The Philosophy Channel

Nietzsche and Tzimtzum


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In this episode I explore the relationship between Nietzsche’s idea of the death of God and the Kabbalistic concept of tzimtzum. Nietzsche’s proclamation, dramatized in The Gay Science, is not a literal claim but a cultural diagnosis: the Christian God no longer commands belief in modern Europe, leading to the collapse of morality and meaning. This absence is both catastrophic, plunging humanity into nihilism, and liberating, forcing humans to take responsibility for creating new values.

By contrast, tzimtzum describes God’s withdrawal of His infinite presence to make space for creation. This absence is not destruction but concealment, allowing finite existence, human freedom, and moral responsibility. It frames absence as a generative act, the womb of creation.

Placed in dialogue, the two ideas reveal striking parallels. Both see divine absence as the condition for human freedom and creativity. Nietzsche’s death of God is cultural, while tzimtzum’s withdrawal is metaphysical, yet both shift responsibility to humanity — Nietzsche through the revaluation of values, Kabbalah through tikkun olam. Both also share a logic of negation: nihilism as the abyss that forces new creation, and the void as the generative space of existence.

Ultimately, Nietzsche can be read as diagnosing the cultural experience of tzimtzum without its theological framework. Where Kabbalah sees God’s withdrawal as purposeful, Nietzsche sees it as catastrophic, but both converge on the insight that absence is not merely loss. It is the paradoxical ground of freedom and creativity, challenging humanity to live courageously, create meaning, and repair the world in the space left open.











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"Dare to use your own reason" - Immanuel Kant
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The Philosophy ChannelBy Robbert Veen