Very interesting analysis. The only thing I would add is that Nietzsche, at least in his later works (Zarathustra onward), is also explicitly pro-hierarchy. In The Antichrist he praises the ancient Hindu law for preserving the fundamental types of mankind as separate castes with their own respective place in society. Nietzsche and Evola had a general agreement in this area, but the clear difference is that Nietzsche's view lacked Evola's metaphysical foundation; Nietzsche's ideal aristocrat was simply a more complete, perfected manifestation of Will to Power.
Nice video
Very interesting analysis. The only thing I would add is that Nietzsche, at least in his later works (Zarathustra onward), is also explicitly pro-hierarchy. In The Antichrist he praises the ancient Hindu law for preserving the fundamental types of mankind as separate castes with their own respective place in society. Nietzsche and Evola had a general agreement in this area, but the clear difference is that Nietzsche's view lacked Evola's metaphysical foundation; Nietzsche's ideal aristocrat was simply a more complete, perfected manifestation of Will to Power.
Thanks a lot for the clarification. Sorry I did not mention that particular quote by Nietzsche, definitely something I'll be rereading soon.
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