The Translation

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Little Venice, near Warwick Avenue, is known as the point where three manmade canals converge in Maida Vale, London. A few strides away sits The Colonnade Hotel was once the temporary home for a refugee named Sigmund Freud and computer science's Alan Turing. The hotel contained a small library of books in the receiving room upstairs.

Late 1995, the children's father visited his friends at the basement bar of the Colonnade Hotel in Maida Vale, London where an unassuming alcoholic and literary genius named Reginald J. Hollingdale frequented. Reg spoke of an ancient lost text that philosopher Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche secretly searched for to write his Philosophy in the Tragic Age of the Greeks.

But Nietzsche later claimed that he destroyed a 12th century Turkish scroll in which contained recorded oral transcription. Reg obtained Nietzsche's notes during his translation of The Antichrist and had thought that the owner destroyed them at his death bed at The Warrington Hotel. Reg suffered from sclerosis of the liver but only missed the drink in his final seven days. Reg always enjoyed multiple tall glasses of aged Scottish whiskey each at during this retirement.

During August 2001, the notes were transferred from his caregiver at the Warrington to Ann Weddell, a very close friend of the children's father, whom he called his "mum", so that Reg's daughter and son did not know about it

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During August 2001, the notes were transferred from his caregiver at the Warrington to Ann Weddell, a very close friend of the children's father, whom he called his "mum", so that Reg's daughter and son did not know about it. It was likely that the son would sell the notes on the open market to preserve his drug habits. The father's youngest daughter received her middle name to recognize Ann whose mother was of Irish lineage.

The children's father never told his friend Reg that he had purchased two of this books at Emory University's student union book store in 1992, which set his epiphany and destiny in motion

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The children's father never told his friend Reg that he had purchased two of this books at Emory University's student union book store in 1992, which set his epiphany and destiny in motion.

The children's father never told his friend Reg that he had purchased two of this books at Emory University's student union book store in 1992, which set his epiphany and destiny in motion

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Triumph of the ill 

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Triumph of the ill 

Nietzsche alleged that "...one is not 'converted ' to Christianity — one must be sufficiently sick for it.". The decadent and sick types of people came to power through Christianity. From everywhere, the aggregate of the sick accumulated in Christianity and outnumbered the healthy. "The majority became master; the democratism of the Christian instincts conquered... ."The meaning of the God on the Cross is that "...[e]verything that suffers, everything that hangs on the Cross, is divine... ." "Because sickness belongs to the essence of Christianity, the typical Christian condition, 'belief,' has to be a form of sickness. Every straightforward, honest, scientific road to knowledge has to be repudiated by the Church as a forbidden road. Even doubt is a sin." Knowledge requires caution, intellectual moderation, discipline, and self–overcoming. But Christianity uses sick reasoning, such as martyrdom, to try to prove its truth. Christians think that "...there must be something to a cause for which someone is willing to die.

Friedrich Nietzsche handwritten notes, which were intentionally omitted from The Antichrist, recited Pythagorus' own words as he descended from the tree grove on that fateful night...

Friedrich Nietzsche handwritten notes, which were intentionally omitted from The Antichrist, recited Pythagorus' own words as he descended from the tree grove on that fateful night

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And that is how the children learned the identity and purpose of the living

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And that is how the children learned the identity and purpose of the living. earth serpent.


The youngest  child recalled, "The  greatest trick the Devil ever pulled was to convincing the world he didn't exist".



The middle child interrupted and clarified the original version, "The French poet Charles Baudelaire said 'La plus belle des ruses du diable est de vous persuader qu'il n'existe pas.' ("The devil's finest trick is to persuade you that he does not exist.")

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