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The Michael Kuhlman Show

Podkast av Michael Kuhlman

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Philosophy for people who think for themselves.Deep dives on Nietzsche, Jung, Plotinus, and the Western esoteric tradition. Book breakdowns, history, and the occasional take on what's happening right now. No hot takes, no clickbait - just long-form thinking out loud.Hosted by Michael Kuhlman.YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@MichaelKuhlman Substack: https://substack.com/@michaelkuhlman?utm_campaign=profile&utm_medium=profile-pageSupport the show: https://donate.stripe.com/cNibJ16dR8rs9jLgSb1gs05Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/c/michaelkuhlman

Alle episoder

23 Episoder

episode Evil Nietzsche - The Heel, The Hammer, The Viking | Birth of Tragedy Part II cover

Evil Nietzsche - The Heel, The Hammer, The Viking | Birth of Tragedy Part II

Nobody reads anymore. But lucky for you I like to read to people. This is Part II of my Birth of Tragedy essay series on Substack. If you'd rather sit back and listen than read the essay on your phone, this one is for you. A few lines from the piece: "Nietzsche was actually a pretty decent guy in real life. But in his writing he constantly plays the heel." "First you hate him, then you laugh at him, then his work starts to click and you see his genius." "I read Nietzsche to discover what he means by 'evil'." "His bedridden, half-blind ass would have been a delicious Viking victim." "You must embrace the fact Nietzsche is, in a real sense, evil." "Strip the gold out, because there is some gold." We get into Nietzsche's method of constructing opponents just to destroy them, the villain origin story hiding inside his prose, the Viking thought experiment that exposes the whole project, and why you can still love the guy while calling him wrong. Read the written version on Substack: https://michaelkuhlman.substack.com/p/part-ii-evil-nietzsche-the-birth [https://michaelkuhlman.substack.com/p/part-ii-evil-nietzsche-the-birth] If this series is doing something for you, here are a few ways to keep it going: Become a Patreon member: https://www.patreon.com/c/michaelkuhlman [https://www.patreon.com/c/michaelkuhlman] Or hit the Join button below this video to become a channel member. You get perks, I get to keep making this stuff. Drop a comment with your take on Evil Nietzsche. I read them. And please share to help the show grow.

20. mai 2026 - 20 min
episode The Birth of Tragedy - This Book Will Rewire Your Worldview, Part I | Nietzsche Deep Dive cover

The Birth of Tragedy - This Book Will Rewire Your Worldview, Part I | Nietzsche Deep Dive

Nobody reads anymore. But lucky for you I like to read to people. This is Part I of my Substack essay series on Nietzsche's The Birth of Tragedy - the book that quietly rewires how you see art, suffering, and the whole Western tradition. We start at the beginning. Why this book matters. Why Nietzsche came out swinging at twenty-something years old. And why two Greek gods you thought you understood are about to get a lot stranger. If you've ever felt like modern life is missing depth, this book explains why. Read the full essay on Substack and follow along as the series unfolds. Support the work: * Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/c/michaelkuhlman [https://www.patreon.com/c/michaelkuhlman] * Tip jar: https://donate.stripe.com/cNibJ16dR8rs9jLgSb1gs05 [https://donate.stripe.com/cNibJ16dR8rs9jLgSb1gs05] * YouTube channel membership available on the channel page If this resonates, leave a comment, share it with someone who reads, and subscribe so you don't miss Part II.

12. mai 2026 - 26 min
episode Thus Spoke Zarathustra Ep. 16 - The Final Descent | Nietzsche Deep Dive cover

Thus Spoke Zarathustra Ep. 16 - The Final Descent | Nietzsche Deep Dive

Nobody reads anymore. But lucky for you I like to read to people. This is it - the finale. We close out Thus Spoke Zarathustra by walking through the last stretch of Part Four: the Last Supper with the Higher Men, the Ass Festival, the Drunken Song, and finally The Sign - the morning, the lion at the cave, and the going-under that's been coming since the Prologue. I read and we sit with what Nietzsche actually wrote - not the slogans, not the memes, not the bumper-sticker version. Sixteen episodes. One book. Thanks for reading along. Support the show: * Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/c/michaelkuhlman [https://www.patreon.com/c/michaelkuhlman] * YouTube channel members get perks and early access - hit Join on the channel * One-time tip via Stripe: https://donate.stripe.com/cNifZhbybdLM0Nf6dx1gs06 [https://donate.stripe.com/cNifZhbybdLM0Nf6dx1gs06] If this series hit, drop a comment, share it with one person who'd actually listen, and tell me what landed hardest.

7. mai 2026 - 1 h 18 min
episode Thus Spoke Zarathustra Ep. 15 - Noontide and Gathering of the Higher Men | Nietzsche's Mystic Hour cover

Thus Spoke Zarathustra Ep. 15 - Noontide and Gathering of the Higher Men | Nietzsche's Mystic Hour

Nobody reads anymore. But lucky for you I like to read to people. Episode 15 takes us into one of the strangest and most beautiful moments in the entire book - and then drops us straight into the chaos that follows. We start with "At Noon" - Zarathustra lies down under an old gnarled tree, and time stops. The world becomes perfect for an instant. He tastes eternity not as an afterlife or a doctrine, but as the depth of this moment, fully inhabited. This is Nietzsche's version of mystical experience translated into his own vocabulary. No God, no heaven, just the noontide stillness where existence justifies itself. Then the bell rings. Zarathustra wakes up, and the cry of distress comes back. The higher men have found his cave. In "The Greeting," every figure from Part Four shows up at once - the two kings, the conscientious of spirit, the magician, the old pope, the ugliest man, the voluntary beggar, the shadow. They hail Zarathustra as their teacher. Their savior. The one they've been waiting for. But it's a trap. Each of these men has broken from the herd. Each has done real work. But none of them is the goal. They are bridges, not destinations - and if Zarathustra accepts their worship, he becomes exactly what he set out to destroy. Pity is his final sin, and these men are walking temptations. We unpack: * Why "At Noon" is Nietzsche's mystical core - eternity as depth, not duration * The Jungian read on the higher men as partial integrations of the Self * Why Zarathustra's warmth toward them is also his greatest danger * How this chapter sets up the catastrophe of Part Four's final movement Zarathustra wanted disciples who don't need him. Instead he got a cave full of men who do. If this work means something to you, the best way to support it is to become a paid member here on YouTube or join the Patreon - that's where the deeper stuff lives. 🔗 Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/c/michaelkuhlman [https://www.patreon.com/c/michaelkuhlman] 🎯 Become a channel member: hit the Join button below 💬 Drop a comment with what hit hardest, and share this with one person who would understand Nietzsche's darkness #Nietzsche #ThusSpokeZarathustra #Jung #Philosophy #Zarathustra #DepthPsychology #PhilosophyPodcast #PartFour

28. april 2026 - 1 h 7 min
episode Thus Spoke Zarathustra Ep. 14 - The Ugliest Man & Confrontation With Shadow | Nietzsche Deep Dive cover

Thus Spoke Zarathustra Ep. 14 - The Ugliest Man & Confrontation With Shadow | Nietzsche Deep Dive

Zarathustra encounters the most disturbing figure in his journey, the Ugliest Man, who's done the darkest of deeds. What drove him to this ultimate act? And why does Zarathustra respond not with horror, but with an overwhelming wave of pity, the very emotion he has warned against throughout the entire book? In this episode, we explore one of Nietzsche's most psychologically dense chapters with help from Jung's seminar analysis. The Ugliest Man represents something we all carry: the shadow so unbearable that it would rather destroy the witness than be seen. But there's a deeper layer here. Jung reads this figure as the confrontation with the irredeemable — the part of the psyche that cannot be beautified, cannot be redeemed by pity, and refuses to be saved. Zarathustra's pity nearly destroys him precisely because it pulls him back toward the old religious instinct: the desire to rescue what must instead be faced. This is Part Four territory at its darkest and most revelatory. 📚 Text: Thus Spoke Zarathustra by Friedrich Nietzsche 📖 Interpretive Guide: Jung's Seminars on Zarathustra 🔔 Subscribe for new episodes as we continue through Part Four. 💬 Support this project on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/c/michaelkuhlman [https://www.patreon.com/c/michaelkuhlman] #Nietzsche #Zarathustra #Jung #Philosophy #Shadow #ThusSpoke

10. april 2026 - 50 min
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