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| Friedrich Nietzsche |
With the loss of the impetus of Christianity, cyclical conceptions of history have resurfaced in the West. Let us see how Nietzsche expresses this in Thus Spoke Zarathustra (Part III, 2.2), at the same time as predicting the replacement of man by the Superman, so he should have been immune to it:
And that
spider creeping slowly in the moonlight, and that same moonlight, and you and
I, standing before this door chatting about eternal things—must we not all have
existed once before? And must we not come again and travel that path that
stretches before us, that long and dreadful path? Won't we have to return
eternally?
Twentieth-century atheist cosmologists often expressed a preference for a cyclic cosmology, which in their view would make God unnecessary to explain the existence of the universe. Although some of those theories (steady-state cosmology and the alternation of the Big Bang and the Big Crunch) are no longer in vogue, thanks to the data we now have about the origin and future of the universe, new theories continually emerge to replace them.





