FAUST Explained: Goethe’s eulogy of the Enlightenment & its philosophical influence

Taken from episodes 41 & 42 of The Nietzsche Podcast. Support the show on Patreon: Goethe is perhaps the most widely-celebrated author of German literature, and Faust is his most famous tale. While the historical Doctor Faustus had always been portrayed as an essentially evil man, who sold his soul to the devil in exchange for greater power, Goethe reinterpreted the story into a wager between Faust and Mephistopheles, and set it against the backdrop of a metaphysical wager between God and Satan. Faust, as protagonist, stands not for evil, but for the spirit of ceaseless striving. Having mastered all the faculties of the university, and attained the zenith of knowledge available to mankind, Faust feels his lifelong quest has been for naught. He declares: “...for all our science and art / we can know nothing, it burns my heart“. His restless heart sees Faust turning to magic and conjuration in order to break past the boundaries of science, moralit
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