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    Winckelmann's 'quiet grandeur' might describe the *expres... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→Nietzsche's critique in 'The Birth of Tragedy' implies that Winckelmann's 'noble simplicity and quiet grandeur' reflects Apollonian wishful thinking imposed on fundamentally Dionysian suffering.

    Winckelmann's 'quiet grandeur' might describe the *expression* of controlled suffering rather than its denial, making the categories less opposed than Nietzsche suggests.

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    Nietzsche's critique in 'The Birth of Tragedy' implies that Winckelmann's 'noble...

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