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In this episode of the Paradyme Podcast, we continue our reading of Beyond Good and Evil by Friedrich Nietzsche, focusing on aphorisms 275–278 from the chapter “What Is Noble?” 275 - 278This discussion examines Nietzsche’s insights into envy, fragility, hindsight, and self-concealment, including:Why people fixate on others’ flaws instead of recognizing greatnessHow envy reveals smallness of spiritWhy noble souls are more fragile than coarse onesHow loss affects refined individuals differently than hardened onesWhy wisdom almost always arrives too lateThe tragedy of learning the essential lesson only after the moment has passedThe need for masks, and why profound individuals rarely reveal themselvesNietzsche suggests that much of human behavior is driven by resentment, delayed understanding, and the inability to face depth, both in ourselves and in others. Rather than confronting greatness, people often retreat into criticism, concealment, and self-deception.This episode explores what it means to live with awareness of these truths, and the cost of refusing to do so.Connect With UsSpotify:https://open.spotify.com/show/6Ox9OW23KIzXnvSlPzfinpApple Podcast:https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/paradyme/id1584283909Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/paradymebrand/Twitter (X):https://twitter.com/prdmbrandSubscribe on YouTube:https://www.youtube.com/@ParadymeBrand/featured?sub_confirmation=1
By Paradyme3.7
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In this episode of the Paradyme Podcast, we continue our reading of Beyond Good and Evil by Friedrich Nietzsche, focusing on aphorisms 275–278 from the chapter “What Is Noble?” 275 - 278This discussion examines Nietzsche’s insights into envy, fragility, hindsight, and self-concealment, including:Why people fixate on others’ flaws instead of recognizing greatnessHow envy reveals smallness of spiritWhy noble souls are more fragile than coarse onesHow loss affects refined individuals differently than hardened onesWhy wisdom almost always arrives too lateThe tragedy of learning the essential lesson only after the moment has passedThe need for masks, and why profound individuals rarely reveal themselvesNietzsche suggests that much of human behavior is driven by resentment, delayed understanding, and the inability to face depth, both in ourselves and in others. Rather than confronting greatness, people often retreat into criticism, concealment, and self-deception.This episode explores what it means to live with awareness of these truths, and the cost of refusing to do so.Connect With UsSpotify:https://open.spotify.com/show/6Ox9OW23KIzXnvSlPzfinpApple Podcast:https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/paradyme/id1584283909Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/paradymebrand/Twitter (X):https://twitter.com/prdmbrandSubscribe on YouTube:https://www.youtube.com/@ParadymeBrand/featured?sub_confirmation=1