Friedrich W. Nietzsche uses the character of Zarathustra - founder of his own religion around the 6th century BC in the Middle East - to give voice to this powerful and unique work, which shows the most important approaches of the German philosopher: the concept of the superman, the death of God, the will to power and the myth of eternal return. In it, he seeks a new definition of man and strives to transmit it in the figure of Zarathustra, who seeks to revolutionize the norm of universal validity that determines what is good and what is bad. With his speech he proposes to change the law imposed by a religion and a society in decline, presenting a unifying image of what the new times demand. Thus Spoke Zarathustra is considered by some critics to be the counterfigure of the Bible, as it dictates a "new table" of values that, in honor of the Dionysian impulse of life, overthrows the ...read more