Pêpe, Pedro Teixeira de Castro; https://buscatextual.cnpq.br/buscatextual/visualizacv.do?id=K2429524E6&tokenCaptchar=0cAFcWeA5cu0Kr1bIe_DyGGrN28grcCFAshCgPcmw7FGYgfGhjvY7_mC5dqM84JTLPx1gOqXALV70qtyWBvr3_YChnTbHLftB6S1skJ9LAeT9Xc7yTlZk_rjV3_jQFetpgHJxm9Un3SvVRNFA0ObKqj-aSf2wLr1bH5KUzxS9h1j6inwiQbwoy-sKF-6rmyaBFUc7BG2pnoBCjgSBOpX334M8yVTwWMbvheQ8AlUZvhxiGki7G3UivAmMr1rERY3KeDZzmQcH2R4kaj1qXUcmT-mpp_310Yju2ZFM4H88Mwz7QAR0RoV0n7rhz5zAboR6xTvoOXQHCuSLGPILIoLDsG0XzW3IsziLw59sUML23N3tf5BPSjy3aG8SSr00Jy6_yhSEJKjg4q2pZeGC4YP25BdAKa6l94pi-nhZNC0m6i2WXxJ0J5gagyHuHV9n01R22DzZNi9348khIHmMLUMZdpZ7k7giOf-3PmHKZVaojU_UcejjmTfxHXM35uDw-RccArkSdFsrYhYdzmAogdc2hZfLnlgTQlDF49K6j1FWTGNzhqyd7weriUR8uDefa6okVPxE3wu0Von21OlBdMl_fb9CUJ_7zLH5dGgR4Klx-nfVINexLzqZzZD5T0h9AJFxZfimaNCWze4-tibEdr6D89UdLJKOiUGmkoFTJJTT2NxxoW_eJJ6j38vMXvZB4SE0ulzSfekHrCkRVan_pOvnPq6K-AlssdnkQc_37Dk2WRK2PcNkRduX2JiE1y98iYeSf10fAzRcmZSWJMM9Knj9aXMmqbxZuomx7qqNZbRQX_dKaPfOyPElcbpaN0b-OLN7swsVU4ZvLJsvg2U9b6Go1Rmve8MCl4pW84huA2SqNOMWTJr4dNKSlxz0
Resumo:
The present work aims to investigate the notion of will and its foundations in the theories of
Freud and Nietzsche, focusing more specifically on what these authors identify as the
foundations of human will, that is, the tendencies that drive the subject to action and guide their
psychodynamics. In doing so, we propose a comparative analysis between their respective
theories of the Trieb: the doctrine of the will to power and the theory of drives. To this end, we
used both the authors’ own writings on the respective topics and those of some of their
commentators, as well as the existing literature on the possible relationships between these
theories. As a result, we found in the literature a range of opinions regarding the relationship
between Freud’s theory and Nietzsche’s theory: some categorically deny the plausibility of
considering their ideas as compatible or sympathetic to one another, while others affirm a very
significant convergence between them. From our own reading of both authors’ texts, we
conclude that the convergence between their theories of Trieb appears to be significant, aligning
with the latter group of theorists and disagreeing with the former. We then seek to justify this
assertion based on textual evidence that supports this interpretation.