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Re: Friedrich Nietzsche

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sounds like the poor sod had a B12 deficiency...

>

> Hey, are you a Nietzsche reader? I just cant resist some sorta

> not-too-relevant comment. Up in the surface world I used to read The

> Gay Science, Beyond Good and Evil, and The Geneology of Morals about

> every 6 months. (Tao Te Ching, the Book of Job, Heraclitus, and

> Kierkegaard were my other continuous focuses among books.)

>

> Apparently the evidence for Nietzsches syphilis is disputed. In 2003

> one Dr Leonard Sax reviewed historical evidence and suggested slow

> brain cancer in an article in the Journal of Medical Biography. 

>

> I havent read it and have no clue how much he knows about Nietzsche

> or spirochetae. (Actually I have no clue how much anyone knows about

> spirochetae.) N was sick for a long ass time before 1888/9. I think

> he retired from his Basel professorship around age 35, which would

> have been around 1878. I believe he was often bedridden, with

> migraines as I recall and maybe fever. He had some very grave eye

> trouble. He moved every few months in search of perfect weather. But

> he frequently walked like 8 miles a day by his accounts, and

> sometimes wept rapturously because of what he " envisioned for man. "

> His letters prior to ~1882-4 largely comprised repetitious moaning

> about his loneliness and misery, but thereafter he seems to have

> become progressively rather elated (and began his best books). This

> was all years prior to his insanity, which seems to have snowballed

> during late 1888. He lived 9-10 years after becoming unreachably

> demented.

>

> Actually theres no reason brain cancer and spirochetal disease

> couldnt both have been present; it wouldnt be too shocking for those

> to co-occur.

>

> If I went back thru either N or Ks letters now, I'm sure could dx

> them with any number of inflammatory conditions, but of course,

> above all they were 100-ft geniuses. 

>

> Madison was an interesting semi-sickie, highly functional and

> apparently somewhat happy, but with apparant bowel disease and

> non-clonic " absence " seizures (I dont know the correct modern

> seizure terminology) - also apparently some degree of poor mood.

> This may have effected his fearful/pessimistic disposition and if so

> it may arguably have had a big effect on modern world politics - he

> got his way in the writing of the US constitution much more so than

> anyone else did, IMO. 

>

>

>

> > 

> > > Dear All

> > > An interesting article on the effects of neonatal infection (  

> > > unfortunately in rats). The first link is to a news group with a

> html  

> > > abstract, the second to a pdf of the whole article

> > > Regards

> > > Windsor

> > >  

> > >  

> > >  

> > >  

> > >

> http://groups-beta.google.com/group/sci.life-extension/browse_thread/ 

> > >

> thread/b214f3f0289f28c0/2a92668c5da7613e?q=infection#2a92668c5da7613e

> > >  

> > > http://www.apa.org/releases/earlylife_article.pdf

>

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