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NOTES ON ETERNAL RETURN


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notes

definition

eternal return, the doctrine that the same events, occurring in the same sequence and involving the same things, have occurred infinitely many times in the past and will occur infinitely many times in the future. Attributed most notably to the Stoics and Nietzsche, the doctrine is antithetical to philosophical and religious viewpoints that claim that the world order is unique, contingent in part, and directed towards some goal. The Stoics interpret eternal return as the consequence of perpetual divine activity imposing exceptionless causal principles on the world in a supremely rational, providential way. The world, being the best possible, can only be repeated endlessly. The Stoics do not explain why the best world cannot be everlasting, making repetition unnecessary. It is not clear whether Nietzsche asserted eternal return as a cosmological doctrine or only as a thought experiment designed to confront one with the authenticity of one's life: would one affirm that life even if one were consigned to live it over again without end? On either interpretation, Nietzsche's version, like the Stoic version, stresses the inexorability and necessary interconnectedness of all things and events, although unlike the Stoic version, it rejects divine providence.

(The Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy)



references

Klossowski, Pierre

Nietzsche and the Vicious Circle.

Reviewed by Douglas Kellner.

Lowith, Karl

Nietzsche's Philosophy of the Eternal Recurrence of the Same.

Lukacher, Ned

Time-Fetishes: The Secret History of Eternal Recurrence. 1998.

Eliade, Mircea

Myth of the Eternal Return.

Nietzsche, Mircea

Myth of the Eternal Return.



urls

"Same-o, Same-o": Eternal Recurrence in Groundhog Day

An essay by David Lavery.



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