Friedrich Nietzsche Prize
The Friedrich Nietzsche Prize or Friedrich-Nietzsche-Preis is a German literary award named after Friedrich Nietzsche and awarded by the state of Saxony-Anhalt. It was first awarded in 1996 for a German-language essayistic or philosophical work.[1] The Friedrich Nietzsche Prize is endowed with 15,000 euros. It is awarded by the Prime Minister of Saxony-Anhalt on the basis of proposals by an international jury.[2]
Friedrich Nietzsche Prize | |
---|---|
Country | Germany |
Presented by | Saxony-Anhalt |
Reward(s) | €15,000 |
First awarded | 1996 |
Website | http://www.nietzsche-gesellschaft.de/nietzsche-preis/ |
The Friedrich Nietzsche Prize is the highest award in Germany, awarded exclusively for philosophical and essayistic achievements.[3]
Comprehensive list of award winners
- 1995 Eugenio Trías, Barcelona
- 1996 Wolfgang Müller-Lauter, Berlin
- 1998 Curt Paul Janz, Basel
- 2000 Rüdiger Safranski, Berlin
- 2002 Marie-Luise Haase, Berlin and Michael Kohlenbach, Basel
- 2004 Durs Grünbein, Berlin
- 2006 Silvio Vietta, Hildesheim
- 2009 Ludger Lütkehaus, Freiburg
- 2012 Andreas Urs Sommer, Heidelberg
- 2015 Martin Walser, Überlingen
- 2017 Wolfram Groddeck, Zürich
- 2019 Ágnes Heller, New York / Budapest
gollark: I mean, I think people can get used to a lot of things with sufficient time.
gollark: The amount of often-conflicting ones is not really a point in their favour.
gollark: Again, popular ≠ good.
gollark: > That's like saying: Rules are bad and should be disregarded. Ethics are an important thing.You have not actually justified this, so it's basically circular.> We use ethics the entire time, disregarding ethics would mean disregarding schools of thoughtPopular/widely used things are not necessarily good.
gollark: I mean, I agree with the sentiment, but your reasoning is terrible.
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External links
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