Statistics
All Anime Stats Anime Stats
Days: 46.1
Mean Score:
6.24
- Watching21
- Completed171
- On-Hold38
- Dropped96
- Plan to Watch333
- Total Entries659
- Rewatched11
- Episodes2,799
All Manga Stats Manga Stats
Days: 13.5
Mean Score:
7.05
- Total Entries71
- Reread0
- Chapters2,207
- Volumes164
All Comments (13) Comments
My opinion is that you could try for yourself a couple of episodes and see if the rom-com works for you. I think plot-wise the anime actually follow the manga quite closely, but maybe the manga is able to deliver its jokes better, so you may want to try it out too and compare for yourself.
I think what you said actually expresses the tragic sense of life expressed in The Wind Rises. A tragedy is a tragedy when happiness is doomed to be an impossibility because of different values, ideals or desires within a character have irresolvable conflict with each other. Jirou wouldn't have fulfilled his dream if he had chosen to commit into a normal life, nor could he have lived a happy with the one he loved, kept his hand clean from war atrocity, had he chosen to channel all his energy into his craft. Nietzsche himself even recommends a stoic, solitary life to those who wants to achieve something great. He is well aware that suffering (to others or the yourself) and solitude is what you have to pay for greatness. He himself lived a lonely, unhappy life which eventually has led to his mental breakdown at the age of 44. Human excellence and conventional values do very often have conflict with each other, and one of the most challenging aspect of Nietzschean philosophy is that its advise us (or those who have the potential to be great) to sacrifice conventional values for excellence whenever the former becomes an obstacle to the latter. He even advices us to look beyond mere humanity, in order to achieve something greater than humanity. So you're quite right that he is indeed encouraging us to break up with our natural human sentimentality (the need for love, recognition, security, empathy, etc.) if it becomes an obstacle to greatness.
I love K-ON because it's a perfectly executed entertainment show on TV anime standard. I think it's equally hard to create truly entertaining show as it's hard to create truly philosophical show. But I'm interested in why you think it's a Marxist Leninist Maoist show. (Is it a meme? haha) To me the show is great not because it has great philosophical depth, but in a way I would also say it embodies an idea of what a happy and fulfilling life should look like, and as an embodiment of a utopian vision, perhaps K-ON is more than what most people think it is.