Übermensch is a fairly new concept to me, you wrote "Overman," I think the context of Übermensch is about not being a pessimistic Christian. In the modern era, starting philosophically from cause and effect or a web of causation might be a more authentic approach towards a sane universal ethic.
Interesting, I thought 'Overman' was just the english translation. The context for the time was definitely a shift away from pessimistic Chrstian values, but as a non-christian, it still strikes home with me in the modern era.
Just to throw in another data point, I've seen Overman used several times. Some people like to keep the native German word, some prefer the translation.
Thanks, lol. I actually looked up the spelling of the word when I was writing the article (it was spelled correctly in the first line) but then proceeded to misspell it for the title (:
My GitHub Pro plan just expired, and the repo was hosted privately, so it became inaccessbile. Just made the repo public, should be viewable now. Thanks for letting me know!
Übermensch is a fairly new concept to me, you wrote "Overman," I think the context of Übermensch is about not being a pessimistic Christian. In the modern era, starting philosophically from cause and effect or a web of causation might be a more authentic approach towards a sane universal ethic.
Interesting, I thought 'Overman' was just the english translation. The context for the time was definitely a shift away from pessimistic Chrstian values, but as a non-christian, it still strikes home with me in the modern era.
Ubermensch is a fairly common loan word in the US. Overman is not.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ubermensch
Ah, ok. The wikipedia paged linked translates it to "Overman" or "Super man" in the first line, so I assumed that was the english terminology
Just to throw in another data point, I've seen Overman used several times. Some people like to keep the native German word, some prefer the translation.
I'm not sure it's as obvious as you think it is to know what you're Overman would do, but in theory I think you've got it right.
It's spelled Eudaimonia
Thanks, lol. I actually looked up the spelling of the word when I was writing the article (it was spelled correctly in the first line) but then proceeded to misspell it for the title (:
@jarbus and @dang, this link is 404.
My GitHub Pro plan just expired, and the repo was hosted privately, so it became inaccessbile. Just made the repo public, should be viewable now. Thanks for letting me know!
Oh crap, thanks. Looking into this now