Alexander Tille Explained

Alexander Tille
Birth Date:30 April 1866
Death Place:Saarbrücken, Germany

Alexander Tille (April 30, 1866 in Lauenstein  - December 16, 1912 in Saarbrücken) was a German philosopher. He published the first English translation of Friedrich Nietzsche's Also sprach Zarathustra in 1896.[1] Tille strongly supported eugenics and Social Darwinism.[2] He claimed Christian ethics, democracy, equality, humanism and socialism were only the delusions held by the weak. Tille felt slums were good, since they could help purge society of the "unfit". He also thought disabled and mentally ill people should be left to starve, with food only given to the "fit".

Bibliography

"Alexander Tille." In: Peter Neumann (ed.): Saarländische Lebensbilder. Vol. 4. (1989), .

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The University of Glasgow Story - Alexander Tille . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20220903011859/https://universitystory.gla.ac.uk/biography/?id=WH24441&type=P . 2022-09-03 . 2022-09-03 . University of Glasgow.
  2. Manz . Stefan . 2007 . Translating Nietzsche, Mediating Literature: Alexander Tille and the Limits of Anglo-German Intercultural Transfer . Neophilologus . 91 . 117–134 . 10.1007/s11061-006-9008-x. 54607231 .