- Translator's Preface
- The Greek State
- The Greek Woman
- Music and Words
- Homer's Contest
- The Relation of Schopenhauer's Philosophy to a German Culture
- Philosophy during the Tragic Age of the Greeks, Part 1
- Philosophy during the Tragic Age of the Greeks, Part 2
- Philosophy during the Tragic Age of the Greeks, Part 3
- Philosophy during the Tragic Age of the Greeks, Part 4
- Philosophy during the Tragic Age of the Greeks, Part 5
- Philosophy during the Tragic Age of the Greeks, Part 6
- Of Truth and Falsity in their Ultramoral Sense
The essays contained in this volume treat of various subjects. With the exception of perhaps one we must consider all these papers as fragments. Written during the early Seventies, and intended mostly as prefaces, they are extremely interesting, since traces of Nietzsche's later tenets — like Slave and Master morality, the Superman — can be found everywhere. But they are also very valuable on account of the young philosopher's daring and able handling of difficult and abstruse subjects. "Truth and Falsity," and "The Greek Woman" are probably the two essays which will prove most attractive to the average reader. - from the Preface.
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