Albert Einstein once said “Try not to become a man of success, rather become a man of value”. In life we all want to walk on the road of success, but would we want it even if it meant bringing the devil from hell. In Shakespeare’s Macbeth, the character of Macbeth is portrayed as a man of strength and courage, whose obsession for success leads him towards self-destruction. This meant betraying those he promised his loyalty to and turning his anger to revenge. In the beginning of the play, Macbeth
Woman: God’s second mistake? Friedrich Nietzsche, a German philosopher, who regarded ‘thirst for power’ as the sole driving force of all human actions, has many a one-liners to his credit. ‘Woman was God’s second mistake’, he declared. Unmindful of the reactionary scathing criticism and shrill abuses he invited for himself, especially from the ever-irritable feminist brigade. The fact and belief that God never ever commits a mistake, brings Nietzsche’s proclamation dashingly down into the dust bin