In 1872, Friedrich Nietzsche published The Birth of Tragedy out of the Spirit of Music. He later re-released it with a preface in 1886. Raymond Geuss and Ronald Speirs explain the book as “an attempt to use theses derived from Schopenhauer and Wagner (in conjunction with an interpretation of archaic Greece) to sketch a new form of tragic culture.”
Nietzsche wrote in The Antichrist that Christianity was a false religion of nothing but lies. But, he asked, Where do these lies come from? The Jews. He says Christianity is inherently Jewish, refers to the rabbi Paul, and says that Christianity is a Jewish plot to weaken the Europeans with a false sense of morality and guilt so they will submit to Christian/Jewish control.
He condemned the conventional antisemites of his day because they were still infected with Jewish values through Christianity.
He also said in section 1 or 2 of the Antichrist that the weak and the unfit should be exterminated.
Nietzsche wrote in The Antichrist that Christianity was a false religion of nothing but lies. But, he asked, Where do these lies come from? The Jews. He says Christianity is inherently Jewish, refers to the rabbi Paul, and says that Christianity is a Jewish plot to weaken the Europeans with a false sense of morality and guilt so they will submit to Christian/Jewish control.
He condemned the conventional antisemites of his day because they were still infected with Jewish values through Christianity.
He also said in section 1 or 2 of the Antichrist that the weak and the unfit should be exterminated.