Lampert, Laurence. “Heidegger’s Nietzsche Interpretation.” Man and World 7, no. 4 (November 1, 1974): 353–378.
Excerpt:
“Heidegger has devoted over 1400 pages of published work to an interpreta-
tion of Nietzsche and there emerges from his pages a Nietzsche quite unlike
any yet encountered either in Nietzsche’s own interpretation of himself or in
the interpretations of others. Here Nietzsche appears as a metaphysician
even though he scorned metaphysics, as a Platonist even though he thought
of himself as the anti-Platonist, as a nihilist even though he said he overcame
nihilism. Here is a Nietzsche who never said in print what he really thought
after Zarathustra, whose real philosophical position must be pieced together
from the multitude of notes he never published. Here is a Nietzsche who is
a “destiny” but not in the sense that Nietzsche meant it in Ecce Homo;
Nietzsche is a destiny who has to be overcome because he exemplifies the
very cultural tradition he thought he was surmounting. Nietzsche long feared
that he would be misunderstood, that he would be taken for someone else,
as he says in Ecce Homo. According to Heidegger, Nietzsche had good reason
to fear, for Nietzsche himself had misunderstood who he was. 1″
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