Directors were Christopher Vaughan and John Barrett (not Frank Michaels).Directors were Christopher Vaughan and John Barrett (not Frank Michaels).Directors were Christopher Vaughan and John Barrett (not Frank Michaels).
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I've looked at Nietzsche from both sides now.
It's always good to see a different view of history and events and speculate through a different set of eyes. An economist would view this through an economic filter. The overt reasoning of this documentary is to view it from a philosophical standpoint. True this is a philosophical presentation but probably nothing resembling what the title would imply.
The presenter starts with a point-by-point reason why some revolutions succeed, and some do not. And then a point-by-point presentation of why the National Socialist German Workers' Party succeeded from its foundation in Germany in 1919 to its coming of dominance in 1933. It appears that due to time restrictions the focuses on a narrow set of events and descriptions leaving out the broader environment. The keyword appears as this is just a commentary that describes their philosophy as holistic socialism versus economic socialism.
So far, we have gone through general revolutions and a specific revolution which takes up the first half of the documentary time. As promised in the title we now move on to Nietzsche. The presenter (Stephen Ronald Craig Hicks is professor of philosophy at Rockford College) now speculates on the various philosophers and writers that some of the different revolutions were based on. And specifically, once again on the rise of the National Socialist German Workers' Party. The focus is promised appears to be on Nietzsche. The keyword once again appears. The presenter may or may not have taken Nietzsche had a context, but his purpose was to show that the National Socialist German Workers' Party where the people that took Nietzsche out of context.
Just a side note even though this is not the main thrust of the presentation Stephen Hicks paints a few pictures of how different people view religions like Judaism and Christianity. There is also a small comparison and contrast between fascism and socialism. Viewing this presentation, I may have overlooked a few things, however they were insignificant to the focus or purpose of this presentation.
This is a review so I have no intention of going step-by-step compare and contrast in soapbox style on what you will view here. I do suggest though that this is worth your time in viewing.
I have read some of Nietzsche. I have different translations of Mein Kampf. Oh yes, I have also read all the major writings of Ayn Rand. Strange this presenter has also written" Ayn Rand and Contemporary Business Ethics," now I wonder why (being a little facetious) the major points in this presentation from beginning to end are focused on the difference between individualism and collectivism. I suggest that the title of this presentation is just a way to lure you into this philosophy.
Do not forget to read the book to see what was missed ISBN: 097942707X Nietzsche and the Nazis Stephen R. C. Hicks (Author), Christopher Vaughan (Illustrator)
The presenter starts with a point-by-point reason why some revolutions succeed, and some do not. And then a point-by-point presentation of why the National Socialist German Workers' Party succeeded from its foundation in Germany in 1919 to its coming of dominance in 1933. It appears that due to time restrictions the focuses on a narrow set of events and descriptions leaving out the broader environment. The keyword appears as this is just a commentary that describes their philosophy as holistic socialism versus economic socialism.
So far, we have gone through general revolutions and a specific revolution which takes up the first half of the documentary time. As promised in the title we now move on to Nietzsche. The presenter (Stephen Ronald Craig Hicks is professor of philosophy at Rockford College) now speculates on the various philosophers and writers that some of the different revolutions were based on. And specifically, once again on the rise of the National Socialist German Workers' Party. The focus is promised appears to be on Nietzsche. The keyword once again appears. The presenter may or may not have taken Nietzsche had a context, but his purpose was to show that the National Socialist German Workers' Party where the people that took Nietzsche out of context.
Just a side note even though this is not the main thrust of the presentation Stephen Hicks paints a few pictures of how different people view religions like Judaism and Christianity. There is also a small comparison and contrast between fascism and socialism. Viewing this presentation, I may have overlooked a few things, however they were insignificant to the focus or purpose of this presentation.
This is a review so I have no intention of going step-by-step compare and contrast in soapbox style on what you will view here. I do suggest though that this is worth your time in viewing.
I have read some of Nietzsche. I have different translations of Mein Kampf. Oh yes, I have also read all the major writings of Ayn Rand. Strange this presenter has also written" Ayn Rand and Contemporary Business Ethics," now I wonder why (being a little facetious) the major points in this presentation from beginning to end are focused on the difference between individualism and collectivism. I suggest that the title of this presentation is just a way to lure you into this philosophy.
Do not forget to read the book to see what was missed ISBN: 097942707X Nietzsche and the Nazis Stephen R. C. Hicks (Author), Christopher Vaughan (Illustrator)
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- Bernie4444
- Jan 2, 2024
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- Budget
- $10,000 (estimated)
- Runtime2 hours 45 minutes
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- 1.33 : 1
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By what name was Nietzsche and the Nazis (2006) officially released in Canada in English?
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