
audiobook
by Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche
These five lectures, delivered when the author was just twenty‑seven, offer a vivid snapshot of his early thoughts on education. He argues that most schools train students merely to earn a living, while true culture belongs to a small number of gifted minds who need a special institution to nurture them. The talks also reveal his growing conviction that the classical legacy of ancient Greece should be the benchmark for any genuine intellectual formation.
In his inaugural address on Homer and classical philology, he expands this critique, insisting that the study of ancient texts must go beyond minute textual variants to a broader philosophical engagement. He envisions a university where the art of learning itself becomes a creative force, shaping not only scholars but the very spirit of a civilization. Though spoken over a century ago, the ideas resonate with today’s debates about the purpose of higher education and the balance between practical training and cultural depth.
Full title
On the Future of our Educational Institutions; Homer and Classical Philology Complete Works, Volume Three
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (256K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Marc D'Hooghe (Images generously made available by the Hathi Trust.
Release date
2016-03-28
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1844–1900
A fiercely original German thinker, he wrote with unusual intensity about morality, culture, religion, and the ways people create meaning. His books still feel alive because they challenge readers rather than comfort them.
View all books
by Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche

by Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche

by Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche

by Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche

by Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche

by Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche

by Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche

by Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche