuance — many controversial passages are fragments, sometimes aphoristic provocations rather than finalized doctrines. But read apart from context, they can sound absolute and dangerous. For me, that tension — brilliant but risky aphorism meets messy editorial history — is the core of why 'The Will to Power' sparks such heated debate and why you should read it alongside reliable commentaries.

What Are The Main Themes In Nietzsche Untimely Meditations?

4 Answers2025-09-04 21:29:47

Diving into 'Untimely Meditations' felt like opening a set of wake-up calls: Nietzsche is constantly pushing against complacency. The most obvious theme is his attack on historicism — not history itself, but the way people use history as an idol that suffocates life. In 'On the Uses and Disadvantages of History for Life' he argues that history must serve living beings, not the other way around; too much reverence for the past makes us sickly and inert.

Beyond that, there's a cultural critique that keeps bubbling up. Nietzsche wants a renewal of spirit: he critiques modern culture, the hollow notions of progress and the institutionalized mediocrity of the academy, and calls for creators, educators, and artists who revive tragic health and strength. He praises figures like Schopenhauer as provocations for individual formation in 'Schopenhauer as Educator'. The meditations also explore how art and philosophical character can challenge the prevailing social taste. Reading it, I kept picturing debates about taste and education in cafes and lecture halls, where Nietzsche's impatience is almost infectious. It's polemical, sometimes abrasive, but it molds into a plea for life-affirming culture rather than sterile historical scholarship.

How Did Nietzsche Untimely Meditations Influence Modern Thinkers?

4 Answers2025-09-04 20:49:40

I get a little excited every time I think about how 'Untimely Meditations' pokes holes in the comfortable stories we tell about progress. When I read Nietzsche now, I’m not trying to worship a prophet or to take down an idol; I’m there for the jolt. Those essays — especially 'Schopenhauer as Educator' and 'David Strauss: the Confessor and the Writer' — feel like a battery that recharges skepticism, and modern thinkers have used that charge in surprising ways.

At first glance, the essays look like philological crankiness and cultural criticism, but they plant seeds for bigger moves: questioning historical teleology, investigating the motives behind our values, and refusing the assumption that the modern age is obviously superior. Foucault picked up the genealogical impulse, Heidegger wrestled with the implications for being and historicity, and writers across disciplines found in Nietzsche a permission to be iconoclastic. I often pair a reread of 'Untimely Meditations' with a stroll through essays by Walter Benjamin or Adorno; you can see how the tone — often caustic, always probing — ripples out.

If you're coming from pop culture, think of it like a game that flips the main quest on its head: the reward for questioning is not a new weapon but a new map. It’s provocative and sometimes infuriating, but I usually finish feeling more alert and less willing to accept easy narratives about who we've become.

Which Audiobook Narrators Read Nietzsche Untimely Meditations Best?

4 Answers2025-09-04 07:09:07

If you're hunting for a great listening experience of 'Untimely Meditations', I tend to judge narrators by three things: clarity, restraint, and a feel for Nietzsche's barbed humor. I love a voice that treats these essays like a conversation rather than a performance — Nietzsche is polemical, sure, but the essays reward a narrator who lets the irony sit. In my ears that means steady pacing, clean diction for German names and philosophical terms, and a low tendency to ham up dramatic moments.

Practically, I look for editions that pair a dependable translation (Walter Kaufmann or R. J. Hollingdale are my go-tos) with a solid studio production — that usually means Audible or a Naxos release. Librivox volunteer readings can be charming and free, but expect variable quality between essays. My favorite listening trick is to sample 10–15 minutes: if the narrator makes me want to pause and chew on a paragraph, that's a winner. Otherwise I switch to another edition and try again.

Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status