Banal Utopia or Tragic Recompense?

New Nietzsche Studies 5 (1-2):26-41 (2002)
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Abstract

What Nietzsche calls “the problem of science” concerns the place or value of science in the wider culture, what science does for or to culture, and to people who believe in its "truth." In framing this question, Nietzsche’s thought becomes a counterweight to a positivism that the philosophy of science has never entirely eliminated from its thinking. Not only is there is important continuity between Comte's original positivism and the later logical positivists; the assumptions about science which they share are precisely those Nietzsche questions.

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Barry Allen
McMaster University

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