The Drunken Silenus On Gods, Goats, And The _s ... Page

Meis uses the figure of Silenus to ask a provocative question: . This is not a literal inquiry but a philosophical one about the nature of divinity and reality.

For Nietzsche, the goat—associated with the half-animal satyrs—represented a wild, bucking vitality that predates "civilized" reason. The Drunken Silenus On Gods, Goats, and the _s ...

Meis reflects on living in Antwerp , Rubens's home, and how the city’s history of war and destruction mirrors the Dionysian chaos Silenus represents. Meis uses the figure of Silenus to ask

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