Wolfgang Müller-Lauter

Wolfgang Müller-Lauter (August 31, 1924 in Weimar August 9, 2001 in Berlin) was a German philosopher and scholar. He is particularly known for his groundbreaking work on the philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche, considered to be one of the most important contributions to the study of Nietzsche in the twentieth century.[1] He was Ordinary Professor of Philosophy at the Kirchliche Hochschule Berlin and from 1993 Emeritus Professor in the Theological Faculty of the Humboldt University Berlin.

Müller-Lauter began his career with a doctoral thesis on Martin Heidegger, to whose work he had been led through a study of Jean-Paul Sartre. In preparing a lecture course on the roots of nihilism in the twentieth century at the Kirchliche Hochschule in Berlin, Müller-Lauter became increasingly interested in Nietzsche's treatment of the problem of nihilism. Müller-Lauter’s own approach to Nietzsche is marked by a critique of Heidegger’s then prevalent reading of Nietzsche’s thought. In particular, Müller-Lauter took issue with Heidegger’s characterization of Nietzsche as the “last metaphysician of the West.” Heidegger had seen Nietzsche as attempting, but ultimately failing, to overcome the metaphysical tradition. Müller-Lauter argued cogently on the basis of a detailed analysis of Nietzsche's texts that the role that Heidegger reserved for himself had in fact been effectively performed by Nietzsche himself. Central to this interpretation was the reexamination of the “doctrine” of the will to power found in Nietzsche’s work, turning it from a metaphysical doctrine (as in Heidegger’s interpretation) into a theory of a plurality of will-to-power quanta dynamically interacting with one another in processes with an inherently contradictory and perspectival character. This work set a new standard of rigor and seriousness in Nietzsche scholarship as well as establishing an influential reading of Nietzsche's work.

Müller-Lauter was a co-founder of the journal Nietzsche-Studien in 1971, and continued to co-edit the journal until 1996. He was also co-founder and co-editor (from 1972 to 1996) of the book series Monographien und Texte zur Nietzsche-Forschung published by de Gruyter. After the death of Mazzino Montinari in 1986 Müller-Lauter took over the co-editorship of the complete critical edition of Nietzsche’s Works (KGW) produced by de Gruyter.

In 1996 he was the first recipient of the Friedrich Nietzsche Prize.

Books

Nietzsche: His Philosophy of Contradictions and the Contradictions of His Philosophy, trans. David J. Parent (Urbana IL, 1999).

Articles

Books

Articles

Secondary literature

References

  1. Ciano Aydin calls Müller-Lauter the “author of probably one of the most important books on Nietzsche written in the last half-century – if not the most important”; “his many articles have been of crucial importance for international Nietzsche research”. See Aydin, "Müller-Lauter's Nietzsche", p. 99. The foreword to the English translation of Nietzsche's Philosophy of Contradictions was provided by the leading American Nietzsche scholar Richard Schacht, who wrote that "the publication of this book [Nietzsche's Philosophy of Contradictions] in its original German form in 1971 was a major event in the development of Nietzsche studies in Germany." See Schacht, Foreword to Nietzsche's Philosophy of Contradictions, p. ix. The leading German Nietzsche scholars Volker Gerhardt and Renate Reschke have called him "one of the great Nietzsche scholars of the twentieth century." Nietzscheforschung 9 (2002), p. 9.
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