1 Introduction
2 Nietzsche's Genealogy of Nihilism
a. Introduction
b. European nihilism: A genealogy
c. European nihilism and the structure of life-denial
d. Conclusion
3 Nihilism as Life-Denial
a. Introduction
b. Life-denial as a cognitive phenomenon: beliefs, judgments of life, and epistemic practices
i. Belief in a "beyond"
ii. Belief in a higher purpose
iii. Belief in objectivity or "knowledge as such"
iv. Life-denying morality: The harm of the "the Good"
v. Life-denying epistemic orientations and practices
c. Life-denial as socio-cultural: institutions and ideologies
d. Life-denial as psychophysiological: drives, affects, and the will
e. Conclusion
4 Before Affective Nihilism, Understanding Affect
a. Introduction
b. Affect in Nietzsche
i. Affects as inclinations and disinclinations (with a first-personal, phenomenal character) that produce beliefs, experience, and behavior
ii. Affects as drive-induced evaluative orientations
iii. Second-order affects and the transpersonal nature of affect
c. Conclusion
5 The Problem of Affective Nihilism
a. Introduction
b. Affective nihilism
i. On the problem of affective nihilism
ii. The psychophysiology of affective nihilism
iii. The transpersonal dynamics of affective nihilism
c. Conclusion
6 Affective Nihilists, Weak Agents
a. Introduction
b. Affective nihilists, weak agents: nihilism as a (variety of) psychological states
i. N1: Affective nihilism involving drive suppression
ii. N2: Affective nihilism involving the fragmentation of the will
c. Conclusion
7 Who is Nietzsche's Affective Nihilist?: Thinking Cognitive Nihilism, Affective Nihilism, and their Interplay
a. Introduction
b. The scope of affective nihilism in Nietzsche
c. A crucial interplay: The relationship between affective and cognitive nihilism
d. Conclusion
8 Overcoming Affective Nihilism
a. Introduction
b. Affective nihilism, redux: Getting the problem in full view
c. Overcoming affective nihilism: What it isn't
d. Overcoming affective nihilism: What it is
i. Psychophysiological and affective features
ii. Characteristic beliefs, judgments, and epistemic tendencies manifest by the individual with an attitude of radical affirmation
iii. An ability to maintain the conditions of one's flourishing
e. Nietzschean Strategies for Overcoming Affective Nihilism
i. Experimentation and the production of affect
ii. Self-knowledge as self-narration
iii. Self-genealogy: Learning to master the affects and creating the conditions of one's flourishing
f. Conclusion