The New Adam

Science Fiction & Fantasy, Fantasy, Contemporary, Science Fiction, Adventure
Cover of the book The New Adam by Stanley Weinbaum, Endymion Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Stanley Weinbaum ISBN: 9781531294441
Publisher: Endymion Press Publication: August 20, 2016
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Stanley Weinbaum
ISBN: 9781531294441
Publisher: Endymion Press
Publication: August 20, 2016
Imprint:
Language: English

THIS is a story of a superman. It details his origin, his search for happiness, his loves, and finally, his success or failure, of which you alone can judge. It is a story perhaps fantastic, but a story based, nevertheless, on possibilities. A superman is not a man, not a creature of the species Homo Sapiens; this is the fallacy of Nietzsche, the fallacy of H. G. Wells. These, like others who deal with the matter, have believed that a man, a human being, raised to the nth degree, represents the superman. Nietzsche picked one set of qualities—those of fitness, potency, power—Wells chose another set, the contemplative, the serene, the intellectual. So probably, a Neanderthaler in his filthy cave, using his embryonic imagination, might have pictured his superman as a giant in strength and size, a mighty hunter, one whose meat-pot and belly is never empty. Certainly he never considered a race whose very thoughts were partly beyond his conception, and he saw nothing ironical in freezing to death upon a ledge of coal. As we are to the cave man, superman must be to us. His coming is surely a possibility; perhaps it is inevitable...

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

THIS is a story of a superman. It details his origin, his search for happiness, his loves, and finally, his success or failure, of which you alone can judge. It is a story perhaps fantastic, but a story based, nevertheless, on possibilities. A superman is not a man, not a creature of the species Homo Sapiens; this is the fallacy of Nietzsche, the fallacy of H. G. Wells. These, like others who deal with the matter, have believed that a man, a human being, raised to the nth degree, represents the superman. Nietzsche picked one set of qualities—those of fitness, potency, power—Wells chose another set, the contemplative, the serene, the intellectual. So probably, a Neanderthaler in his filthy cave, using his embryonic imagination, might have pictured his superman as a giant in strength and size, a mighty hunter, one whose meat-pot and belly is never empty. Certainly he never considered a race whose very thoughts were partly beyond his conception, and he saw nothing ironical in freezing to death upon a ledge of coal. As we are to the cave man, superman must be to us. His coming is surely a possibility; perhaps it is inevitable...

More books from Endymion Press

Cover of the book A Short Introduction to Confucius by Stanley Weinbaum
Cover of the book Cattle Brands by Stanley Weinbaum
Cover of the book A Thane of Wessex by Stanley Weinbaum
Cover of the book Accidental Flight by Stanley Weinbaum
Cover of the book The Roman Empire by Stanley Weinbaum
Cover of the book The Great Dome on Mercury by Stanley Weinbaum
Cover of the book Steve Harrison, Detective of the Occult by Stanley Weinbaum
Cover of the book The Man from the Moon by Stanley Weinbaum
Cover of the book A Jacobite Exile by Stanley Weinbaum
Cover of the book Buck Peters, Ranchman by Stanley Weinbaum
Cover of the book Damaged Goods by Stanley Weinbaum
Cover of the book The Battle of the Marne by Stanley Weinbaum
Cover of the book Fear and Other Stories by Stanley Weinbaum
Cover of the book Star-Begotten by Stanley Weinbaum
Cover of the book Supermind by Stanley Weinbaum
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy