“Every Day Is Exactly the Same” came on while I was listening to a rock playlist, and I was digging it. Find “Every Day Is Exactly The Same” (the link opens in a new tab) by Nine Inch Nails on Spotify.
The other day when I was on my Friedrich Nietzsche kick and did the Google search for “where does the ‘God is dead’ quote by Nietzsche come from,” I had emailed a fellow member of the academic community and asked for some of his recommendations of readings by Nietzsche. I am referring to my post on September 30, 2019, titled “Friedrich Nietzsche and his ‘God is dead’ Quote.”
My academic advisor replied that a few of his suggested reads by Nietzsche are On the Genealogy of Morals and Thus Spake Zarathustra(the link opens in a new tab). I figured Nietzsche would be a great academic add to my collection of books, so I ordered On the Genealogy of Morals through Amazon. It has since arrived. It turned out to be a stroke of luck that the paperback edition I ordered actually contained two works: On the Genealogy of Morals and Ecce Homo(the link opens in a new tab), which you can find through Amazon.
On the Genealogy of Morals and Ecce Homo by Friedrich Nietzsche through Amazon (the link opens in a new tab).
For all of us using Modern Language Association (MLA) formatting, this Purdue OWL (owl.purdue.edu – the link opens in a new tab), brought to us by The Purdue Writing Lab and the College of Liberal Arts at Purdue University was a priceless resource during studies for my B.I.S. degree. That, along with the paperback MLA Handbook, the eighth edition(the link opens in a new tab).
Paperback MLA Handbook, the eighth edition (the link opens in a new tab).
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