Interpret and discuss sections 51 and 52 from Nietzsche's Human, All Too Human

Interpret and discuss sections 51 and 52 from Nietzsche’s Human, All Too Human
Friedrich Nietzsche, a late 19th century philosopher completed the first section, Human, All Too Human to his three part series in 1878. Nietzsche followed this in 1879 and 1880 with parts two and three to his three part series; Mixed Opinions and Maxims and The Wanderer and his Shadow. It was not until 1886 when he joined the three parts collectively to shape together the three part series known these days as been Human, All Too Human - A Book for Free Spirits. Due to the fact that Nietzsche did not want to form together a philosophical "system," he completed these writings as a series of many aphorisms whose length was contrasted from been either a line or two to a page or two. Here, he often questions upon cultural and psychological prodigies in relation to the individuals's natural and physiological health nature. The suggestion of influence and authority according to Nietzsche repeatedly appears as an illuminating theory but Nietzsche tends in this period of time to appeal to pleasure-seeking reflections of satisfaction and pain in his vindications of cultural and objective experiences.
Throughout his writings Nietzsche explores the theory of truth and reason as he perceives it to be. Nietzsche challenges the reader to seek out on a quest for the true elements of logic and to question their adequacy. Truth; in Nietzsche’s words is something not to be ‘found’ or ‘discovered’, but something ‘that must be created and that gives name to a process’. His primary aim in his work is articulated to encourage people to question and re-consider their morals and values of what they previously thought was good, evil, and just et cetera… He also questions whether his life experiences are his personal experiences or if all individuals share the same encounters in their lifetimes.
