Doesn't really read like something that could be dismissed easily as
'nonsense'.

http://www.theperspectivesofnietzsche.com/nietzsche/nwill.html

Will to Power

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Suppose nothing else were "given" as real except our world of desires
and passions, and we could  not get down, or up, to any other
"reality" besides the reality of our drives--for thinking is merely a
relation of these drives to each other: is it not permitted to make
the experiment and to ask the question whether this "given" would not
be sufficient for also understanding on the basis of this kind of
thing the so-called mechanistic (or "material") world?...

In the end not only is it permitted to make this experiment; the
conscience of method demands it. Not to assume several kinds of
causality until the experiment of making do with a single one has been
pushed to its utmost limit (to the point of nonsense, if I may say
so)... The question is in the end whether we really recognize the will
as efficient,  whether we believe in the causality of the will: if we
do--and at bottom our faith in this is nothing less than our faith in
causality itself--then we have to make the experiment of positing
causality of the will hypothetically as the only one. "Will," of
course, can affect only "will"--and not "matter" (not "nerves," for
example). In short, one has to risk the hypothesis whether will does
not affect will wherever "effects" are recognized--and whether all
mechanical occurrences are not, insofar as a force is active in them,
will force, effects of will.

Suppose, finally, we succeeded in explaining our entire instinctive
life as the development and ramification of one basic form of the
will--namely, of the will to power, as my proposition has it... then
one would have gained the right to determine all efficient force
univocally as--will to power. The world viewed from inside... it would
be "will to power" and nothing else.

from Beyond Good and Evil, s.36, Walter Kaufmann transl.
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In order to sustain the theory of a mechanistic world, therefore, we
always have to stipulate to what extent we are employing two fictions:
the concept of motion (taken from our sense language) and the concept
of the atom (=unity, deriving from our psychical "experience"): the
mechanistic theory presupposes a sense prejudice and a psychological
prejudice...

The mechanistic world is imagined only as sight and touch imagine a
world (as "moved") --so as to be calculable-- thus causal unities are
invented, "things" (atoms) whose effect remains constant
(--transference of the false concept of subject to the concept of the
atom)...
If we eliminate these additions, no things remain but only dynamic
quanta, in a relation of tension to all other dynamic quanta: their
essence lies in their relation to all other quanta, in their "effect"
upon the same. The will to power is not a being, not a becoming, but a
pathos --the most elemental fact from which a becoming and effecting
first emerge--

from The Will to Power, s.635, Walter Kaufmann transl.
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My idea is that every specific body strives to become master over all
space and to extend its force (--its will to power:) and to thrust
back all that resists its extension. But it continually encounters
similar efforts on the part of other bodies and ends by coming to an
arrangement ("union") with those of them that are sufficiently related
to it: thus they then conspire together for power. And the process
goes on--

from The Will to Power, s.636, Walter Kaufmann transl.
________________________________

[Anything which] is a living and not a dying body... will have to be
an incarnate will to power, it will strive to grow, spread, seize,
become predominant - not from any morality or immorality but because
it is living and because life simply is will to power...
'Exploitation'... belongs to the essence of what lives, as a basic
organic function; it is a consequence of the will to power, which is
after all the will to life.

from Nietzsche's Beyond Good and Evil, s.259, Walter Kaufmann transl.
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