|
41.
|
New Nietzsche Studies:
Volume >
10 >
Issue: 3/4
Note on Subscriptions
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
introduction |
42.
|
New Nietzsche Studies:
Volume >
10 >
Issue: 1/2
Babette Babich
Reading Nietzsche’s The Birth of Tragedy
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
nietzsche on tragedy |
43.
|
New Nietzsche Studies:
Volume >
10 >
Issue: 1/2
Friedrich Nietzsche
The Birth of Tragic Thought
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
44.
|
New Nietzsche Studies:
Volume >
10 >
Issue: 1/2
Günter Wohlfart
Nietzsche and the Birth of Tragedy
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
45.
|
New Nietzsche Studies:
Volume >
10 >
Issue: 1/2
David Rapport Lachterman
Nietzsche and the Homeric Question
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
46.
|
New Nietzsche Studies:
Volume >
10 >
Issue: 1/2
David Blair Allison
Nietzsche’s Birth of Tragedy
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
rhythm and the lyric subject |
47.
|
New Nietzsche Studies:
Volume >
10 >
Issue: 1/2
Friedrich Nietzsche
On the Theory of Quantitifying Rhythm
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
48.
|
New Nietzsche Studies:
Volume >
10 >
Issue: 1/2
Angèle Kremer-Marietti
Rhythm and Rhetoric in Nietzsche
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
49.
|
New Nietzsche Studies:
Volume >
10 >
Issue: 1/2
Babette Babich
Nietzsche’s Archilochus and the Lyric Subject
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
music & words — deleuze & dionysus |
50.
|
New Nietzsche Studies:
Volume >
10 >
Issue: 1/2
Friedrich Nietzsche
Music and Words
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
51.
|
New Nietzsche Studies:
Volume >
10 >
Issue: 1/2
David Blair Allison
On Nietzsche’s Music and Words
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
52.
|
New Nietzsche Studies:
Volume >
10 >
Issue: 1/2
Christoph Cox
Nietzsche, Dionysus, and the Virtual
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
in memoriam |
53.
|
New Nietzsche Studies:
Volume >
10 >
Issue: 1/2
David Blair Allison
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
54.
|
New Nietzsche Studies:
Volume >
10 >
Issue: 1/2
Alphonso Lingis, Penn State, Emeritus
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
55.
|
New Nietzsche Studies:
Volume >
10 >
Issue: 1/2
Tracy Burr Strong, UCSD, Emeritus / Southampton, UK
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
56.
|
New Nietzsche Studies:
Volume >
10 >
Issue: 1/2
Babette Babich, Fordham, NYC / Humboldt University, Berlin
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
57.
|
New Nietzsche Studies:
Volume >
10 >
Issue: 1/2
Anne Freire Ashbaugh, Towson University/Rutgers University
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
|
58.
|
New Nietzsche Studies:
Volume >
10 >
Issue: 1/2
notes on contributors...
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
economy and psychology |
59.
|
New Nietzsche Studies:
Volume >
9 >
Issue: 3/4
Erik S. Reinert, Hugo Reinert
Creative Destruction in Economics
abstract |
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
This paper argues that the idea of creative destruction enters the social sciences by way of Friedrich Nietzsche. The term itself is first used by German economist Werner Sombart, who openly acknowledges the influence of Nietzsche on his own economic theory. The roots of creative destruction are traced back to Indian philosophy, from where the idea entered the German literary and philosophical tradition. Understanding the origins and evolution of this key concept in evolutionary economics helps clarifying the contrasts between today’s standard mainstream economics and the Schumpeterian and evolutionary alternative.
|
|
|
60.
|
New Nietzsche Studies:
Volume >
9 >
Issue: 3/4
Eckhard Heftrich
The Limits of the Psychological Explanation of Nietzsche
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|