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Morality in memory techniques: Nietzsche and the comments on the mnemonics of Thomas Aquinas

Abstract:

The investigation presents a hermeneutics of memory in Nietzsche’s mature texts in the light of contributions of AristotleARISTOTLE. Works of Aristotle. Trans. J. A. Smith and W. D. Ross. London: Oxford at the Clarendon Press, 1907. and Thomas AquinasAQUINAS, St. Tomas. Commentaries on Aristotle’s ‘On sense and what is sensed’ and ‘On memory and recollection’. Trans. Kevin White and Edward M. Marcierowski. Washington DC: The Catholic University of America Press, 2005.. At the First Dissertation of Towards the Genealogy of Morals, Nietzsche introduces the influence that memory exerts on the capacity for reflection and action. The mnemotechnical procedure that the German philosopher analyzes is Thomas Aquinas’ commentary on Aristotle’s reminiscence. Aquinas identifies the ordering of what is wanted, the investment of the spirit, frequent meditation and the taking of the chain of pending issues as fundamental points for the activity of memory. And, at these points, Nietzsche identifies morality as a key component in the memorization process. It will analyze some approximations and distances between the Nietzschean and Thomist theses and to what extent morality operates in the sense of detecting memory activity.

Keywords:
Memory; Technique; Moral; Nietzsche; Thomas Aquinas

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