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In this work, Ludovici presents a solid, concise introduction to Nietzsche. It doesn't just represent the life and works of Nietsche but also provides a reader with a short but strong analysis of the philosopher and his works.
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Originally written in 1938 under the pseudonym "Cobbett," this book is British philosopher and polyglot Anthony M. Ludovici's most strident political writing. Finished at a time when Nazi Germany was at its peacetime height, Ludovici was still concerned enough about Jewish power in Britain to want this work to appear under another name. Starting with a frank discussion on Jewish racial origins--as far as they were understood, based on phenotype and morphology in those pre-DNA days--Ludovici concludes that the European Jews were of mixed antecedents--Semitic, Orientalid, Asiatic and European, all in differing proportions. From there he discusses the history of the Jews from their earliest int...
In The Confessions of an Anti-Feminist, British Nietzschean philosopher Anthony M. Ludovici recounts his life, intellectual development, and memories of Oscar Levy, A. R. Orage, G. I. Gurdjieff, P. D. Ouspensky, F. M. Alexander, and G. K. Chesterton, as well as Adolf Hitler, Joseph Goebbels, and other leading figures of the Third Reich.
Meant to be read alongside Friedrich Nietzsche's Thus Spoke Zarathustra, these notes by famous British polyglot and Nietzsche student Anthony Mario Ludovici are perhaps the most incisive and penetrating analyses of the German philosopher's famous work ever committed to text. Ludovici, a talented author and philosopher in his own right, was completely fluent in German, and studied Nietzsche's works in their original German, and translated many of his major writings into English. There were therefore few, if any, English-speaking intelligentsia as familiar with Nietzsche's works as Ludovici. In this work, Ludovici provides a section-by-section analysis of Thus Spoke Zarathustra, providing alon...
A series of articles by philosopher Anthony M. Ludovici comparing the achievements of National Socialist Germany and Fascist Italy and those of the liberal democracies--and Britain in particular. This collection starts with a 1936 eye-witness review of Germany, written after a personal visit to that country. Ludovici describes how the Hitler government set about solving the unemployment crisis, a declining population, and urbanisation. It also includes fascinating statistics on how the crime rate had been reduced, how many home start-up loans had been granted to new couples (repayable by having children), and of the number of new farmers created over the previous three years. He also describ...