| Produced by John Mamoun, Charles Franks and the Online
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| Distributed Proofreading Team
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| BEYOND GOOD AND EVIL
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| By Friedrich Nietzsche
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| Translated by Helen Zimmern
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| TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE ABOUT THIS E-TEXT EDITION:
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| The following is a reprint of the Helen Zimmern translation from German
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| into English of "Beyond Good and Evil," as published in The Complete
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| Works of Friedrich Nietzsche (1909-1913). Some adaptations from the
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| original text were made to format it into an e-text. Italics in the
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| original book are capitalized in this e-text, except for most foreign
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| language phrases that were italicized. Original footnotes are put in
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| brackets "[]" at the points where they are cited in the text. Some
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| spellings were altered. "To-day" and "To-morrow" are spelled "today"
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| and "tomorrow." Some words containing the letters "ise" in the original
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| text, such as "idealise," had these letters changed to "ize," such as
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| "idealize." "Sceptic" was changed to "skeptic."
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| TABLE OF CONTENTS
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| PREFACE
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| BEYOND GOOD AND EVIL
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| CHAPTER I: PREJUDICES OF PHILOSOPHERS
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| CHAPTER II: THE FREE SPIRIT
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| CHAPTER III: THE RELIGIOUS MOOD
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| CHAPTER IV: APOPHTHEGMS AND INTERLUDES
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| CHAPTER V: THE NATURAL HISTORY OF MORALS
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| CHAPTER VI: WE SCHOLARS
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| CHAPTER VII: OUR VIRTUES
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| CHAPTER VIII: PEOPLES AND COUNTRIES
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| CHAPTER IX: WHAT IS NOBLE?
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| FROM THE HEIGHTS (POEM TRANSLATED BY L.A. MAGNUS)
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| PREFACE
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| SUPPOSING that Truth is a woman--what then? Is there not ground
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| for suspecting that all philosophers, in so far as they have been
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| dogmatists, have failed to understand women--that the terrible
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| seriousness and clumsy importunity with which they have usually paid
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| their addresses to Truth, have been unskilled and unseemly methods for
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| winning a woman? Certainly she has never allowed herself to be won; and
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| at present every kind of dogma stands with sad and discouraged mien--IF,
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| indeed, it stands at all! For there are scoffers who maintain that it
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| has fallen, that all dogma lies on the ground--nay more, that it is at
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| its last gasp. But to speak seriously, there are good grounds for hoping
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| that all dogmatizing in philosophy, whatever solemn, whatever conclusive
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| and decided airs it has assumed, may have been only a noble puerilism
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| and tyronism; and probably the time is at hand when it will be once
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| and again understood WHAT has actually sufficed for the basis of such
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| imposing and absolute philosophical edifices as the dogmatists have
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| hitherto reared: perhaps some popular superstition of immemorial time
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| (such as the soul-superstition, which, in the form of subject- and
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| ego-superstition, has not yet ceased doing mischief): perhaps some
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| play upon words, a deception on the part of grammar, or an
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| audacious generalization of very restricted, very personal, very
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| human--all-too-human facts. The philosophy of the dogmatists, it is to
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| be hoped, was only a promise for thousands of years afterwards, as was
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| astrology in still earlier times, in the service of which probably more
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| labour, gold, acuteness, and patience have been spent than on any
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| actual science hitherto: we owe to it, and to its "super-terrestrial"
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| pretensions in Asia and Egypt, the grand style of architecture. It seems
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| that in order to inscribe themselves upon the heart of humanity with
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| everlasting claims, all great things have first to wander about the
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| earth as enormous and awe-inspiring caricatures: dogmatic philosophy has
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| been a caricature of this kind--for instance, the Vedanta doctrine in
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| Asia, and Platonism in Europe. Let us not be ungrateful to it, although
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| it must certainly be confessed that the worst, the most tiresome,
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| and the most dangerous of errors hitherto has been a dogmatist
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| error--namely, Plato's invention of Pure Spirit and the Good in Itself.
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| But now when it has been surmounted, when Europe, rid of this nightmare,
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| can again draw breath freely and at least enjoy a healthier--sleep,
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| we, WHOSE DUTY IS WAKEFULNESS ITSELF, are the heirs of all the strength
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| which the struggle against this error has fostered. It amounted to
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| the very inversion of truth, and the denial of the PERSPECTIVE--the
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| fundamental condition--of life, to speak of Spirit and the Good as Plato
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| spoke of them; indeed one might ask, as a physician: "How did such a
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| malady attack that finest product of antiquity, Plato? Had the wicked
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| Socrates really corrupted him? Was Socrates after all a corrupter of
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| youths, and deserved his hemlock?" But the struggle against Plato,
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| or--to speak plainer, and for the "people"--the struggle against
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| the ecclesiastical oppression of millenniums of Christianity (FOR
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| CHRISTIANITY IS PLATONISM FOR THE "PEOPLE"), produced in Europe
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| a magnificent tension of soul, such as had not existed anywhere
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| previously; with such a tensely strained bow one can now aim at the
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| furthest goals. As a matter of fact, the European feels this tension as
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| a state of distress, and twice attempts have been made in grand style to
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| unbend the bow: once by means of Jesuitism, and the second time by means
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| of democratic enlightenment--which, with the aid of liberty of the press
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| and newspaper-reading, might, in fact, bring it about that the spirit
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| would not so easily find itself in "distress"! (The Germans invented
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| gunpowder--all credit to them! but they again made things square--they
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| invented printing.) But we, who are neither Jesuits, nor democrats,
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| nor even sufficiently Germans, we GOOD EUROPEANS, and free, VERY free
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| spirits--we have it still, all the distress of spirit and all the
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| tension of its bow! And perhaps also the arrow, the duty, and, who
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| knows? THE GOAL TO AIM AT....
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| Sils Maria Upper Engadine, JUNE, 1885.
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| CHAPTER I. PREJUDICES OF PHILOSOPHERS
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| 1. The Will to Truth, which is to tempt us to many a hazardous
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| enterprise, the famous Truthfulness of which all philosophers have
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| hitherto spoken with respect, what questions has this Will to Truth not
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| laid before us! What strange, perplexing, questionable questions! It is
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| already a long story; yet it seems as if it were hardly commenced. Is
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| it any wonder if we at last grow distrustful, lose patience, and turn
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| impatiently away? That this Sphinx teaches us at last to ask questions
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| ourselves? WHO is it really that puts questions to us here? WHAT really
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| is this "Will to Truth" in us? In fact we made a long halt at the
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| question as to the origin of this Will--until at last we came to an
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| absolute standstill before a yet more fundamental question. We inquired
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| about the VALUE of this Will. Granted that we want the truth: WHY NOT
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| RATHER untruth? And uncertainty? Even ignorance? The problem of the
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| value of truth presented itself before us--or was it we who presented
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| ourselves before the problem? Which of us is the Oedipus here? Which
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| the Sphinx? It would seem to be a rendezvous of questions and notes of
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| interrogation. And could it be believed that it at last seems to us as
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| if the problem had never been propounded before, as if we were the first
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| to discern it, get a sight of it, and RISK RAISING it? For there is risk
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| in raising it, perhaps there is no greater risk.
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| 2. "HOW COULD anything originate out of its opposite? For example, truth
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| out of error? or the Will to Truth out of the will to deception? or the
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| generous deed out of selfishness? or the pure sun-bright vision of the
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| wise man out of covetousness? Such genesis is impossible; whoever dreams
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| of it is a fool, nay, worse than a fool; things of the highest
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| value must have a different origin, an origin of THEIR own--in this
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| transitory, seductive, illusory, paltry world, in this turmoil of
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| delusion and cupidity, they cannot have their source. But rather in
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| the lap of Being, in the intransitory, in the concealed God, in the
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| 'Thing-in-itself--THERE must be their source, and nowhere else!"--This
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| mode of reasoning discloses the typical prejudice by which
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| metaphysicians of all times can be recognized, this mode of valuation
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| is at the back of all their logical procedure; through this "belief" of
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| theirs, they exert themselves for their "knowledge," for something that
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| is in the end solemnly christened "the Truth." The fundamental belief of
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| metaphysicians is THE BELIEF IN ANTITHESES OF VALUES. It never occurred
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| even to the wariest of them to doubt here on the very threshold (where
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| doubt, however, was most necessary); though they had made a solemn
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| vow, "DE OMNIBUS DUBITANDUM." For it may be doubted, firstly, whether
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| antitheses exist at all; and secondly, whether the popular valuations
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| and antitheses of value upon which metaphysicians have set their
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| seal, are not perhaps merely superficial estimates, merely provisional
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| perspectives, besides being probably made from some corner, perhaps from
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| below--"frog perspectives," as it were, to borrow an expression current
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| among painters. In spite of all the value which may belong to the true,
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| the positive, and the unselfish, it might be possible that a higher
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| and more fundamental value for life generally should be assigned to
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| pretence, to the will to delusion, to selfishness, and cupidity. It
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| might even be possible that WHAT constitutes the value of those good and
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| respected things, consists precisely in their being insidiously
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| related, knotted, and crocheted to these evil and apparently opposed
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| things--perhaps even in being essentially identical with them. Perhaps!
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| But who wishes to concern himself with such dangerous "Perhapses"!
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| For that investigation one must await the advent of a new order of
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| philosophers, such as will have other tastes and inclinations, the
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| reverse of those hitherto prevalent--philosophers of the dangerous
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| "Perhaps" in every sense of the term. And to speak in all seriousness, I
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| see such new philosophers beginning to appear.
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| 3. Having kept a sharp eye on philosophers, and having read between
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| their lines long enough, I now say to myself that the greater part of
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| conscious thinking must be counted among the instinctive functions, and
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| it is so even in the case of philosophical thinking; one has here to
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| learn anew, as one learned anew about heredity and "innateness." As
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| little as the act of birth comes into consideration in the whole process
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| and procedure of heredity, just as little is "being-conscious" OPPOSED
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| to the instinctive in any decisive sense; the greater part of the
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| conscious thinking of a philosopher is secretly influenced by his
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| instincts, and forced into definite channels. And behind all logic and
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| its seeming sovereignty of movement, there are valuations, or to speak
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| more plainly, physiological demands, for the maintenance of a definite
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| mode of life For example, that the certain is worth more than the
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| uncertain, that illusion is less valuable than "truth" such valuations,
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| in spite of their regulative importance for US, might notwithstanding be
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| only superficial valuations, special kinds of _niaiserie_, such as may
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| be necessary for the maintenance of beings such as ourselves. Supposing,
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| in effect, that man is not just the "measure of things."
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| 4. The falseness of an opinion is not for us any objection to it: it is
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| here, perhaps, that our new language sounds most strangely. The
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| question is, how far an opinion is life-furthering, life-preserving,
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| species-preserving, perhaps species-rearing, and we are fundamentally
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| inclined to maintain that the falsest opinions (to which the synthetic
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| judgments a priori belong), are the most indispensable to us, that
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| without a recognition of logical fictions, without a comparison of
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| reality with the purely IMAGINED world of the absolute and immutable,
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| without a constant counterfeiting of the world by means of numbers,
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| man could not live--that the renunciation of false opinions would be
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| a renunciation of life, a negation of life. TO RECOGNISE UNTRUTH AS A
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| CONDITION OF LIFE; that is certainly to impugn the traditional ideas of
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| value in a dangerous manner, and a philosophy which ventures to do so,
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| has thereby alone placed itself beyond good and evil.
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| 5. That which causes philosophers to be regarded half-distrustfully
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| and half-mockingly, is not the oft-repeated discovery how innocent they
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| are--how often and easily they make mistakes and lose their way, in
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| short, how childish and childlike they are,--but that there is not
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| enough honest dealing with them, whereas they all raise a loud and
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| virtuous outcry when the problem of truthfulness is even hinted at in
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| the remotest manner. They all pose as though their real opinions had
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| been discovered and attained through the self-evolving of a cold, pure,
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| divinely indifferent dialectic (in contrast to all sorts of mystics,
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| who, fairer and foolisher, talk of "inspiration"), whereas, in fact, a
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| prejudiced proposition, idea, or "suggestion," which is generally
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| their heart's desire abstracted and refined, is defended by them with
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| arguments sought out after the event. They are all advocates who do not
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| wish to be regarded as such, generally astute defenders, also, of their
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| prejudices, which they dub "truths,"--and VERY far from having the
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| conscience which bravely admits this to itself, very far from having
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| the good taste of the courage which goes so far as to let this be
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| understood, perhaps to warn friend or foe, or in cheerful confidence
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| and self-ridicule. The spectacle of the Tartuffery of old Kant, equally
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| stiff and decent, with which he entices us into the dialectic
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| by-ways that lead (more correctly mislead) to his "categorical
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| imperative"--makes us fastidious ones smile, we who find no small
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| amusement in spying out the subtle tricks of old moralists and ethical
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| preachers. Or, still more so, the hocus-pocus in mathematical form, by
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| means of which Spinoza has, as it were, clad his philosophy in mail and
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| mask--in fact, the "love of HIS wisdom," to translate the term fairly
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| and squarely--in order thereby to strike terror at once into the heart
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| of the assailant who should dare to cast a glance on that invincible
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| maiden, that Pallas Athene:--how much of personal timidity and
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| vulnerability does this masquerade of a sickly recluse betray!
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| 6. It has gradually become clear to me what every great philosophy up
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| till now has consisted of--namely, the confession of its originator, and
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| a species of involuntary and unconscious auto-biography; and moreover
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| that the moral (or immoral) purpose in every philosophy has constituted
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| the true vital germ out of which the entire plant has always grown.
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| Indeed, to understand how the abstrusest metaphysical assertions of a
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| philosopher have been arrived at, it is always well (and wise) to first
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| ask oneself: "What morality do they (or does he) aim at?" Accordingly,
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| I do not believe that an "impulse to knowledge" is the father of
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| philosophy; but that another impulse, here as elsewhere, has only made
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| use of knowledge (and mistaken knowledge!) as an instrument. But whoever
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| considers the fundamental impulses of man with a view to determining
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| how far they may have here acted as INSPIRING GENII (or as demons and
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| cobolds), will find that they have all practiced philosophy at one time
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| or another, and that each one of them would have been only too glad to
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| look upon itself as the ultimate end of existence and the legitimate
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| LORD over all the other impulses. For every impulse is imperious, and as
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| SUCH, attempts to philosophize. To be sure, in the case of scholars, in
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| the case of really scientific men, it may be otherwise--"better," if
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| you will; there there may really be such a thing as an "impulse to
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| knowledge," some kind of small, independent clock-work, which, when well
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| wound up, works away industriously to that end, WITHOUT the rest of
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| the scholarly impulses taking any material part therein. The actual
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| "interests" of the scholar, therefore, are generally in quite another
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| direction--in the family, perhaps, or in money-making, or in politics;
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| it is, in fact, almost indifferent at what point of research his little
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| machine is placed, and whether the hopeful young worker becomes a
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| good philologist, a mushroom specialist, or a chemist; he is not
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| CHARACTERISED by becoming this or that. In the philosopher, on the
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| contrary, there is absolutely nothing impersonal; and above all,
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| his morality furnishes a decided and decisive testimony as to WHO HE
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| IS,--that is to say, in what order the deepest impulses of his nature
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| stand to each other.
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| 7. How malicious philosophers can be! I know of nothing more stinging
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| than the joke Epicurus took the liberty of making on Plato and the
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| Platonists; he called them Dionysiokolakes. In its original sense,
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| and on the face of it, the word signifies "Flatterers of
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| Dionysius"--consequently, tyrants' accessories and lick-spittles;
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| besides this, however, it is as much as to say, "They are all ACTORS,
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| there is nothing genuine about them" (for Dionysiokolax was a popular
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| name for an actor). And the latter is really the malignant reproach that
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| Epicurus cast upon Plato: he was annoyed by the grandiose manner, the
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| mise en scene style of which Plato and his scholars were masters--of
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| which Epicurus was not a master! He, the old school-teacher of Samos,
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| who sat concealed in his little garden at Athens, and wrote three
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| hundred books, perhaps out of rage and ambitious envy of Plato, who
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| knows! Greece took a hundred years to find out who the garden-god
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| Epicurus really was. Did she ever find out?
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| 8. There is a point in every philosophy at which the "conviction" of
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| the philosopher appears on the scene; or, to put it in the words of an
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| ancient mystery:
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| Adventavit asinus, Pulcher et fortissimus.
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| 9. You desire to LIVE "according to Nature"? Oh, you noble Stoics, what
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| fraud of words! Imagine to yourselves a being like Nature, boundlessly
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| extravagant, boundlessly indifferent, without purpose or consideration,
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| without pity or justice, at once fruitful and barren and uncertain:
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| imagine to yourselves INDIFFERENCE as a power--how COULD you live
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| in accordance with such indifference? To live--is not that just
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| endeavouring to be otherwise than this Nature? Is not living valuing,
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| preferring, being unjust, being limited, endeavouring to be different?
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| And granted that your imperative, "living according to Nature," means
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| actually the same as "living according to life"--how could you do
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| DIFFERENTLY? Why should you make a principle out of what you yourselves
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| are, and must be? In reality, however, it is quite otherwise with you:
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| while you pretend to read with rapture the canon of your law in Nature,
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| you want something quite the contrary, you extraordinary stage-players
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| and self-deluders! In your pride you wish to dictate your morals and
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| ideals to Nature, to Nature herself, and to incorporate them therein;
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| you insist that it shall be Nature "according to the Stoa," and would
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| like everything to be made after your own image, as a vast, eternal
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| glorification and generalism of Stoicism! With all your love for truth,
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| you have forced yourselves so long, so persistently, and with such
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| hypnotic rigidity to see Nature FALSELY, that is to say, Stoically,
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| that you are no longer able to see it otherwise--and to crown all, some
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| unfathomable superciliousness gives you the Bedlamite hope that
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| BECAUSE you are able to tyrannize over yourselves--Stoicism is
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| self-tyranny--Nature will also allow herself to be tyrannized over: is
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| not the Stoic a PART of Nature?... But this is an old and everlasting
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| story: what happened in old times with the Stoics still happens today,
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| as soon as ever a philosophy begins to believe in itself. It always
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| creates the world in its own image; it cannot do otherwise; philosophy
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| is this tyrannical impulse itself, the most spiritual Will to Power, the
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| will to "creation of the world," the will to the causa prima.
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| 10. The eagerness and subtlety, I should even say craftiness, with
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| which the problem of "the real and the apparent world" is dealt with at
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| present throughout Europe, furnishes food for thought and attention; and
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| he who hears only a "Will to Truth" in the background, and nothing else,
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| cannot certainly boast of the sharpest ears. In rare and isolated
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| cases, it may really have happened that such a Will to Truth--a certain
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| extravagant and adventurous pluck, a metaphysician's ambition of the
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| forlorn hope--has participated therein: that which in the end always
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| prefers a handful of "certainty" to a whole cartload of beautiful
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| possibilities; there may even be puritanical fanatics of conscience,
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| who prefer to put their last trust in a sure nothing, rather than in an
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| uncertain something. But that is Nihilism, and the sign of a despairing,
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| mortally wearied soul, notwithstanding the courageous bearing such a
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| virtue may display. It seems, however, to be otherwise with stronger
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| and livelier thinkers who are still eager for life. In that they side
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| AGAINST appearance, and speak superciliously of "perspective," in
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| that they rank the credibility of their own bodies about as low as the
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| credibility of the ocular evidence that "the earth stands still," and
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| thus, apparently, allowing with complacency their securest possession
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| to escape (for what does one at present believe in more firmly than
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| in one's body?),--who knows if they are not really trying to win back
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| something which was formerly an even securer possession, something
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| of the old domain of the faith of former times, perhaps the "immortal
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| soul," perhaps "the old God," in short, ideas by which they could live
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| better, that is to say, more vigorously and more joyously, than by
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| "modern ideas"? There is DISTRUST of these modern ideas in this mode
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| of looking at things, a disbelief in all that has been constructed
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| yesterday and today; there is perhaps some slight admixture of satiety
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| and scorn, which can no longer endure the BRIC-A-BRAC of ideas of the
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| most varied origin, such as so-called Positivism at present throws on
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| the market; a disgust of the more refined taste at the village-fair
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| motleyness and patchiness of all these reality-philosophasters, in whom
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| there is nothing either new or true, except this motleyness. Therein it
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| seems to me that we should agree with those skeptical anti-realists and
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| knowledge-microscopists of the present day; their instinct, which repels
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| them from MODERN reality, is unrefuted... what do their retrograde
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| by-paths concern us! The main thing about them is NOT that they wish
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| to go "back," but that they wish to get AWAY therefrom. A little MORE
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| strength, swing, courage, and artistic power, and they would be OFF--and
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| not back!
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| 11. It seems to me that there is everywhere an attempt at present to
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| divert attention from the actual influence which Kant exercised on
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| German philosophy, and especially to ignore prudently the value which
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| he set upon himself. Kant was first and foremost proud of his Table of
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| Categories; with it in his hand he said: "This is the most difficult
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| thing that could ever be undertaken on behalf of metaphysics." Let us
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| only understand this "could be"! He was proud of having DISCOVERED a
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| new faculty in man, the faculty of synthetic judgment a priori. Granting
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| that he deceived himself in this matter; the development and rapid
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| flourishing of German philosophy depended nevertheless on his pride, and
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| on the eager rivalry of the younger generation to discover if possible
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| something--at all events "new faculties"--of which to be still
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| prouder!--But let us reflect for a moment--it is high time to do so.
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| "How are synthetic judgments a priori POSSIBLE?" Kant asks himself--and
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| what is really his answer? "BY MEANS OF A MEANS (faculty)"--but
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| unfortunately not in five words, but so circumstantially, imposingly,
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| and with such display of German profundity and verbal flourishes, that
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| one altogether loses sight of the comical niaiserie allemande involved
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| in such an answer. People were beside themselves with delight over this
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| new faculty, and the jubilation reached its climax when Kant further
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| discovered a moral faculty in man--for at that time Germans were still
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| moral, not yet dabbling in the "Politics of hard fact." Then came
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| the honeymoon of German philosophy. All the young theologians of the
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| Tubingen institution went immediately into the groves--all seeking for
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| "faculties." And what did they not find--in that innocent, rich, and
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| still youthful period of the German spirit, to which Romanticism, the
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| malicious fairy, piped and sang, when one could not yet distinguish
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| between "finding" and "inventing"! Above all a faculty for the
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| "transcendental"; Schelling christened it, intellectual intuition,
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| and thereby gratified the most earnest longings of the naturally
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| pious-inclined Germans. One can do no greater wrong to the whole of
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| this exuberant and eccentric movement (which was really youthfulness,
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| notwithstanding that it disguised itself so boldly, in hoary and senile
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| conceptions), than to take it seriously, or even treat it with moral
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| indignation. Enough, however--the world grew older, and the dream
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| vanished. A time came when people rubbed their foreheads, and they still
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| rub them today. People had been dreaming, and first and foremost--old
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| Kant. "By means of a means (faculty)"--he had said, or at least meant to
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| say. But, is that--an answer? An explanation? Or is it not rather merely
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| a repetition of the question? How does opium induce sleep? "By means of
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| a means (faculty)," namely the virtus dormitiva, replies the doctor in
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| Moliere,
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| Quia est in eo virtus dormitiva,
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| Cujus est natura sensus assoupire.
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| But such replies belong to the realm of comedy, and it is high time
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| to replace the Kantian question, "How are synthetic judgments a PRIORI
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| possible?" by another question, "Why is belief in such judgments
|
| necessary?"--in effect, it is high time that we should understand
|
| that such judgments must be believed to be true, for the sake of the
|
| preservation of creatures like ourselves; though they still might
|
| naturally be false judgments! Or, more plainly spoken, and roughly and
|
| readily--synthetic judgments a priori should not "be possible" at all;
|
| we have no right to them; in our mouths they are nothing but false
|
| judgments. Only, of course, the belief in their truth is necessary, as
|
| plausible belief and ocular evidence belonging to the perspective view
|
| of life. And finally, to call to mind the enormous influence which
|
| "German philosophy"--I hope you understand its right to inverted commas
|
| (goosefeet)?--has exercised throughout the whole of Europe, there is
|
| no doubt that a certain VIRTUS DORMITIVA had a share in it; thanks to
|
| German philosophy, it was a delight to the noble idlers, the virtuous,
|
| the mystics, the artiste, the three-fourths Christians, and the
|
| political obscurantists of all nations, to find an antidote to the still
|
| overwhelming sensualism which overflowed from the last century into
|
| this, in short--"sensus assoupire."...
|
|
|
| 12. As regards materialistic atomism, it is one of the best-refuted
|
| theories that have been advanced, and in Europe there is now perhaps
|
| no one in the learned world so unscholarly as to attach serious
|
| signification to it, except for convenient everyday use (as an
|
| abbreviation of the means of expression)--thanks chiefly to the Pole
|
| Boscovich: he and the Pole Copernicus have hitherto been the greatest
|
| and most successful opponents of ocular evidence. For while Copernicus
|
| has persuaded us to believe, contrary to all the senses, that the earth
|
| does NOT stand fast, Boscovich has taught us to abjure the belief in the
|
| last thing that "stood fast" of the earth--the belief in "substance," in
|
| "matter," in the earth-residuum, and particle-atom: it is the greatest
|
| triumph over the senses that has hitherto been gained on earth. One
|
| must, however, go still further, and also declare war, relentless war
|
| to the knife, against the "atomistic requirements" which still lead a
|
| dangerous after-life in places where no one suspects them, like the more
|
| celebrated "metaphysical requirements": one must also above all give
|
| the finishing stroke to that other and more portentous atomism which
|
| Christianity has taught best and longest, the SOUL-ATOMISM. Let it be
|
| permitted to designate by this expression the belief which regards the
|
| soul as something indestructible, eternal, indivisible, as a monad,
|
| as an atomon: this belief ought to be expelled from science! Between
|
| ourselves, it is not at all necessary to get rid of "the soul" thereby,
|
| and thus renounce one of the oldest and most venerated hypotheses--as
|
| happens frequently to the clumsiness of naturalists, who can hardly
|
| touch on the soul without immediately losing it. But the way is open
|
| for new acceptations and refinements of the soul-hypothesis; and such
|
| conceptions as "mortal soul," and "soul of subjective multiplicity,"
|
| and "soul as social structure of the instincts and passions," want
|
| henceforth to have legitimate rights in science. In that the NEW
|
| psychologist is about to put an end to the superstitions which have
|
| hitherto flourished with almost tropical luxuriance around the idea of
|
| the soul, he is really, as it were, thrusting himself into a new desert
|
| and a new distrust--it is possible that the older psychologists had a
|
| merrier and more comfortable time of it; eventually, however, he finds
|
| that precisely thereby he is also condemned to INVENT--and, who knows?
|
| perhaps to DISCOVER the new.
|
|
|
| 13. Psychologists should bethink themselves before putting down the
|
| instinct of self-preservation as the cardinal instinct of an organic
|
| being. A living thing seeks above all to DISCHARGE its strength--life
|
| itself is WILL TO POWER; self-preservation is only one of the indirect
|
| and most frequent RESULTS thereof. In short, here, as everywhere else,
|
| let us beware of SUPERFLUOUS teleological principles!--one of which
|
| is the instinct of self-preservation (we owe it to Spinoza's
|
| inconsistency). It is thus, in effect, that method ordains, which must
|
| be essentially economy of principles.
|
|
|
| 14. It is perhaps just dawning on five or six minds that natural
|
| philosophy is only a world-exposition and world-arrangement (according
|
| to us, if I may say so!) and NOT a world-explanation; but in so far as
|
| it is based on belief in the senses, it is regarded as more, and for a
|
| long time to come must be regarded as more--namely, as an explanation.
|
| It has eyes and fingers of its own, it has ocular evidence and
|
| palpableness of its own: this operates fascinatingly, persuasively, and
|
| CONVINCINGLY upon an age with fundamentally plebeian tastes--in fact, it
|
| follows instinctively the canon of truth of eternal popular sensualism.
|
| What is clear, what is "explained"? Only that which can be seen and
|
| felt--one must pursue every problem thus far. Obversely, however, the
|
| charm of the Platonic mode of thought, which was an ARISTOCRATIC mode,
|
| consisted precisely in RESISTANCE to obvious sense-evidence--perhaps
|
| among men who enjoyed even stronger and more fastidious senses than our
|
| contemporaries, but who knew how to find a higher triumph in remaining
|
| masters of them: and this by means of pale, cold, grey conceptional
|
| networks which they threw over the motley whirl of the senses--the
|
| mob of the senses, as Plato said. In this overcoming of the world, and
|
| interpreting of the world in the manner of Plato, there was an ENJOYMENT
|
| different from that which the physicists of today offer us--and likewise
|
| the Darwinists and anti-teleologists among the physiological workers,
|
| with their principle of the "smallest possible effort," and the greatest
|
| possible blunder. "Where there is nothing more to see or to grasp, there
|
| is also nothing more for men to do"--that is certainly an imperative
|
| different from the Platonic one, but it may notwithstanding be the right
|
| imperative for a hardy, laborious race of machinists and bridge-builders
|
| of the future, who have nothing but ROUGH work to perform.
|
|
|
| 15. To study physiology with a clear conscience, one must insist on
|
| the fact that the sense-organs are not phenomena in the sense of the
|
| idealistic philosophy; as such they certainly could not be causes!
|
| Sensualism, therefore, at least as regulative hypothesis, if not as
|
| heuristic principle. What? And others say even that the external world
|
| is the work of our organs? But then our body, as a part of this external
|
| world, would be the work of our organs! But then our organs themselves
|
| would be the work of our organs! It seems to me that this is a
|
| complete REDUCTIO AD ABSURDUM, if the conception CAUSA SUI is something
|
| fundamentally absurd. Consequently, the external world is NOT the work
|
| of our organs--?
|
|
|
| 16. There are still harmless self-observers who believe that there are
|
| "immediate certainties"; for instance, "I think," or as the superstition
|
| of Schopenhauer puts it, "I will"; as though cognition here got hold
|
| of its object purely and simply as "the thing in itself," without any
|
| falsification taking place either on the part of the subject or the
|
| object. I would repeat it, however, a hundred times, that "immediate
|
| certainty," as well as "absolute knowledge" and the "thing in itself,"
|
| involve a CONTRADICTIO IN ADJECTO; we really ought to free ourselves
|
| from the misleading significance of words! The people on their part may
|
| think that cognition is knowing all about things, but the philosopher
|
| must say to himself: "When I analyze the process that is expressed in
|
| the sentence, 'I think,' I find a whole series of daring assertions, the
|
| argumentative proof of which would be difficult, perhaps impossible:
|
| for instance, that it is _I_ who think, that there must necessarily be
|
| something that thinks, that thinking is an activity and operation on the
|
| part of a being who is thought of as a cause, that there is an 'ego,'
|
| and finally, that it is already determined what is to be designated by
|
| thinking--that I KNOW what thinking is. For if I had not already decided
|
| within myself what it is, by what standard could I determine whether
|
| that which is just happening is not perhaps 'willing' or 'feeling'? In
|
| short, the assertion 'I think,' assumes that I COMPARE my state at the
|
| present moment with other states of myself which I know, in order to
|
| determine what it is; on account of this retrospective connection with
|
| further 'knowledge,' it has, at any rate, no immediate certainty for
|
| me."--In place of the "immediate certainty" in which the people may
|
| believe in the special case, the philosopher thus finds a series of
|
| metaphysical questions presented to him, veritable conscience questions
|
| of the intellect, to wit: "Whence did I get the notion of 'thinking'?
|
| Why do I believe in cause and effect? What gives me the right to speak
|
| of an 'ego,' and even of an 'ego' as cause, and finally of an 'ego'
|
| as cause of thought?" He who ventures to answer these metaphysical
|
| questions at once by an appeal to a sort of INTUITIVE perception, like
|
| the person who says, "I think, and know that this, at least, is
|
| true, actual, and certain"--will encounter a smile and two notes of
|
| interrogation in a philosopher nowadays. "Sir," the philosopher will
|
| perhaps give him to understand, "it is improbable that you are not
|
| mistaken, but why should it be the truth?"
|
|
|
| 17. With regard to the superstitions of logicians, I shall never tire
|
| of emphasizing a small, terse fact, which is unwillingly recognized by
|
| these credulous minds--namely, that a thought comes when "it" wishes,
|
| and not when "I" wish; so that it is a PERVERSION of the facts of the
|
| case to say that the subject "I" is the condition of the predicate
|
| "think." ONE thinks; but that this "one" is precisely the famous old
|
| "ego," is, to put it mildly, only a supposition, an assertion, and
|
| assuredly not an "immediate certainty." After all, one has even gone too
|
| far with this "one thinks"--even the "one" contains an INTERPRETATION of
|
| the process, and does not belong to the process itself. One infers here
|
| according to the usual grammatical formula--"To think is an activity;
|
| every activity requires an agency that is active; consequently"... It
|
| was pretty much on the same lines that the older atomism sought, besides
|
| the operating "power," the material particle wherein it resides and out
|
| of which it operates--the atom. More rigorous minds, however, learnt at
|
| last to get along without this "earth-residuum," and perhaps some day we
|
| shall accustom ourselves, even from the logician's point of view, to
|
| get along without the little "one" (to which the worthy old "ego" has
|
| refined itself).
|
|
|
| 18. It is certainly not the least charm of a theory that it is
|
| refutable; it is precisely thereby that it attracts the more subtle
|
| minds. It seems that the hundred-times-refuted theory of the "free will"
|
| owes its persistence to this charm alone; some one is always appearing
|
| who feels himself strong enough to refute it.
|
|
|
| 19. Philosophers are accustomed to speak of the will as though it were
|
| the best-known thing in the world; indeed, Schopenhauer has given us
|
| to understand that the will alone is really known to us, absolutely and
|
| completely known, without deduction or addition. But it again and
|
| again seems to me that in this case Schopenhauer also only did what
|
| philosophers are in the habit of doing--he seems to have adopted a
|
| POPULAR PREJUDICE and exaggerated it. Willing seems to me to be above
|
| all something COMPLICATED, something that is a unity only in name--and
|
| it is precisely in a name that popular prejudice lurks, which has got
|
| the mastery over the inadequate precautions of philosophers in all ages.
|
| So let us for once be more cautious, let us be "unphilosophical": let
|
| us say that in all willing there is firstly a plurality of sensations,
|
| namely, the sensation of the condition "AWAY FROM WHICH we go," the
|
| sensation of the condition "TOWARDS WHICH we go," the sensation of this
|
| "FROM" and "TOWARDS" itself, and then besides, an accompanying muscular
|
| sensation, which, even without our putting in motion "arms and legs,"
|
| commences its action by force of habit, directly we "will" anything.
|
| Therefore, just as sensations (and indeed many kinds of sensations) are
|
| to be recognized as ingredients of the will, so, in the second place,
|
| thinking is also to be recognized; in every act of the will there is
|
| a ruling thought;--and let us not imagine it possible to sever this
|
| thought from the "willing," as if the will would then remain over!
|
| In the third place, the will is not only a complex of sensation and
|
| thinking, but it is above all an EMOTION, and in fact the emotion of the
|
| command. That which is termed "freedom of the will" is essentially the
|
| emotion of supremacy in respect to him who must obey: "I am free, 'he'
|
| must obey"--this consciousness is inherent in every will; and equally
|
| so the straining of the attention, the straight look which fixes itself
|
| exclusively on one thing, the unconditional judgment that "this and
|
| nothing else is necessary now," the inward certainty that obedience
|
| will be rendered--and whatever else pertains to the position of the
|
| commander. A man who WILLS commands something within himself which
|
| renders obedience, or which he believes renders obedience. But now let
|
| us notice what is the strangest thing about the will,--this affair so
|
| extremely complex, for which the people have only one name. Inasmuch as
|
| in the given circumstances we are at the same time the commanding AND
|
| the obeying parties, and as the obeying party we know the sensations of
|
| constraint, impulsion, pressure, resistance, and motion, which usually
|
| commence immediately after the act of will; inasmuch as, on the other
|
| hand, we are accustomed to disregard this duality, and to deceive
|
| ourselves about it by means of the synthetic term "I": a whole series
|
| of erroneous conclusions, and consequently of false judgments about the
|
| will itself, has become attached to the act of willing--to such a degree
|
| that he who wills believes firmly that willing SUFFICES for action.
|
| Since in the majority of cases there has only been exercise of will
|
| when the effect of the command--consequently obedience, and therefore
|
| action--was to be EXPECTED, the APPEARANCE has translated itself into
|
| the sentiment, as if there were a NECESSITY OF EFFECT; in a word, he who
|
| wills believes with a fair amount of certainty that will and action are
|
| somehow one; he ascribes the success, the carrying out of the willing,
|
| to the will itself, and thereby enjoys an increase of the sensation
|
| of power which accompanies all success. "Freedom of Will"--that is the
|
| expression for the complex state of delight of the person exercising
|
| volition, who commands and at the same time identifies himself with
|
| the executor of the order--who, as such, enjoys also the triumph over
|
| obstacles, but thinks within himself that it was really his own will
|
| that overcame them. In this way the person exercising volition adds the
|
| feelings of delight of his successful executive instruments, the useful
|
| "underwills" or under-souls--indeed, our body is but a social structure
|
| composed of many souls--to his feelings of delight as commander. L'EFFET
|
| C'EST MOI. what happens here is what happens in every well-constructed
|
| and happy commonwealth, namely, that the governing class identifies
|
| itself with the successes of the commonwealth. In all willing it is
|
| absolutely a question of commanding and obeying, on the basis, as
|
| already said, of a social structure composed of many "souls", on which
|
| account a philosopher should claim the right to include willing-as-such
|
| within the sphere of morals--regarded as the doctrine of the relations
|
| of supremacy under which the phenomenon of "life" manifests itself.
|
|
|
| 20. That the separate philosophical ideas are not anything optional or
|
| autonomously evolving, but grow up in connection and relationship with
|
| each other, that, however suddenly and arbitrarily they seem to appear
|
| in the history of thought, they nevertheless belong just as much to
|
| a system as the collective members of the fauna of a Continent--is
|
| betrayed in the end by the circumstance: how unfailingly the most
|
| diverse philosophers always fill in again a definite fundamental scheme
|
| of POSSIBLE philosophies. Under an invisible spell, they always revolve
|
| once more in the same orbit, however independent of each other they
|
| may feel themselves with their critical or systematic wills, something
|
| within them leads them, something impels them in definite order the
|
| one after the other--to wit, the innate methodology and relationship
|
| of their ideas. Their thinking is, in fact, far less a discovery than a
|
| re-recognizing, a remembering, a return and a home-coming to a far-off,
|
| ancient common-household of the soul, out of which those ideas formerly
|
| grew: philosophizing is so far a kind of atavism of the highest order.
|
| The wonderful family resemblance of all Indian, Greek, and German
|
| philosophizing is easily enough explained. In fact, where there is
|
| affinity of language, owing to the common philosophy of grammar--I mean
|
| owing to the unconscious domination and guidance of similar grammatical
|
| functions--it cannot but be that everything is prepared at the outset
|
| for a similar development and succession of philosophical systems,
|
| just as the way seems barred against certain other possibilities of
|
| world-interpretation. It is highly probable that philosophers within the
|
| domain of the Ural-Altaic languages (where the conception of the subject
|
| is least developed) look otherwise "into the world," and will be
|
| found on paths of thought different from those of the Indo-Germans and
|
| Mussulmans, the spell of certain grammatical functions is ultimately
|
| also the spell of PHYSIOLOGICAL valuations and racial conditions.--So
|
| much by way of rejecting Locke's superficiality with regard to the
|
| origin of ideas.
|
|
|
| 21. The CAUSA SUI is the best self-contradiction that has yet been
|
| conceived, it is a sort of logical violation and unnaturalness; but the
|
| extravagant pride of man has managed to entangle itself profoundly and
|
| frightfully with this very folly. The desire for "freedom of will"
|
| in the superlative, metaphysical sense, such as still holds sway,
|
| unfortunately, in the minds of the half-educated, the desire to bear
|
| the entire and ultimate responsibility for one's actions oneself, and
|
| to absolve God, the world, ancestors, chance, and society therefrom,
|
| involves nothing less than to be precisely this CAUSA SUI, and, with
|
| more than Munchausen daring, to pull oneself up into existence by the
|
| hair, out of the slough of nothingness. If any one should find out in
|
| this manner the crass stupidity of the celebrated conception of "free
|
| will" and put it out of his head altogether, I beg of him to carry
|
| his "enlightenment" a step further, and also put out of his head the
|
| contrary of this monstrous conception of "free will": I mean "non-free
|
| will," which is tantamount to a misuse of cause and effect. One
|
| should not wrongly MATERIALISE "cause" and "effect," as the natural
|
| philosophers do (and whoever like them naturalize in thinking at
|
| present), according to the prevailing mechanical doltishness which makes
|
| the cause press and push until it "effects" its end; one should use
|
| "cause" and "effect" only as pure CONCEPTIONS, that is to say, as
|
| conventional fictions for the purpose of designation and mutual
|
| understanding,--NOT for explanation. In "being-in-itself" there is
|
| nothing of "casual-connection," of "necessity," or of "psychological
|
| non-freedom"; there the effect does NOT follow the cause, there "law"
|
| does not obtain. It is WE alone who have devised cause, sequence,
|
| reciprocity, relativity, constraint, number, law, freedom, motive,
|
| and purpose; and when we interpret and intermix this symbol-world,
|
| as "being-in-itself," with things, we act once more as we have always
|
| acted--MYTHOLOGICALLY. The "non-free will" is mythology; in real life
|
| it is only a question of STRONG and WEAK wills.--It is almost always
|
| a symptom of what is lacking in himself, when a thinker, in every
|
| "causal-connection" and "psychological necessity," manifests something
|
| of compulsion, indigence, obsequiousness, oppression, and non-freedom;
|
| it is suspicious to have such feelings--the person betrays himself. And
|
| in general, if I have observed correctly, the "non-freedom of the will"
|
| is regarded as a problem from two entirely opposite standpoints, but
|
| always in a profoundly PERSONAL manner: some will not give up their
|
| "responsibility," their belief in THEMSELVES, the personal right to
|
| THEIR merits, at any price (the vain races belong to this class); others
|
| on the contrary, do not wish to be answerable for anything, or blamed
|
| for anything, and owing to an inward self-contempt, seek to GET OUT OF
|
| THE BUSINESS, no matter how. The latter, when they write books, are
|
| in the habit at present of taking the side of criminals; a sort of
|
| socialistic sympathy is their favourite disguise. And as a matter of
|
| fact, the fatalism of the weak-willed embellishes itself surprisingly
|
| when it can pose as "la religion de la souffrance humaine"; that is ITS
|
| "good taste."
|
|
|
| 22. Let me be pardoned, as an old philologist who cannot desist from
|
| the mischief of putting his finger on bad modes of interpretation, but
|
| "Nature's conformity to law," of which you physicists talk so proudly,
|
| as though--why, it exists only owing to your interpretation and bad
|
| "philology." It is no matter of fact, no "text," but rather just a
|
| naively humanitarian adjustment and perversion of meaning, with which
|
| you make abundant concessions to the democratic instincts of the modern
|
| soul! "Everywhere equality before the law--Nature is not different in
|
| that respect, nor better than we": a fine instance of secret motive,
|
| in which the vulgar antagonism to everything privileged and
|
| autocratic--likewise a second and more refined atheism--is once more
|
| disguised. "Ni dieu, ni maitre"--that, also, is what you want; and
|
| therefore "Cheers for natural law!"--is it not so? But, as has been
|
| said, that is interpretation, not text; and somebody might come along,
|
| who, with opposite intentions and modes of interpretation, could read
|
| out of the same "Nature," and with regard to the same phenomena, just
|
| the tyrannically inconsiderate and relentless enforcement of the claims
|
| of power--an interpreter who should so place the unexceptionalness and
|
| unconditionalness of all "Will to Power" before your eyes, that almost
|
| every word, and the word "tyranny" itself, would eventually seem
|
| unsuitable, or like a weakening and softening metaphor--as being too
|
| human; and who should, nevertheless, end by asserting the same about
|
| this world as you do, namely, that it has a "necessary" and "calculable"
|
| course, NOT, however, because laws obtain in it, but because they are
|
| absolutely LACKING, and every power effects its ultimate consequences
|
| every moment. Granted that this also is only interpretation--and you
|
| will be eager enough to make this objection?--well, so much the better.
|
|
|
| 23. All psychology hitherto has run aground on moral prejudices and
|
| timidities, it has not dared to launch out into the depths. In so far
|
| as it is allowable to recognize in that which has hitherto been written,
|
| evidence of that which has hitherto been kept silent, it seems as if
|
| nobody had yet harboured the notion of psychology as the Morphology
|
| and DEVELOPMENT-DOCTRINE OF THE WILL TO POWER, as I conceive of it.
|
| The power of moral prejudices has penetrated deeply into the most
|
| intellectual world, the world apparently most indifferent and
|
| unprejudiced, and has obviously operated in an injurious, obstructive,
|
| blinding, and distorting manner. A proper physio-psychology has to
|
| contend with unconscious antagonism in the heart of the investigator,
|
| it has "the heart" against it even a doctrine of the reciprocal
|
| conditionalness of the "good" and the "bad" impulses, causes (as
|
| refined immorality) distress and aversion in a still strong and manly
|
| conscience--still more so, a doctrine of the derivation of all good
|
| impulses from bad ones. If, however, a person should regard even
|
| the emotions of hatred, envy, covetousness, and imperiousness
|
| as life-conditioning emotions, as factors which must be present,
|
| fundamentally and essentially, in the general economy of life (which
|
| must, therefore, be further developed if life is to be further
|
| developed), he will suffer from such a view of things as from
|
| sea-sickness. And yet this hypothesis is far from being the strangest
|
| and most painful in this immense and almost new domain of dangerous
|
| knowledge, and there are in fact a hundred good reasons why every one
|
| should keep away from it who CAN do so! On the other hand, if one has
|
| once drifted hither with one's bark, well! very good! now let us set our
|
| teeth firmly! let us open our eyes and keep our hand fast on the helm!
|
| We sail away right OVER morality, we crush out, we destroy perhaps the
|
| remains of our own morality by daring to make our voyage thither--but
|
| what do WE matter. Never yet did a PROFOUNDER world of insight reveal
|
| itself to daring travelers and adventurers, and the psychologist who
|
| thus "makes a sacrifice"--it is not the sacrifizio dell' intelletto,
|
| on the contrary!--will at least be entitled to demand in return that
|
| psychology shall once more be recognized as the queen of the sciences,
|
| for whose service and equipment the other sciences exist. For psychology
|
| is once more the path to the fundamental problems.
|
|
|
| CHAPTER II. THE FREE SPIRIT
|
|
|
| 24. O sancta simplicitas! In what strange simplification and
|
| falsification man lives! One can never cease wondering when once one has
|
| got eyes for beholding this marvel! How we have made everything around
|
| us clear and free and easy and simple! how we have been able to give
|
| our senses a passport to everything superficial, our thoughts a godlike
|
| desire for wanton pranks and wrong inferences!--how from the beginning,
|
| we have contrived to retain our ignorance in order to enjoy an almost
|
| inconceivable freedom, thoughtlessness, imprudence, heartiness,
|
| and gaiety--in order to enjoy life! And only on this solidified,
|
| granite-like foundation of ignorance could knowledge rear itself
|
| hitherto, the will to knowledge on the foundation of a far more powerful
|
| will, the will to ignorance, to the uncertain, to the untrue! Not as
|
| its opposite, but--as its refinement! It is to be hoped, indeed, that
|
| LANGUAGE, here as elsewhere, will not get over its awkwardness, and that
|
| it will continue to talk of opposites where there are only degrees
|
| and many refinements of gradation; it is equally to be hoped that the
|
| incarnated Tartuffery of morals, which now belongs to our unconquerable
|
| "flesh and blood," will turn the words round in the mouths of us
|
| discerning ones. Here and there we understand it, and laugh at the way
|
| in which precisely the best knowledge seeks most to retain us in this
|
| SIMPLIFIED, thoroughly artificial, suitably imagined, and suitably
|
| falsified world: at the way in which, whether it will or not, it loves
|
| error, because, as living itself, it loves life!
|
|
|
| 25. After such a cheerful commencement, a serious word would fain be
|
| heard; it appeals to the most serious minds. Take care, ye philosophers
|
| and friends of knowledge, and beware of martyrdom! Of suffering "for the
|
| truth's sake"! even in your own defense! It spoils all the innocence
|
| and fine neutrality of your conscience; it makes you headstrong against
|
| objections and red rags; it stupefies, animalizes, and brutalizes, when
|
| in the struggle with danger, slander, suspicion, expulsion, and even
|
| worse consequences of enmity, ye have at last to play your last card
|
| as protectors of truth upon earth--as though "the Truth" were such an
|
| innocent and incompetent creature as to require protectors! and you of
|
| all people, ye knights of the sorrowful countenance, Messrs Loafers and
|
| Cobweb-spinners of the spirit! Finally, ye know sufficiently well that
|
| it cannot be of any consequence if YE just carry your point; ye know
|
| that hitherto no philosopher has carried his point, and that there might
|
| be a more laudable truthfulness in every little interrogative mark
|
| which you place after your special words and favourite doctrines (and
|
| occasionally after yourselves) than in all the solemn pantomime and
|
| trumping games before accusers and law-courts! Rather go out of the way!
|
| Flee into concealment! And have your masks and your ruses, that ye may
|
| be mistaken for what you are, or somewhat feared! And pray, don't forget
|
| the garden, the garden with golden trellis-work! And have people around
|
| you who are as a garden--or as music on the waters at eventide, when
|
| already the day becomes a memory. Choose the GOOD solitude, the free,
|
| wanton, lightsome solitude, which also gives you the right still to
|
| remain good in any sense whatsoever! How poisonous, how crafty, how bad,
|
| does every long war make one, which cannot be waged openly by means
|
| of force! How PERSONAL does a long fear make one, a long watching
|
| of enemies, of possible enemies! These pariahs of society, these
|
| long-pursued, badly-persecuted ones--also the compulsory recluses, the
|
| Spinozas or Giordano Brunos--always become in the end, even under the
|
| most intellectual masquerade, and perhaps without being themselves aware
|
| of it, refined vengeance-seekers and poison-Brewers (just lay bare
|
| the foundation of Spinoza's ethics and theology!), not to speak of
|
| the stupidity of moral indignation, which is the unfailing sign in a
|
| philosopher that the sense of philosophical humour has left him. The
|
| martyrdom of the philosopher, his "sacrifice for the sake of truth,"
|
| forces into the light whatever of the agitator and actor lurks in him;
|
| and if one has hitherto contemplated him only with artistic curiosity,
|
| with regard to many a philosopher it is easy to understand the dangerous
|
| desire to see him also in his deterioration (deteriorated into a
|
| "martyr," into a stage-and-tribune-bawler). Only, that it is necessary
|
| with such a desire to be clear WHAT spectacle one will see in any
|
| case--merely a satyric play, merely an epilogue farce, merely the
|
| continued proof that the long, real tragedy IS AT AN END, supposing that
|
| every philosophy has been a long tragedy in its origin.
|
|
|
| 26. Every select man strives instinctively for a citadel and a privacy,
|
| where he is FREE from the crowd, the many, the majority--where he may
|
| forget "men who are the rule," as their exception;--exclusive only of
|
| the case in which he is pushed straight to such men by a still stronger
|
| instinct, as a discerner in the great and exceptional sense. Whoever, in
|
| intercourse with men, does not occasionally glisten in all the green
|
| and grey colours of distress, owing to disgust, satiety, sympathy,
|
| gloominess, and solitariness, is assuredly not a man of elevated tastes;
|
| supposing, however, that he does not voluntarily take all this burden
|
| and disgust upon himself, that he persistently avoids it, and remains,
|
| as I said, quietly and proudly hidden in his citadel, one thing is then
|
| certain: he was not made, he was not predestined for knowledge. For as
|
| such, he would one day have to say to himself: "The devil take my good
|
| taste! but 'the rule' is more interesting than the exception--than
|
| myself, the exception!" And he would go DOWN, and above all, he would
|
| go "inside." The long and serious study of the AVERAGE man--and
|
| consequently much disguise, self-overcoming, familiarity, and bad
|
| intercourse (all intercourse is bad intercourse except with one's
|
| equals):--that constitutes a necessary part of the life-history of every
|
| philosopher; perhaps the most disagreeable, odious, and disappointing
|
| part. If he is fortunate, however, as a favourite child of knowledge
|
| should be, he will meet with suitable auxiliaries who will shorten and
|
| lighten his task; I mean so-called cynics, those who simply recognize
|
| the animal, the commonplace and "the rule" in themselves, and at the
|
| same time have so much spirituality and ticklishness as to make them
|
| talk of themselves and their like BEFORE WITNESSES--sometimes they
|
| wallow, even in books, as on their own dung-hill. Cynicism is the only
|
| form in which base souls approach what is called honesty; and the
|
| higher man must open his ears to all the coarser or finer cynicism, and
|
| congratulate himself when the clown becomes shameless right before
|
| him, or the scientific satyr speaks out. There are even cases where
|
| enchantment mixes with the disgust--namely, where by a freak of nature,
|
| genius is bound to some such indiscreet billy-goat and ape, as in the
|
| case of the Abbe Galiani, the profoundest, acutest, and perhaps also
|
| filthiest man of his century--he was far profounder than Voltaire, and
|
| consequently also, a good deal more silent. It happens more frequently,
|
| as has been hinted, that a scientific head is placed on an ape's body, a
|
| fine exceptional understanding in a base soul, an occurrence by no means
|
| rare, especially among doctors and moral physiologists. And whenever
|
| anyone speaks without bitterness, or rather quite innocently, of man
|
| as a belly with two requirements, and a head with one; whenever any one
|
| sees, seeks, and WANTS to see only hunger, sexual instinct, and vanity
|
| as the real and only motives of human actions; in short, when any one
|
| speaks "badly"--and not even "ill"--of man, then ought the lover of
|
| knowledge to hearken attentively and diligently; he ought, in general,
|
| to have an open ear wherever there is talk without indignation. For the
|
| indignant man, and he who perpetually tears and lacerates himself with
|
| his own teeth (or, in place of himself, the world, God, or society),
|
| may indeed, morally speaking, stand higher than the laughing and
|
| self-satisfied satyr, but in every other sense he is the more ordinary,
|
| more indifferent, and less instructive case. And no one is such a LIAR
|
| as the indignant man.
|
|
|
| 27. It is difficult to be understood, especially when one thinks and
|
| lives gangasrotogati [Footnote: Like the river Ganges: presto.] among
|
| those only who think and live otherwise--namely, kurmagati [Footnote:
|
| Like the tortoise: lento.], or at best "froglike," mandeikagati
|
| [Footnote: Like the frog: staccato.] (I do everything to be "difficultly
|
| understood" myself!)--and one should be heartily grateful for the
|
| good will to some refinement of interpretation. As regards "the good
|
| friends," however, who are always too easy-going, and think that as
|
| friends they have a right to ease, one does well at the very first to
|
| grant them a play-ground and romping-place for misunderstanding--one can
|
| thus laugh still; or get rid of them altogether, these good friends--and
|
| laugh then also!
|
|
|
| 28. What is most difficult to render from one language into another
|
| is the TEMPO of its style, which has its basis in the character of the
|
| race, or to speak more physiologically, in the average TEMPO of the
|
| assimilation of its nutriment. There are honestly meant translations,
|
| which, as involuntary vulgarizations, are almost falsifications of the
|
| original, merely because its lively and merry TEMPO (which overleaps and
|
| obviates all dangers in word and expression) could not also be
|
| rendered. A German is almost incapacitated for PRESTO in his language;
|
| consequently also, as may be reasonably inferred, for many of the most
|
| delightful and daring NUANCES of free, free-spirited thought. And just
|
| as the buffoon and satyr are foreign to him in body and conscience,
|
| so Aristophanes and Petronius are untranslatable for him. Everything
|
| ponderous, viscous, and pompously clumsy, all long-winded and wearying
|
| species of style, are developed in profuse variety among Germans--pardon
|
| me for stating the fact that even Goethe's prose, in its mixture of
|
| stiffness and elegance, is no exception, as a reflection of the "good
|
| old time" to which it belongs, and as an expression of German taste at a
|
| time when there was still a "German taste," which was a rococo-taste
|
| in moribus et artibus. Lessing is an exception, owing to his histrionic
|
| nature, which understood much, and was versed in many things; he who was
|
| not the translator of Bayle to no purpose, who took refuge willingly in
|
| the shadow of Diderot and Voltaire, and still more willingly among the
|
| Roman comedy-writers--Lessing loved also free-spiritism in the TEMPO,
|
| and flight out of Germany. But how could the German language, even
|
| in the prose of Lessing, imitate the TEMPO of Machiavelli, who in his
|
| "Principe" makes us breathe the dry, fine air of Florence, and cannot
|
| help presenting the most serious events in a boisterous allegrissimo,
|
| perhaps not without a malicious artistic sense of the contrast he
|
| ventures to present--long, heavy, difficult, dangerous thoughts, and
|
| a TEMPO of the gallop, and of the best, wantonest humour? Finally, who
|
| would venture on a German translation of Petronius, who, more than any
|
| great musician hitherto, was a master of PRESTO in invention, ideas, and
|
| words? What matter in the end about the swamps of the sick, evil world,
|
| or of the "ancient world," when like him, one has the feet of a wind,
|
| the rush, the breath, the emancipating scorn of a wind, which makes
|
| everything healthy, by making everything RUN! And with regard to
|
| Aristophanes--that transfiguring, complementary genius, for whose
|
| sake one PARDONS all Hellenism for having existed, provided one has
|
| understood in its full profundity ALL that there requires pardon and
|
| transfiguration; there is nothing that has caused me to meditate more on
|
| PLATO'S secrecy and sphinx-like nature, than the happily preserved petit
|
| fait that under the pillow of his death-bed there was found no
|
| "Bible," nor anything Egyptian, Pythagorean, or Platonic--but a book of
|
| Aristophanes. How could even Plato have endured life--a Greek life which
|
| he repudiated--without an Aristophanes!
|
|
|
| 29. It is the business of the very few to be independent; it is a
|
| privilege of the strong. And whoever attempts it, even with the best
|
| right, but without being OBLIGED to do so, proves that he is probably
|
| not only strong, but also daring beyond measure. He enters into a
|
| labyrinth, he multiplies a thousandfold the dangers which life in itself
|
| already brings with it; not the least of which is that no one can see
|
| how and where he loses his way, becomes isolated, and is torn piecemeal
|
| by some minotaur of conscience. Supposing such a one comes to grief, it
|
| is so far from the comprehension of men that they neither feel it, nor
|
| sympathize with it. And he cannot any longer go back! He cannot even go
|
| back again to the sympathy of men!
|
|
|
| 30. Our deepest insights must--and should--appear as follies, and under
|
| certain circumstances as crimes, when they come unauthorizedly to
|
| the ears of those who are not disposed and predestined for them. The
|
| exoteric and the esoteric, as they were formerly distinguished by
|
| philosophers--among the Indians, as among the Greeks, Persians, and
|
| Mussulmans, in short, wherever people believed in gradations of rank and
|
| NOT in equality and equal rights--are not so much in contradistinction
|
| to one another in respect to the exoteric class, standing without, and
|
| viewing, estimating, measuring, and judging from the outside, and not
|
| from the inside; the more essential distinction is that the class in
|
| question views things from below upwards--while the esoteric class views
|
| things FROM ABOVE DOWNWARDS. There are heights of the soul from which
|
| tragedy itself no longer appears to operate tragically; and if all the
|
| woe in the world were taken together, who would dare to decide whether
|
| the sight of it would NECESSARILY seduce and constrain to sympathy, and
|
| thus to a doubling of the woe?... That which serves the higher class of
|
| men for nourishment or refreshment, must be almost poison to an entirely
|
| different and lower order of human beings. The virtues of the common
|
| man would perhaps mean vice and weakness in a philosopher; it might be
|
| possible for a highly developed man, supposing him to degenerate and go
|
| to ruin, to acquire qualities thereby alone, for the sake of which he
|
| would have to be honoured as a saint in the lower world into which he
|
| had sunk. There are books which have an inverse value for the soul and
|
| the health according as the inferior soul and the lower vitality, or the
|
| higher and more powerful, make use of them. In the former case they are
|
| dangerous, disturbing, unsettling books, in the latter case they are
|
| herald-calls which summon the bravest to THEIR bravery. Books for the
|
| general reader are always ill-smelling books, the odour of paltry people
|
| clings to them. Where the populace eat and drink, and even where they
|
| reverence, it is accustomed to stink. One should not go into churches if
|
| one wishes to breathe PURE air.
|
|
|
| 31. In our youthful years we still venerate and despise without the art
|
| of NUANCE, which is the best gain of life, and we have rightly to do
|
| hard penance for having fallen upon men and things with Yea and Nay.
|
| Everything is so arranged that the worst of all tastes, THE TASTE FOR
|
| THE UNCONDITIONAL, is cruelly befooled and abused, until a man learns
|
| to introduce a little art into his sentiments, and prefers to try
|
| conclusions with the artificial, as do the real artists of life. The
|
| angry and reverent spirit peculiar to youth appears to allow itself no
|
| peace, until it has suitably falsified men and things, to be able
|
| to vent its passion upon them: youth in itself even, is something
|
| falsifying and deceptive. Later on, when the young soul, tortured by
|
| continual disillusions, finally turns suspiciously against itself--still
|
| ardent and savage even in its suspicion and remorse of conscience: how
|
| it upbraids itself, how impatiently it tears itself, how it revenges
|
| itself for its long self-blinding, as though it had been a voluntary
|
| blindness! In this transition one punishes oneself by distrust of one's
|
| sentiments; one tortures one's enthusiasm with doubt, one feels even the
|
| good conscience to be a danger, as if it were the self-concealment and
|
| lassitude of a more refined uprightness; and above all, one espouses
|
| upon principle the cause AGAINST "youth."--A decade later, and one
|
| comprehends that all this was also still--youth!
|
|
|
| 32. Throughout the longest period of human history--one calls it the
|
| prehistoric period--the value or non-value of an action was inferred
|
| from its CONSEQUENCES; the action in itself was not taken into
|
| consideration, any more than its origin; but pretty much as in China at
|
| present, where the distinction or disgrace of a child redounds to
|
| its parents, the retro-operating power of success or failure was what
|
| induced men to think well or ill of an action. Let us call this period
|
| the PRE-MORAL period of mankind; the imperative, "Know thyself!" was
|
| then still unknown.--In the last ten thousand years, on the other hand,
|
| on certain large portions of the earth, one has gradually got so far,
|
| that one no longer lets the consequences of an action, but its origin,
|
| decide with regard to its worth: a great achievement as a whole, an
|
| important refinement of vision and of criterion, the unconscious effect
|
| of the supremacy of aristocratic values and of the belief in "origin,"
|
| the mark of a period which may be designated in the narrower sense as
|
| the MORAL one: the first attempt at self-knowledge is thereby
|
| made. Instead of the consequences, the origin--what an inversion
|
| of perspective! And assuredly an inversion effected only after long
|
| struggle and wavering! To be sure, an ominous new superstition, a
|
| peculiar narrowness of interpretation, attained supremacy precisely
|
| thereby: the origin of an action was interpreted in the most definite
|
| sense possible, as origin out of an INTENTION; people were agreed in the
|
| belief that the value of an action lay in the value of its intention.
|
| The intention as the sole origin and antecedent history of an action:
|
| under the influence of this prejudice moral praise and blame have been
|
| bestowed, and men have judged and even philosophized almost up to the
|
| present day.--Is it not possible, however, that the necessity may now
|
| have arisen of again making up our minds with regard to the reversing
|
| and fundamental shifting of values, owing to a new self-consciousness
|
| and acuteness in man--is it not possible that we may be standing on
|
| the threshold of a period which to begin with, would be distinguished
|
| negatively as ULTRA-MORAL: nowadays when, at least among us immoralists,
|
| the suspicion arises that the decisive value of an action lies precisely
|
| in that which is NOT INTENTIONAL, and that all its intentionalness, all
|
| that is seen, sensible, or "sensed" in it, belongs to its surface or
|
| skin--which, like every skin, betrays something, but CONCEALS still
|
| more? In short, we believe that the intention is only a sign or symptom,
|
| which first requires an explanation--a sign, moreover, which has too
|
| many interpretations, and consequently hardly any meaning in itself
|
| alone: that morality, in the sense in which it has been understood
|
| hitherto, as intention-morality, has been a prejudice, perhaps a
|
| prematureness or preliminariness, probably something of the same rank
|
| as astrology and alchemy, but in any case something which must be
|
| surmounted. The surmounting of morality, in a certain sense even the
|
| self-mounting of morality--let that be the name for the long-secret
|
| labour which has been reserved for the most refined, the most upright,
|
| and also the most wicked consciences of today, as the living touchstones
|
| of the soul.
|
|
|
| 33. It cannot be helped: the sentiment of surrender, of sacrifice for
|
| one's neighbour, and all self-renunciation-morality, must be mercilessly
|
| called to account, and brought to judgment; just as the aesthetics
|
| of "disinterested contemplation," under which the emasculation of art
|
| nowadays seeks insidiously enough to create itself a good conscience.
|
| There is far too much witchery and sugar in the sentiments "for others"
|
| and "NOT for myself," for one not needing to be doubly distrustful here,
|
| and for one asking promptly: "Are they not perhaps--DECEPTIONS?"--That
|
| they PLEASE--him who has them, and him who enjoys their fruit, and also
|
| the mere spectator--that is still no argument in their FAVOUR, but just
|
| calls for caution. Let us therefore be cautious!
|
|
|
| 34. At whatever standpoint of philosophy one may place oneself nowadays,
|
| seen from every position, the ERRONEOUSNESS of the world in which we
|
| think we live is the surest and most certain thing our eyes can light
|
| upon: we find proof after proof thereof, which would fain allure us into
|
| surmises concerning a deceptive principle in the "nature of things."
|
| He, however, who makes thinking itself, and consequently "the spirit,"
|
| responsible for the falseness of the world--an honourable exit, which
|
| every conscious or unconscious advocatus dei avails himself of--he
|
| who regards this world, including space, time, form, and movement, as
|
| falsely DEDUCED, would have at least good reason in the end to become
|
| distrustful also of all thinking; has it not hitherto been playing upon
|
| us the worst of scurvy tricks? and what guarantee would it give that
|
| it would not continue to do what it has always been doing? In all
|
| seriousness, the innocence of thinkers has something touching and
|
| respect-inspiring in it, which even nowadays permits them to wait upon
|
| consciousness with the request that it will give them HONEST answers:
|
| for example, whether it be "real" or not, and why it keeps the outer
|
| world so resolutely at a distance, and other questions of the same
|
| description. The belief in "immediate certainties" is a MORAL NAIVETE
|
| which does honour to us philosophers; but--we have now to cease being
|
| "MERELY moral" men! Apart from morality, such belief is a folly which
|
| does little honour to us! If in middle-class life an ever-ready distrust
|
| is regarded as the sign of a "bad character," and consequently as an
|
| imprudence, here among us, beyond the middle-class world and its Yeas
|
| and Nays, what should prevent our being imprudent and saying: the
|
| philosopher has at length a RIGHT to "bad character," as the being who
|
| has hitherto been most befooled on earth--he is now under OBLIGATION
|
| to distrustfulness, to the wickedest squinting out of every abyss of
|
| suspicion.--Forgive me the joke of this gloomy grimace and turn of
|
| expression; for I myself have long ago learned to think and estimate
|
| differently with regard to deceiving and being deceived, and I keep at
|
| least a couple of pokes in the ribs ready for the blind rage with which
|
| philosophers struggle against being deceived. Why NOT? It is nothing
|
| more than a moral prejudice that truth is worth more than semblance; it
|
| is, in fact, the worst proved supposition in the world. So much must be
|
| conceded: there could have been no life at all except upon the basis
|
| of perspective estimates and semblances; and if, with the virtuous
|
| enthusiasm and stupidity of many philosophers, one wished to do away
|
| altogether with the "seeming world"--well, granted that YOU could do
|
| that,--at least nothing of your "truth" would thereby remain! Indeed,
|
| what is it that forces us in general to the supposition that there is an
|
| essential opposition of "true" and "false"? Is it not enough to suppose
|
| degrees of seemingness, and as it were lighter and darker shades and
|
| tones of semblance--different valeurs, as the painters say? Why might
|
| not the world WHICH CONCERNS US--be a fiction? And to any one who
|
| suggested: "But to a fiction belongs an originator?"--might it not be
|
| bluntly replied: WHY? May not this "belong" also belong to the fiction?
|
| Is it not at length permitted to be a little ironical towards the
|
| subject, just as towards the predicate and object? Might not the
|
| philosopher elevate himself above faith in grammar? All respect
|
| to governesses, but is it not time that philosophy should renounce
|
| governess-faith?
|
|
|
| 35. O Voltaire! O humanity! O idiocy! There is something ticklish in
|
| "the truth," and in the SEARCH for the truth; and if man goes about it
|
| too humanely--"il ne cherche le vrai que pour faire le bien"--I wager he
|
| finds nothing!
|
|
|
| 36. Supposing that nothing else is "given" as real but our world of
|
| desires and passions, that we cannot sink or rise to any other "reality"
|
| but just that of our impulses--for thinking is only a relation of these
|
| impulses to one another:--are we not permitted to make the attempt and
|
| to ask the question whether this which is "given" does not SUFFICE, by
|
| means of our counterparts, for the understanding even of the so-called
|
| mechanical (or "material") world? I do not mean as an illusion, a
|
| "semblance," a "representation" (in the Berkeleyan and Schopenhauerian
|
| sense), but as possessing the same degree of reality as our emotions
|
| themselves--as a more primitive form of the world of emotions, in
|
| which everything still lies locked in a mighty unity, which afterwards
|
| branches off and develops itself in organic processes (naturally also,
|
| refines and debilitates)--as a kind of instinctive life in which all
|
| organic functions, including self-regulation, assimilation, nutrition,
|
| secretion, and change of matter, are still synthetically united with
|
| one another--as a PRIMARY FORM of life?--In the end, it is not only
|
| permitted to make this attempt, it is commanded by the conscience of
|
| LOGICAL METHOD. Not to assume several kinds of causality, so long as
|
| the attempt to get along with a single one has not been pushed to its
|
| furthest extent (to absurdity, if I may be allowed to say so): that is
|
| a morality of method which one may not repudiate nowadays--it follows
|
| "from its definition," as mathematicians say. The question is ultimately
|
| whether we really recognize the will as OPERATING, whether we believe in
|
| the causality of the will; if we do so--and fundamentally our belief IN
|
| THIS is just our belief in causality itself--we MUST make the attempt
|
| to posit hypothetically the causality of the will as the only causality.
|
| "Will" can naturally only operate on "will"--and not on "matter" (not
|
| on "nerves," for instance): in short, the hypothesis must be
|
| hazarded, whether will does not operate on will wherever "effects"
|
| are recognized--and whether all mechanical action, inasmuch as a power
|
| operates therein, is not just the power of will, the effect of will.
|
| Granted, finally, that we succeeded in explaining our entire instinctive
|
| life as the development and ramification of one fundamental form of
|
| will--namely, the Will to Power, as my thesis puts it; granted that all
|
| organic functions could be traced back to this Will to Power, and that
|
| the solution of the problem of generation and nutrition--it is one
|
| problem--could also be found therein: one would thus have acquired the
|
| right to define ALL active force unequivocally as WILL TO POWER. The
|
| world seen from within, the world defined and designated according to
|
| its "intelligible character"--it would simply be "Will to Power," and
|
| nothing else.
|
|
|
| 37. "What? Does not that mean in popular language: God is disproved, but
|
| not the devil?"--On the contrary! On the contrary, my friends! And who
|
| the devil also compels you to speak popularly!
|
|
|
| 38. As happened finally in all the enlightenment of modern times with
|
| the French Revolution (that terrible farce, quite superfluous when
|
| judged close at hand, into which, however, the noble and visionary
|
| spectators of all Europe have interpreted from a distance their own
|
| indignation and enthusiasm so long and passionately, UNTIL THE TEXT HAS
|
| DISAPPEARED UNDER THE INTERPRETATION), so a noble posterity might once
|
| more misunderstand the whole of the past, and perhaps only thereby make
|
| ITS aspect endurable.--Or rather, has not this already happened? Have
|
| not we ourselves been--that "noble posterity"? And, in so far as we now
|
| comprehend this, is it not--thereby already past?
|
|
|
| 39. Nobody will very readily regard a doctrine as true merely because
|
| it makes people happy or virtuous--excepting, perhaps, the amiable
|
| "Idealists," who are enthusiastic about the good, true, and beautiful,
|
| and let all kinds of motley, coarse, and good-natured desirabilities
|
| swim about promiscuously in their pond. Happiness and virtue are no
|
| arguments. It is willingly forgotten, however, even on the part of
|
| thoughtful minds, that to make unhappy and to make bad are just as
|
| little counter-arguments. A thing could be TRUE, although it were in
|
| the highest degree injurious and dangerous; indeed, the fundamental
|
| constitution of existence might be such that one succumbed by a full
|
| knowledge of it--so that the strength of a mind might be measured by
|
| the amount of "truth" it could endure--or to speak more plainly, by the
|
| extent to which it REQUIRED truth attenuated, veiled, sweetened, damped,
|
| and falsified. But there is no doubt that for the discovery of certain
|
| PORTIONS of truth the wicked and unfortunate are more favourably
|
| situated and have a greater likelihood of success; not to speak of the
|
| wicked who are happy--a species about whom moralists are silent. Perhaps
|
| severity and craft are more favourable conditions for the development of
|
| strong, independent spirits and philosophers than the gentle, refined,
|
| yielding good-nature, and habit of taking things easily, which are
|
| prized, and rightly prized in a learned man. Presupposing always,
|
| to begin with, that the term "philosopher" be not confined to the
|
| philosopher who writes books, or even introduces HIS philosophy into
|
| books!--Stendhal furnishes a last feature of the portrait of the
|
| free-spirited philosopher, which for the sake of German taste I will
|
| not omit to underline--for it is OPPOSED to German taste. "Pour etre
|
| bon philosophe," says this last great psychologist, "il faut etre sec,
|
| clair, sans illusion. Un banquier, qui a fait fortune, a une partie du
|
| caractere requis pour faire des decouvertes en philosophie, c'est-a-dire
|
| pour voir clair dans ce qui est."
|
|
|
| 40. Everything that is profound loves the mask: the profoundest things
|
| have a hatred even of figure and likeness. Should not the CONTRARY only
|
| be the right disguise for the shame of a God to go about in? A question
|
| worth asking!--it would be strange if some mystic has not already
|
| ventured on the same kind of thing. There are proceedings of such a
|
| delicate nature that it is well to overwhelm them with coarseness
|
| and make them unrecognizable; there are actions of love and of an
|
| extravagant magnanimity after which nothing can be wiser than to take
|
| a stick and thrash the witness soundly: one thereby obscures his
|
| recollection. Many a one is able to obscure and abuse his own memory, in
|
| order at least to have vengeance on this sole party in the secret:
|
| shame is inventive. They are not the worst things of which one is
|
| most ashamed: there is not only deceit behind a mask--there is so much
|
| goodness in craft. I could imagine that a man with something costly and
|
| fragile to conceal, would roll through life clumsily and rotundly like
|
| an old, green, heavily-hooped wine-cask: the refinement of his shame
|
| requiring it to be so. A man who has depths in his shame meets his
|
| destiny and his delicate decisions upon paths which few ever reach,
|
| and with regard to the existence of which his nearest and most intimate
|
| friends may be ignorant; his mortal danger conceals itself from their
|
| eyes, and equally so his regained security. Such a hidden nature,
|
| which instinctively employs speech for silence and concealment, and is
|
| inexhaustible in evasion of communication, DESIRES and insists that a
|
| mask of himself shall occupy his place in the hearts and heads of his
|
| friends; and supposing he does not desire it, his eyes will some day be
|
| opened to the fact that there is nevertheless a mask of him there--and
|
| that it is well to be so. Every profound spirit needs a mask; nay, more,
|
| around every profound spirit there continually grows a mask, owing to
|
| the constantly false, that is to say, SUPERFICIAL interpretation
|
| of every word he utters, every step he takes, every sign of life he
|
| manifests.
|
|
|
| 41. One must subject oneself to one's own tests that one is destined
|
| for independence and command, and do so at the right time. One must not
|
| avoid one's tests, although they constitute perhaps the most dangerous
|
| game one can play, and are in the end tests made only before ourselves
|
| and before no other judge. Not to cleave to any person, be it even the
|
| dearest--every person is a prison and also a recess. Not to cleave to
|
| a fatherland, be it even the most suffering and necessitous--it is even
|
| less difficult to detach one's heart from a victorious fatherland. Not
|
| to cleave to a sympathy, be it even for higher men, into whose peculiar
|
| torture and helplessness chance has given us an insight. Not to cleave
|
| to a science, though it tempt one with the most valuable discoveries,
|
| apparently specially reserved for us. Not to cleave to one's own
|
| liberation, to the voluptuous distance and remoteness of the bird, which
|
| always flies further aloft in order always to see more under it--the
|
| danger of the flier. Not to cleave to our own virtues, nor become as
|
| a whole a victim to any of our specialties, to our "hospitality" for
|
| instance, which is the danger of dangers for highly developed
|
| and wealthy souls, who deal prodigally, almost indifferently with
|
| themselves, and push the virtue of liberality so far that it becomes
|
| a vice. One must know how TO CONSERVE ONESELF--the best test of
|
| independence.
|
|
|
| 42. A new order of philosophers is appearing; I shall venture to baptize
|
| them by a name not without danger. As far as I understand them, as far
|
| as they allow themselves to be understood--for it is their nature to
|
| WISH to remain something of a puzzle--these philosophers of the
|
| future might rightly, perhaps also wrongly, claim to be designated as
|
| "tempters." This name itself is after all only an attempt, or, if it be
|
| preferred, a temptation.
|
|
|
| 43. Will they be new friends of "truth," these coming philosophers? Very
|
| probably, for all philosophers hitherto have loved their truths. But
|
| assuredly they will not be dogmatists. It must be contrary to their
|
| pride, and also contrary to their taste, that their truth should still
|
| be truth for every one--that which has hitherto been the secret wish
|
| and ultimate purpose of all dogmatic efforts. "My opinion is MY opinion:
|
| another person has not easily a right to it"--such a philosopher of the
|
| future will say, perhaps. One must renounce the bad taste of wishing to
|
| agree with many people. "Good" is no longer good when one's neighbour
|
| takes it into his mouth. And how could there be a "common good"! The
|
| expression contradicts itself; that which can be common is always of
|
| small value. In the end things must be as they are and have always
|
| been--the great things remain for the great, the abysses for the
|
| profound, the delicacies and thrills for the refined, and, to sum up
|
| shortly, everything rare for the rare.
|
|
|
| 44. Need I say expressly after all this that they will be free, VERY
|
| free spirits, these philosophers of the future--as certainly also they
|
| will not be merely free spirits, but something more, higher, greater,
|
| and fundamentally different, which does not wish to be misunderstood and
|
| mistaken? But while I say this, I feel under OBLIGATION almost as much
|
| to them as to ourselves (we free spirits who are their heralds and
|
| forerunners), to sweep away from ourselves altogether a stupid old
|
| prejudice and misunderstanding, which, like a fog, has too long made the
|
| conception of "free spirit" obscure. In every country of Europe, and the
|
| same in America, there is at present something which makes an abuse of
|
| this name a very narrow, prepossessed, enchained class of spirits,
|
| who desire almost the opposite of what our intentions and instincts
|
| prompt--not to mention that in respect to the NEW philosophers who are
|
| appearing, they must still more be closed windows and bolted doors.
|
| Briefly and regrettably, they belong to the LEVELLERS, these wrongly
|
| named "free spirits"--as glib-tongued and scribe-fingered slaves of
|
| the democratic taste and its "modern ideas" all of them men without
|
| solitude, without personal solitude, blunt honest fellows to whom
|
| neither courage nor honourable conduct ought to be denied, only, they
|
| are not free, and are ludicrously superficial, especially in their
|
| innate partiality for seeing the cause of almost ALL human misery and
|
| failure in the old forms in which society has hitherto existed--a notion
|
| which happily inverts the truth entirely! What they would fain attain
|
| with all their strength, is the universal, green-meadow happiness of the
|
| herd, together with security, safety, comfort, and alleviation of life
|
| for every one, their two most frequently chanted songs and doctrines
|
| are called "Equality of Rights" and "Sympathy with All Sufferers"--and
|
| suffering itself is looked upon by them as something which must be
|
| DONE AWAY WITH. We opposite ones, however, who have opened our eye and
|
| conscience to the question how and where the plant "man" has hitherto
|
| grown most vigorously, believe that this has always taken place under
|
| the opposite conditions, that for this end the dangerousness of his
|
| situation had to be increased enormously, his inventive faculty and
|
| dissembling power (his "spirit") had to develop into subtlety and daring
|
| under long oppression and compulsion, and his Will to Life had to be
|
| increased to the unconditioned Will to Power--we believe that severity,
|
| violence, slavery, danger in the street and in the heart, secrecy,
|
| stoicism, tempter's art and devilry of every kind,--that everything
|
| wicked, terrible, tyrannical, predatory, and serpentine in man, serves
|
| as well for the elevation of the human species as its opposite--we do
|
| not even say enough when we only say THIS MUCH, and in any case we
|
| find ourselves here, both with our speech and our silence, at the OTHER
|
| extreme of all modern ideology and gregarious desirability, as their
|
| antipodes perhaps? What wonder that we "free spirits" are not exactly
|
| the most communicative spirits? that we do not wish to betray in every
|
| respect WHAT a spirit can free itself from, and WHERE perhaps it will
|
| then be driven? And as to the import of the dangerous formula, "Beyond
|
| Good and Evil," with which we at least avoid confusion, we ARE something
|
| else than "libres-penseurs," "liben pensatori" "free-thinkers,"
|
| and whatever these honest advocates of "modern ideas" like to call
|
| themselves. Having been at home, or at least guests, in many realms of
|
| the spirit, having escaped again and again from the gloomy, agreeable
|
| nooks in which preferences and prejudices, youth, origin, the accident
|
| of men and books, or even the weariness of travel seemed to confine us,
|
| full of malice against the seductions of dependency which he concealed
|
| in honours, money, positions, or exaltation of the senses, grateful even
|
| for distress and the vicissitudes of illness, because they always free
|
| us from some rule, and its "prejudice," grateful to the God, devil,
|
| sheep, and worm in us, inquisitive to a fault, investigators to the
|
| point of cruelty, with unhesitating fingers for the intangible, with
|
| teeth and stomachs for the most indigestible, ready for any business
|
| that requires sagacity and acute senses, ready for every adventure,
|
| owing to an excess of "free will", with anterior and posterior souls,
|
| into the ultimate intentions of which it is difficult to pry, with
|
| foregrounds and backgrounds to the end of which no foot may run, hidden
|
| ones under the mantles of light, appropriators, although we resemble
|
| heirs and spendthrifts, arrangers and collectors from morning till
|
| night, misers of our wealth and our full-crammed drawers, economical
|
| in learning and forgetting, inventive in scheming, sometimes proud of
|
| tables of categories, sometimes pedants, sometimes night-owls of
|
| work even in full day, yea, if necessary, even scarecrows--and it is
|
| necessary nowadays, that is to say, inasmuch as we are the born, sworn,
|
| jealous friends of SOLITUDE, of our own profoundest midnight and midday
|
| solitude--such kind of men are we, we free spirits! And perhaps ye are
|
| also something of the same kind, ye coming ones? ye NEW philosophers?
|
|
|
| CHAPTER III. THE RELIGIOUS MOOD
|
|
|
| 45. The human soul and its limits, the range of man's inner experiences
|
| hitherto attained, the heights, depths, and distances of these
|
| experiences, the entire history of the soul UP TO THE PRESENT TIME,
|
| and its still unexhausted possibilities: this is the preordained
|
| hunting-domain for a born psychologist and lover of a "big hunt". But
|
| how often must he say despairingly to himself: "A single individual!
|
| alas, only a single individual! and this great forest, this virgin
|
| forest!" So he would like to have some hundreds of hunting assistants,
|
| and fine trained hounds, that he could send into the history of the
|
| human soul, to drive HIS game together. In vain: again and again he
|
| experiences, profoundly and bitterly, how difficult it is to find
|
| assistants and dogs for all the things that directly excite his
|
| curiosity. The evil of sending scholars into new and dangerous
|
| hunting-domains, where courage, sagacity, and subtlety in every sense
|
| are required, is that they are no longer serviceable just when the "BIG
|
| hunt," and also the great danger commences,--it is precisely then that
|
| they lose their keen eye and nose. In order, for instance, to divine and
|
| determine what sort of history the problem of KNOWLEDGE AND CONSCIENCE
|
| has hitherto had in the souls of homines religiosi, a person would
|
| perhaps himself have to possess as profound, as bruised, as immense an
|
| experience as the intellectual conscience of Pascal; and then he would
|
| still require that wide-spread heaven of clear, wicked spirituality,
|
| which, from above, would be able to oversee, arrange, and effectively
|
| formulize this mass of dangerous and painful experiences.--But who
|
| could do me this service! And who would have time to wait for such
|
| servants!--they evidently appear too rarely, they are so improbable at
|
| all times! Eventually one must do everything ONESELF in order to know
|
| something; which means that one has MUCH to do!--But a curiosity like
|
| mine is once for all the most agreeable of vices--pardon me! I mean to
|
| say that the love of truth has its reward in heaven, and already upon
|
| earth.
|
|
|
| 46. Faith, such as early Christianity desired, and not infrequently
|
| achieved in the midst of a skeptical and southernly free-spirited world,
|
| which had centuries of struggle between philosophical schools behind
|
| it and in it, counting besides the education in tolerance which
|
| the Imperium Romanum gave--this faith is NOT that sincere, austere
|
| slave-faith by which perhaps a Luther or a Cromwell, or some other
|
| northern barbarian of the spirit remained attached to his God and
|
| Christianity, it is much rather the faith of Pascal, which resembles in
|
| a terrible manner a continuous suicide of reason--a tough, long-lived,
|
| worm-like reason, which is not to be slain at once and with a single
|
| blow. The Christian faith from the beginning, is sacrifice the sacrifice
|
| of all freedom, all pride, all self-confidence of spirit, it is at
|
| the same time subjection, self-derision, and self-mutilation. There is
|
| cruelty and religious Phoenicianism in this faith, which is adapted to a
|
| tender, many-sided, and very fastidious conscience, it takes for granted
|
| that the subjection of the spirit is indescribably PAINFUL, that all the
|
| past and all the habits of such a spirit resist the absurdissimum, in
|
| the form of which "faith" comes to it. Modern men, with their obtuseness
|
| as regards all Christian nomenclature, have no longer the sense for the
|
| terribly superlative conception which was implied to an antique taste by
|
| the paradox of the formula, "God on the Cross". Hitherto there had never
|
| and nowhere been such boldness in inversion, nor anything at once so
|
| dreadful, questioning, and questionable as this formula: it promised a
|
| transvaluation of all ancient values--It was the Orient, the PROFOUND
|
| Orient, it was the Oriental slave who thus took revenge on Rome and its
|
| noble, light-minded toleration, on the Roman "Catholicism" of non-faith,
|
| and it was always not the faith, but the freedom from the faith, the
|
| half-stoical and smiling indifference to the seriousness of the faith,
|
| which made the slaves indignant at their masters and revolt against
|
| them. "Enlightenment" causes revolt, for the slave desires the
|
| unconditioned, he understands nothing but the tyrannous, even in morals,
|
| he loves as he hates, without NUANCE, to the very depths, to the point
|
| of pain, to the point of sickness--his many HIDDEN sufferings make
|
| him revolt against the noble taste which seems to DENY suffering. The
|
| skepticism with regard to suffering, fundamentally only an attitude of
|
| aristocratic morality, was not the least of the causes, also, of the
|
| last great slave-insurrection which began with the French Revolution.
|
|
|
| 47. Wherever the religious neurosis has appeared on the earth so far,
|
| we find it connected with three dangerous prescriptions as to regimen:
|
| solitude, fasting, and sexual abstinence--but without its being possible
|
| to determine with certainty which is cause and which is effect, or IF
|
| any relation at all of cause and effect exists there. This latter doubt
|
| is justified by the fact that one of the most regular symptoms among
|
| savage as well as among civilized peoples is the most sudden and
|
| excessive sensuality, which then with equal suddenness transforms into
|
| penitential paroxysms, world-renunciation, and will-renunciation, both
|
| symptoms perhaps explainable as disguised epilepsy? But nowhere is it
|
| MORE obligatory to put aside explanations around no other type has there
|
| grown such a mass of absurdity and superstition, no other type seems to
|
| have been more interesting to men and even to philosophers--perhaps it
|
| is time to become just a little indifferent here, to learn caution, or,
|
| better still, to look AWAY, TO GO AWAY--Yet in the background of the
|
| most recent philosophy, that of Schopenhauer, we find almost as the
|
| problem in itself, this terrible note of interrogation of the religious
|
| crisis and awakening. How is the negation of will POSSIBLE? how is the
|
| saint possible?--that seems to have been the very question with which
|
| Schopenhauer made a start and became a philosopher. And thus it was a
|
| genuine Schopenhauerian consequence, that his most convinced adherent
|
| (perhaps also his last, as far as Germany is concerned), namely, Richard
|
| Wagner, should bring his own life-work to an end just here, and should
|
| finally put that terrible and eternal type upon the stage as Kundry,
|
| type vecu, and as it loved and lived, at the very time that the
|
| mad-doctors in almost all European countries had an opportunity to study
|
| the type close at hand, wherever the religious neurosis--or as I call
|
| it, "the religious mood"--made its latest epidemical outbreak and
|
| display as the "Salvation Army"--If it be a question, however, as to
|
| what has been so extremely interesting to men of all sorts in all ages,
|
| and even to philosophers, in the whole phenomenon of the saint, it
|
| is undoubtedly the appearance of the miraculous therein--namely, the
|
| immediate SUCCESSION OF OPPOSITES, of states of the soul regarded as
|
| morally antithetical: it was believed here to be self-evident that
|
| a "bad man" was all at once turned into a "saint," a good man. The
|
| hitherto existing psychology was wrecked at this point, is it not
|
| possible it may have happened principally because psychology had placed
|
| itself under the dominion of morals, because it BELIEVED in oppositions
|
| of moral values, and saw, read, and INTERPRETED these oppositions
|
| into the text and facts of the case? What? "Miracle" only an error of
|
| interpretation? A lack of philology?
|
|
|
| 48. It seems that the Latin races are far more deeply attached to their
|
| Catholicism than we Northerners are to Christianity generally, and
|
| that consequently unbelief in Catholic countries means something quite
|
| different from what it does among Protestants--namely, a sort of revolt
|
| against the spirit of the race, while with us it is rather a return to
|
| the spirit (or non-spirit) of the race.
|
|
|
| We Northerners undoubtedly derive our origin from barbarous races, even
|
| as regards our talents for religion--we have POOR talents for it. One
|
| may make an exception in the case of the Celts, who have theretofore
|
| furnished also the best soil for Christian infection in the North: the
|
| Christian ideal blossomed forth in France as much as ever the pale sun
|
| of the north would allow it. How strangely pious for our taste are still
|
| these later French skeptics, whenever there is any Celtic blood in their
|
| origin! How Catholic, how un-German does Auguste Comte's Sociology
|
| seem to us, with the Roman logic of its instincts! How Jesuitical, that
|
| amiable and shrewd cicerone of Port Royal, Sainte-Beuve, in spite of all
|
| his hostility to Jesuits! And even Ernest Renan: how inaccessible to
|
| us Northerners does the language of such a Renan appear, in whom
|
| every instant the merest touch of religious thrill throws his refined
|
| voluptuous and comfortably couching soul off its balance! Let us repeat
|
| after him these fine sentences--and what wickedness and haughtiness is
|
| immediately aroused by way of answer in our probably less beautiful but
|
| harder souls, that is to say, in our more German souls!--"DISONS DONC
|
| HARDIMENT QUE LA RELIGION EST UN PRODUIT DE L'HOMME NORMAL, QUE L'HOMME
|
| EST LE PLUS DANS LE VRAI QUANT IL EST LE PLUS RELIGIEUX ET LE PLUS
|
| ASSURE D'UNE DESTINEE INFINIE.... C'EST QUAND IL EST BON QU'IL VEUT QUE
|
| LA VIRTU CORRESPONDE A UN ORDER ETERNAL, C'EST QUAND IL CONTEMPLE LES
|
| CHOSES D'UNE MANIERE DESINTERESSEE QU'IL TROUVE LA MORT REVOLTANTE ET
|
| ABSURDE. COMMENT NE PAS SUPPOSER QUE C'EST DANS CES MOMENTS-LA, QUE
|
| L'HOMME VOIT LE MIEUX?"... These sentences are so extremely ANTIPODAL
|
| to my ears and habits of thought, that in my first impulse of rage
|
| on finding them, I wrote on the margin, "LA NIAISERIE RELIGIEUSE PAR
|
| EXCELLENCE!"--until in my later rage I even took a fancy to them, these
|
| sentences with their truth absolutely inverted! It is so nice and such a
|
| distinction to have one's own antipodes!
|
|
|
| 49. That which is so astonishing in the religious life of the ancient
|
| Greeks is the irrestrainable stream of GRATITUDE which it pours
|
| forth--it is a very superior kind of man who takes SUCH an attitude
|
| towards nature and life.--Later on, when the populace got the upper hand
|
| in Greece, FEAR became rampant also in religion; and Christianity was
|
| preparing itself.
|
|
|
| 50. The passion for God: there are churlish, honest-hearted, and
|
| importunate kinds of it, like that of Luther--the whole of Protestantism
|
| lacks the southern DELICATEZZA. There is an Oriental exaltation of the
|
| mind in it, like that of an undeservedly favoured or elevated slave, as
|
| in the case of St. Augustine, for instance, who lacks in an offensive
|
| manner, all nobility in bearing and desires. There is a feminine
|
| tenderness and sensuality in it, which modestly and unconsciously longs
|
| for a UNIO MYSTICA ET PHYSICA, as in the case of Madame de Guyon. In
|
| many cases it appears, curiously enough, as the disguise of a girl's
|
| or youth's puberty; here and there even as the hysteria of an old maid,
|
| also as her last ambition. The Church has frequently canonized the woman
|
| in such a case.
|
|
|
| 51. The mightiest men have hitherto always bowed reverently before
|
| the saint, as the enigma of self-subjugation and utter voluntary
|
| privation--why did they thus bow? They divined in him--and as it were
|
| behind the questionableness of his frail and wretched appearance--the
|
| superior force which wished to test itself by such a subjugation; the
|
| strength of will, in which they recognized their own strength and
|
| love of power, and knew how to honour it: they honoured something
|
| in themselves when they honoured the saint. In addition to this, the
|
| contemplation of the saint suggested to them a suspicion: such an
|
| enormity of self-negation and anti-naturalness will not have been
|
| coveted for nothing--they have said, inquiringly. There is perhaps a
|
| reason for it, some very great danger, about which the ascetic might
|
| wish to be more accurately informed through his secret interlocutors and
|
| visitors? In a word, the mighty ones of the world learned to have a new
|
| fear before him, they divined a new power, a strange, still unconquered
|
| enemy:--it was the "Will to Power" which obliged them to halt before the
|
| saint. They had to question him.
|
|
|
| 52. In the Jewish "Old Testament," the book of divine justice, there are
|
| men, things, and sayings on such an immense scale, that Greek and Indian
|
| literature has nothing to compare with it. One stands with fear and
|
| reverence before those stupendous remains of what man was formerly, and
|
| one has sad thoughts about old Asia and its little out-pushed peninsula
|
| Europe, which would like, by all means, to figure before Asia as the
|
| "Progress of Mankind." To be sure, he who is himself only a slender,
|
| tame house-animal, and knows only the wants of a house-animal (like
|
| our cultured people of today, including the Christians of "cultured"
|
| Christianity), need neither be amazed nor even sad amid those ruins--the
|
| taste for the Old Testament is a touchstone with respect to "great" and
|
| "small": perhaps he will find that the New Testament, the book of grace,
|
| still appeals more to his heart (there is much of the odour of the
|
| genuine, tender, stupid beadsman and petty soul in it). To have bound
|
| up this New Testament (a kind of ROCOCO of taste in every respect) along
|
| with the Old Testament into one book, as the "Bible," as "The Book in
|
| Itself," is perhaps the greatest audacity and "sin against the Spirit"
|
| which literary Europe has upon its conscience.
|
|
|
| 53. Why Atheism nowadays? "The father" in God is thoroughly refuted;
|
| equally so "the judge," "the rewarder." Also his "free will": he does
|
| not hear--and even if he did, he would not know how to help. The worst
|
| is that he seems incapable of communicating himself clearly; is he
|
| uncertain?--This is what I have made out (by questioning and listening
|
| at a variety of conversations) to be the cause of the decline of
|
| European theism; it appears to me that though the religious instinct is
|
| in vigorous growth,--it rejects the theistic satisfaction with profound
|
| distrust.
|
|
|
| 54. What does all modern philosophy mainly do? Since Descartes--and
|
| indeed more in defiance of him than on the basis of his procedure--an
|
| ATTENTAT has been made on the part of all philosophers on the old
|
| conception of the soul, under the guise of a criticism of the subject
|
| and predicate conception--that is to say, an ATTENTAT on the
|
| fundamental presupposition of Christian doctrine. Modern philosophy,
|
| as epistemological skepticism, is secretly or openly ANTI-CHRISTIAN,
|
| although (for keener ears, be it said) by no means anti-religious.
|
| Formerly, in effect, one believed in "the soul" as one believed in
|
| grammar and the grammatical subject: one said, "I" is the condition,
|
| "think" is the predicate and is conditioned--to think is an activity for
|
| which one MUST suppose a subject as cause. The attempt was then made,
|
| with marvelous tenacity and subtlety, to see if one could not get out
|
| of this net,--to see if the opposite was not perhaps true: "think" the
|
| condition, and "I" the conditioned; "I," therefore, only a synthesis
|
| which has been MADE by thinking itself. KANT really wished to prove
|
| that, starting from the subject, the subject could not be proved--nor
|
| the object either: the possibility of an APPARENT EXISTENCE of the
|
| subject, and therefore of "the soul," may not always have been strange
|
| to him,--the thought which once had an immense power on earth as the
|
| Vedanta philosophy.
|
|
|
| 55. There is a great ladder of religious cruelty, with many rounds; but
|
| three of these are the most important. Once on a time men sacrificed
|
| human beings to their God, and perhaps just those they loved the
|
| best--to this category belong the firstling sacrifices of all primitive
|
| religions, and also the sacrifice of the Emperor Tiberius in the
|
| Mithra-Grotto on the Island of Capri, that most terrible of all Roman
|
| anachronisms. Then, during the moral epoch of mankind, they sacrificed
|
| to their God the strongest instincts they possessed, their "nature";
|
| THIS festal joy shines in the cruel glances of ascetics and
|
| "anti-natural" fanatics. Finally, what still remained to be sacrificed?
|
| Was it not necessary in the end for men to sacrifice everything
|
| comforting, holy, healing, all hope, all faith in hidden harmonies, in
|
| future blessedness and justice? Was it not necessary to sacrifice God
|
| himself, and out of cruelty to themselves to worship stone, stupidity,
|
| gravity, fate, nothingness? To sacrifice God for nothingness--this
|
| paradoxical mystery of the ultimate cruelty has been reserved for the
|
| rising generation; we all know something thereof already.
|
|
|
| 56. Whoever, like myself, prompted by some enigmatical desire, has long
|
| endeavoured to go to the bottom of the question of pessimism and free it
|
| from the half-Christian, half-German narrowness and stupidity in which
|
| it has finally presented itself to this century, namely, in the form of
|
| Schopenhauer's philosophy; whoever, with an Asiatic and super-Asiatic
|
| eye, has actually looked inside, and into the most world-renouncing of
|
| all possible modes of thought--beyond good and evil, and no longer
|
| like Buddha and Schopenhauer, under the dominion and delusion of
|
| morality,--whoever has done this, has perhaps just thereby, without
|
| really desiring it, opened his eyes to behold the opposite ideal: the
|
| ideal of the most world-approving, exuberant, and vivacious man, who has
|
| not only learnt to compromise and arrange with that which was and
|
| is, but wishes to have it again AS IT WAS AND IS, for all eternity,
|
| insatiably calling out da capo, not only to himself, but to the whole
|
| piece and play; and not only the play, but actually to him who requires
|
| the play--and makes it necessary; because he always requires
|
| himself anew--and makes himself necessary.--What? And this would not
|
| be--circulus vitiosus deus?
|
|
|
| 57. The distance, and as it were the space around man, grows with the
|
| strength of his intellectual vision and insight: his world becomes
|
| profounder; new stars, new enigmas, and notions are ever coming into
|
| view. Perhaps everything on which the intellectual eye has exercised
|
| its acuteness and profundity has just been an occasion for its exercise,
|
| something of a game, something for children and childish minds. Perhaps
|
| the most solemn conceptions that have caused the most fighting and
|
| suffering, the conceptions "God" and "sin," will one day seem to us of
|
| no more importance than a child's plaything or a child's pain seems to
|
| an old man;--and perhaps another plaything and another pain will then
|
| be necessary once more for "the old man"--always childish enough, an
|
| eternal child!
|
|
|
| 58. Has it been observed to what extent outward idleness, or
|
| semi-idleness, is necessary to a real religious life (alike for its
|
| favourite microscopic labour of self-examination, and for its soft
|
| placidity called "prayer," the state of perpetual readiness for the
|
| "coming of God"), I mean the idleness with a good conscience, the
|
| idleness of olden times and of blood, to which the aristocratic
|
| sentiment that work is DISHONOURING--that it vulgarizes body and
|
| soul--is not quite unfamiliar? And that consequently the modern, noisy,
|
| time-engrossing, conceited, foolishly proud laboriousness educates
|
| and prepares for "unbelief" more than anything else? Among these, for
|
| instance, who are at present living apart from religion in Germany, I
|
| find "free-thinkers" of diversified species and origin, but above all
|
| a majority of those in whom laboriousness from generation to generation
|
| has dissolved the religious instincts; so that they no longer know what
|
| purpose religions serve, and only note their existence in the world
|
| with a kind of dull astonishment. They feel themselves already fully
|
| occupied, these good people, be it by their business or by their
|
| pleasures, not to mention the "Fatherland," and the newspapers, and
|
| their "family duties"; it seems that they have no time whatever left
|
| for religion; and above all, it is not obvious to them whether it is a
|
| question of a new business or a new pleasure--for it is impossible, they
|
| say to themselves, that people should go to church merely to spoil
|
| their tempers. They are by no means enemies of religious customs;
|
| should certain circumstances, State affairs perhaps, require their
|
| participation in such customs, they do what is required, as so many
|
| things are done--with a patient and unassuming seriousness, and without
|
| much curiosity or discomfort;--they live too much apart and outside
|
| to feel even the necessity for a FOR or AGAINST in such matters. Among
|
| those indifferent persons may be reckoned nowadays the majority of
|
| German Protestants of the middle classes, especially in the great
|
| laborious centres of trade and commerce; also the majority of laborious
|
| scholars, and the entire University personnel (with the exception of
|
| the theologians, whose existence and possibility there always gives
|
| psychologists new and more subtle puzzles to solve). On the part of
|
| pious, or merely church-going people, there is seldom any idea of HOW
|
| MUCH good-will, one might say arbitrary will, is now necessary for a
|
| German scholar to take the problem of religion seriously; his whole
|
| profession (and as I have said, his whole workmanlike laboriousness, to
|
| which he is compelled by his modern conscience) inclines him to a
|
| lofty and almost charitable serenity as regards religion, with which is
|
| occasionally mingled a slight disdain for the "uncleanliness" of spirit
|
| which he takes for granted wherever any one still professes to belong
|
| to the Church. It is only with the help of history (NOT through his own
|
| personal experience, therefore) that the scholar succeeds in bringing
|
| himself to a respectful seriousness, and to a certain timid deference
|
| in presence of religions; but even when his sentiments have reached the
|
| stage of gratitude towards them, he has not personally advanced one
|
| step nearer to that which still maintains itself as Church or as piety;
|
| perhaps even the contrary. The practical indifference to religious
|
| matters in the midst of which he has been born and brought up, usually
|
| sublimates itself in his case into circumspection and cleanliness, which
|
| shuns contact with religious men and things; and it may be just the
|
| depth of his tolerance and humanity which prompts him to avoid the
|
| delicate trouble which tolerance itself brings with it.--Every age has
|
| its own divine type of naivete, for the discovery of which other ages
|
| may envy it: and how much naivete--adorable, childlike, and boundlessly
|
| foolish naivete is involved in this belief of the scholar in
|
| his superiority, in the good conscience of his tolerance, in the
|
| unsuspecting, simple certainty with which his instinct treats the
|
| religious man as a lower and less valuable type, beyond, before, and
|
| ABOVE which he himself has developed--he, the little arrogant dwarf
|
| and mob-man, the sedulously alert, head-and-hand drudge of "ideas," of
|
| "modern ideas"!
|
|
|
| 59. Whoever has seen deeply into the world has doubtless divined what
|
| wisdom there is in the fact that men are superficial. It is their
|
| preservative instinct which teaches them to be flighty, lightsome, and
|
| false. Here and there one finds a passionate and exaggerated adoration
|
| of "pure forms" in philosophers as well as in artists: it is not to be
|
| doubted that whoever has NEED of the cult of the superficial to that
|
| extent, has at one time or another made an unlucky dive BENEATH it.
|
| Perhaps there is even an order of rank with respect to those burnt
|
| children, the born artists who find the enjoyment of life only in trying
|
| to FALSIFY its image (as if taking wearisome revenge on it), one might
|
| guess to what degree life has disgusted them, by the extent to which
|
| they wish to see its image falsified, attenuated, ultrified, and
|
| deified,--one might reckon the homines religiosi among the artists, as
|
| their HIGHEST rank. It is the profound, suspicious fear of an incurable
|
| pessimism which compels whole centuries to fasten their teeth into a
|
| religious interpretation of existence: the fear of the instinct which
|
| divines that truth might be attained TOO soon, before man has become
|
| strong enough, hard enough, artist enough.... Piety, the "Life in God,"
|
| regarded in this light, would appear as the most elaborate and
|
| ultimate product of the FEAR of truth, as artist-adoration
|
| and artist-intoxication in presence of the most logical of all
|
| falsifications, as the will to the inversion of truth, to untruth at
|
| any price. Perhaps there has hitherto been no more effective means of
|
| beautifying man than piety, by means of it man can become so artful, so
|
| superficial, so iridescent, and so good, that his appearance no longer
|
| offends.
|
|
|
| 60. To love mankind FOR GOD'S SAKE--this has so far been the noblest and
|
| remotest sentiment to which mankind has attained. That love to mankind,
|
| without any redeeming intention in the background, is only an ADDITIONAL
|
| folly and brutishness, that the inclination to this love has first to
|
| get its proportion, its delicacy, its gram of salt and sprinkling
|
| of ambergris from a higher inclination--whoever first perceived
|
| and "experienced" this, however his tongue may have stammered as it
|
| attempted to express such a delicate matter, let him for all time be
|
| holy and respected, as the man who has so far flown highest and gone
|
| astray in the finest fashion!
|
|
|
| 61. The philosopher, as WE free spirits understand him--as the man of
|
| the greatest responsibility, who has the conscience for the general
|
| development of mankind,--will use religion for his disciplining and
|
| educating work, just as he will use the contemporary political
|
| and economic conditions. The selecting and disciplining
|
| influence--destructive, as well as creative and fashioning--which can be
|
| exercised by means of religion is manifold and varied, according to the
|
| sort of people placed under its spell and protection. For those who are
|
| strong and independent, destined and trained to command, in whom the
|
| judgment and skill of a ruling race is incorporated, religion is
|
| an additional means for overcoming resistance in the exercise of
|
| authority--as a bond which binds rulers and subjects in common,
|
| betraying and surrendering to the former the conscience of the latter,
|
| their inmost heart, which would fain escape obedience. And in the
|
| case of the unique natures of noble origin, if by virtue of superior
|
| spirituality they should incline to a more retired and contemplative
|
| life, reserving to themselves only the more refined forms of government
|
| (over chosen disciples or members of an order), religion itself may
|
| be used as a means for obtaining peace from the noise and trouble of
|
| managing GROSSER affairs, and for securing immunity from the UNAVOIDABLE
|
| filth of all political agitation. The Brahmins, for instance, understood
|
| this fact. With the help of a religious organization, they secured to
|
| themselves the power of nominating kings for the people, while their
|
| sentiments prompted them to keep apart and outside, as men with a higher
|
| and super-regal mission. At the same time religion gives inducement and
|
| opportunity to some of the subjects to qualify themselves for future
|
| ruling and commanding the slowly ascending ranks and classes, in which,
|
| through fortunate marriage customs, volitional power and delight in
|
| self-control are on the increase. To them religion offers sufficient
|
| incentives and temptations to aspire to higher intellectuality, and to
|
| experience the sentiments of authoritative self-control, of silence, and
|
| of solitude. Asceticism and Puritanism are almost indispensable means of
|
| educating and ennobling a race which seeks to rise above its hereditary
|
| baseness and work itself upwards to future supremacy. And finally, to
|
| ordinary men, to the majority of the people, who exist for service and
|
| general utility, and are only so far entitled to exist, religion gives
|
| invaluable contentedness with their lot and condition, peace of heart,
|
| ennoblement of obedience, additional social happiness and sympathy,
|
| with something of transfiguration and embellishment, something of
|
| justification of all the commonplaceness, all the meanness, all
|
| the semi-animal poverty of their souls. Religion, together with the
|
| religious significance of life, sheds sunshine over such perpetually
|
| harassed men, and makes even their own aspect endurable to them, it
|
| operates upon them as the Epicurean philosophy usually operates upon
|
| sufferers of a higher order, in a refreshing and refining manner,
|
| almost TURNING suffering TO ACCOUNT, and in the end even hallowing and
|
| vindicating it. There is perhaps nothing so admirable in Christianity
|
| and Buddhism as their art of teaching even the lowest to elevate
|
| themselves by piety to a seemingly higher order of things, and thereby
|
| to retain their satisfaction with the actual world in which they find it
|
| difficult enough to live--this very difficulty being necessary.
|
|
|
| 62. To be sure--to make also the bad counter-reckoning against such
|
| religions, and to bring to light their secret dangers--the cost is
|
| always excessive and terrible when religions do NOT operate as an
|
| educational and disciplinary medium in the hands of the philosopher, but
|
| rule voluntarily and PARAMOUNTLY, when they wish to be the final end,
|
| and not a means along with other means. Among men, as among all other
|
| animals, there is a surplus of defective, diseased, degenerating,
|
| infirm, and necessarily suffering individuals; the successful cases,
|
| among men also, are always the exception; and in view of the fact that
|
| man is THE ANIMAL NOT YET PROPERLY ADAPTED TO HIS ENVIRONMENT, the rare
|
| exception. But worse still. The higher the type a man represents, the
|
| greater is the improbability that he will SUCCEED; the accidental, the
|
| law of irrationality in the general constitution of mankind, manifests
|
| itself most terribly in its destructive effect on the higher orders of
|
| men, the conditions of whose lives are delicate, diverse, and difficult
|
| to determine. What, then, is the attitude of the two greatest religions
|
| above-mentioned to the SURPLUS of failures in life? They endeavour
|
| to preserve and keep alive whatever can be preserved; in fact, as the
|
| religions FOR SUFFERERS, they take the part of these upon principle;
|
| they are always in favour of those who suffer from life as from a
|
| disease, and they would fain treat every other experience of life as
|
| false and impossible. However highly we may esteem this indulgent and
|
| preservative care (inasmuch as in applying to others, it has applied,
|
| and applies also to the highest and usually the most suffering type of
|
| man), the hitherto PARAMOUNT religions--to give a general appreciation
|
| of them--are among the principal causes which have kept the type of
|
| "man" upon a lower level--they have preserved too much THAT WHICH SHOULD
|
| HAVE PERISHED. One has to thank them for invaluable services; and who is
|
| sufficiently rich in gratitude not to feel poor at the contemplation
|
| of all that the "spiritual men" of Christianity have done for Europe
|
| hitherto! But when they had given comfort to the sufferers, courage to
|
| the oppressed and despairing, a staff and support to the helpless,
|
| and when they had allured from society into convents and spiritual
|
| penitentiaries the broken-hearted and distracted: what else had they
|
| to do in order to work systematically in that fashion, and with a good
|
| conscience, for the preservation of all the sick and suffering, which
|
| means, in deed and in truth, to work for the DETERIORATION OF THE
|
| EUROPEAN RACE? To REVERSE all estimates of value--THAT is what they
|
| had to do! And to shatter the strong, to spoil great hopes, to cast
|
| suspicion on the delight in beauty, to break down everything autonomous,
|
| manly, conquering, and imperious--all instincts which are natural to the
|
| highest and most successful type of "man"--into uncertainty, distress
|
| of conscience, and self-destruction; forsooth, to invert all love of the
|
| earthly and of supremacy over the earth, into hatred of the earth and
|
| earthly things--THAT is the task the Church imposed on itself, and
|
| was obliged to impose, until, according to its standard of value,
|
| "unworldliness," "unsensuousness," and "higher man" fused into one
|
| sentiment. If one could observe the strangely painful, equally coarse
|
| and refined comedy of European Christianity with the derisive and
|
| impartial eye of an Epicurean god, I should think one would never cease
|
| marvelling and laughing; does it not actually seem that some single will
|
| has ruled over Europe for eighteen centuries in order to make a SUBLIME
|
| ABORTION of man? He, however, who, with opposite requirements (no longer
|
| Epicurean) and with some divine hammer in his hand, could approach this
|
| almost voluntary degeneration and stunting of mankind, as exemplified in
|
| the European Christian (Pascal, for instance), would he not have to
|
| cry aloud with rage, pity, and horror: "Oh, you bunglers, presumptuous
|
| pitiful bunglers, what have you done! Was that a work for your hands?
|
| How you have hacked and botched my finest stone! What have you presumed
|
| to do!"--I should say that Christianity has hitherto been the most
|
| portentous of presumptions. Men, not great enough, nor hard enough,
|
| to be entitled as artists to take part in fashioning MAN; men,
|
| not sufficiently strong and far-sighted to ALLOW, with sublime
|
| self-constraint, the obvious law of the thousandfold failures and
|
| perishings to prevail; men, not sufficiently noble to see the radically
|
| different grades of rank and intervals of rank that separate man from
|
| man:--SUCH men, with their "equality before God," have hitherto swayed
|
| the destiny of Europe; until at last a dwarfed, almost ludicrous species
|
| has been produced, a gregarious animal, something obliging, sickly,
|
| mediocre, the European of the present day.
|
|
|
| CHAPTER IV. APOPHTHEGMS AND INTERLUDES
|
|
|
| 63. He who is a thorough teacher takes things seriously--and even
|
| himself--only in relation to his pupils.
|
|
|
| 64. "Knowledge for its own sake"--that is the last snare laid by
|
| morality: we are thereby completely entangled in morals once more.
|
|
|
| 65. The charm of knowledge would be small, were it not so much shame has
|
| to be overcome on the way to it.
|
|
|
| 65A. We are most dishonourable towards our God: he is not PERMITTED to
|
| sin.
|
|
|
| 66. The tendency of a person to allow himself to be degraded, robbed,
|
| deceived, and exploited might be the diffidence of a God among men.
|
|
|
| 67. Love to one only is a barbarity, for it is exercised at the expense
|
| of all others. Love to God also!
|
|
|
| 68. "I did that," says my memory. "I could not have done that," says my
|
| pride, and remains inexorable. Eventually--the memory yields.
|
|
|
| 69. One has regarded life carelessly, if one has failed to see the hand
|
| that--kills with leniency.
|
|
|
| 70. If a man has character, he has also his typical experience, which
|
| always recurs.
|
|
|
| 71. THE SAGE AS ASTRONOMER.--So long as thou feelest the stars as an
|
| "above thee," thou lackest the eye of the discerning one.
|
|
|
| 72. It is not the strength, but the duration of great sentiments that
|
| makes great men.
|
|
|
| 73. He who attains his ideal, precisely thereby surpasses it.
|
|
|
| 73A. Many a peacock hides his tail from every eye--and calls it his
|
| pride.
|
|
|
| 74. A man of genius is unbearable, unless he possess at least two things
|
| besides: gratitude and purity.
|
|
|
| 75. The degree and nature of a man's sensuality extends to the highest
|
| altitudes of his spirit.
|
|
|
| 76. Under peaceful conditions the militant man attacks himself.
|
|
|
| 77. With his principles a man seeks either to dominate, or justify,
|
| or honour, or reproach, or conceal his habits: two men with the same
|
| principles probably seek fundamentally different ends therewith.
|
|
|
| 78. He who despises himself, nevertheless esteems himself thereby, as a
|
| despiser.
|
|
|
| 79. A soul which knows that it is loved, but does not itself love,
|
| betrays its sediment: its dregs come up.
|
|
|
| 80. A thing that is explained ceases to concern us--What did the God
|
| mean who gave the advice, "Know thyself!" Did it perhaps imply "Cease to
|
| be concerned about thyself! become objective!"--And Socrates?--And the
|
| "scientific man"?
|
|
|
| 81. It is terrible to die of thirst at sea. Is it necessary that you
|
| should so salt your truth that it will no longer--quench thirst?
|
|
|
| 82. "Sympathy for all"--would be harshness and tyranny for THEE, my good
|
| neighbour.
|
|
|
| 83. INSTINCT--When the house is on fire one forgets even the
|
| dinner--Yes, but one recovers it from among the ashes.
|
|
|
| 84. Woman learns how to hate in proportion as she--forgets how to charm.
|
|
|
| 85. The same emotions are in man and woman, but in different TEMPO, on
|
| that account man and woman never cease to misunderstand each other.
|
|
|
| 86. In the background of all their personal vanity, women themselves
|
| have still their impersonal scorn--for "woman".
|
|
|
| 87. FETTERED HEART, FREE SPIRIT--When one firmly fetters one's heart
|
| and keeps it prisoner, one can allow one's spirit many liberties: I said
|
| this once before But people do not believe it when I say so, unless they
|
| know it already.
|
|
|
| 88. One begins to distrust very clever persons when they become
|
| embarrassed.
|
|
|
| 89. Dreadful experiences raise the question whether he who experiences
|
| them is not something dreadful also.
|
|
|
| 90. Heavy, melancholy men turn lighter, and come temporarily to their
|
| surface, precisely by that which makes others heavy--by hatred and love.
|
|
|
| 91. So cold, so icy, that one burns one's finger at the touch of him!
|
| Every hand that lays hold of him shrinks back!--And for that very reason
|
| many think him red-hot.
|
|
|
| 92. Who has not, at one time or another--sacrificed himself for the sake
|
| of his good name?
|
|
|
| 93. In affability there is no hatred of men, but precisely on that
|
| account a great deal too much contempt of men.
|
|
|
| 94. The maturity of man--that means, to have reacquired the seriousness
|
| that one had as a child at play.
|
|
|
| 95. To be ashamed of one's immorality is a step on the ladder at the end
|
| of which one is ashamed also of one's morality.
|
|
|
| 96. One should part from life as Ulysses parted from Nausicaa--blessing
|
| it rather than in love with it.
|
|
|
| 97. What? A great man? I always see merely the play-actor of his own
|
| ideal.
|
|
|
| 98. When one trains one's conscience, it kisses one while it bites.
|
|
|
| 99. THE DISAPPOINTED ONE SPEAKS--"I listened for the echo and I heard
|
| only praise."
|
|
|
| 100. We all feign to ourselves that we are simpler than we are, we thus
|
| relax ourselves away from our fellows.
|
|
|
| 101. A discerning one might easily regard himself at present as the
|
| animalization of God.
|
|
|
| 102. Discovering reciprocal love should really disenchant the lover with
|
| regard to the beloved. "What! She is modest enough to love even you? Or
|
| stupid enough? Or--or---"
|
|
|
| 103. THE DANGER IN HAPPINESS.--"Everything now turns out best for me, I
|
| now love every fate:--who would like to be my fate?"
|
|
|
| 104. Not their love of humanity, but the impotence of their love,
|
| prevents the Christians of today--burning us.
|
|
|
| 105. The pia fraus is still more repugnant to the taste (the "piety")
|
| of the free spirit (the "pious man of knowledge") than the impia fraus.
|
| Hence the profound lack of judgment, in comparison with the Church,
|
| characteristic of the type "free spirit"--as ITS non-freedom.
|
|
|
| 106. By means of music the very passions enjoy themselves.
|
|
|
| 107. A sign of strong character, when once the resolution has been
|
| taken, to shut the ear even to the best counter-arguments. Occasionally,
|
| therefore, a will to stupidity.
|
|
|
| 108. There is no such thing as moral phenomena, but only a moral
|
| interpretation of phenomena.
|
|
|
| 109. The criminal is often enough not equal to his deed: he extenuates
|
| and maligns it.
|
|
|
| 110. The advocates of a criminal are seldom artists enough to turn the
|
| beautiful terribleness of the deed to the advantage of the doer.
|
|
|
| 111. Our vanity is most difficult to wound just when our pride has been
|
| wounded.
|
|
|
| 112. To him who feels himself preordained to contemplation and not to
|
| belief, all believers are too noisy and obtrusive; he guards against
|
| them.
|
|
|
| 113. "You want to prepossess him in your favour? Then you must be
|
| embarrassed before him."
|
|
|
| 114. The immense expectation with regard to sexual love, and the coyness
|
| in this expectation, spoils all the perspectives of women at the outset.
|
|
|
| 115. Where there is neither love nor hatred in the game, woman's play is
|
| mediocre.
|
|
|
| 116. The great epochs of our life are at the points when we gain courage
|
| to rebaptize our badness as the best in us.
|
|
|
| 117. The will to overcome an emotion, is ultimately only the will of
|
| another, or of several other, emotions.
|
|
|
| 118. There is an innocence of admiration: it is possessed by him to whom
|
| it has not yet occurred that he himself may be admired some day.
|
|
|
| 119. Our loathing of dirt may be so great as to prevent our cleaning
|
| ourselves--"justifying" ourselves.
|
|
|
| 120. Sensuality often forces the growth of love too much, so that its
|
| root remains weak, and is easily torn up.
|
|
|
| 121. It is a curious thing that God learned Greek when he wished to turn
|
| author--and that he did not learn it better.
|
|
|
| 122. To rejoice on account of praise is in many cases merely politeness
|
| of heart--and the very opposite of vanity of spirit.
|
|
|
| 123. Even concubinage has been corrupted--by marriage.
|
|
|
| 124. He who exults at the stake, does not triumph over pain, but because
|
| of the fact that he does not feel pain where he expected it. A parable.
|
|
|
| 125. When we have to change an opinion about any one, we charge heavily
|
| to his account the inconvenience he thereby causes us.
|
|
|
| 126. A nation is a detour of nature to arrive at six or seven great
|
| men.--Yes, and then to get round them.
|
|
|
| 127. In the eyes of all true women science is hostile to the sense of
|
| shame. They feel as if one wished to peep under their skin with it--or
|
| worse still! under their dress and finery.
|
|
|
| 128. The more abstract the truth you wish to teach, the more must you
|
| allure the senses to it.
|
|
|
| 129. The devil has the most extensive perspectives for God; on that
|
| account he keeps so far away from him:--the devil, in effect, as the
|
| oldest friend of knowledge.
|
|
|
| 130. What a person IS begins to betray itself when his talent
|
| decreases,--when he ceases to show what he CAN do. Talent is also an
|
| adornment; an adornment is also a concealment.
|
|
|
| 131. The sexes deceive themselves about each other: the reason is that
|
| in reality they honour and love only themselves (or their own ideal, to
|
| express it more agreeably). Thus man wishes woman to be peaceable: but
|
| in fact woman is ESSENTIALLY unpeaceable, like the cat, however well she
|
| may have assumed the peaceable demeanour.
|
|
|
| 132. One is punished best for one's virtues.
|
|
|
| 133. He who cannot find the way to HIS ideal, lives more frivolously and
|
| shamelessly than the man without an ideal.
|
|
|
| 134. From the senses originate all trustworthiness, all good conscience,
|
| all evidence of truth.
|
|
|
| 135. Pharisaism is not a deterioration of the good man; a considerable
|
| part of it is rather an essential condition of being good.
|
|
|
| 136. The one seeks an accoucheur for his thoughts, the other seeks some
|
| one whom he can assist: a good conversation thus originates.
|
|
|
| 137. In intercourse with scholars and artists one readily makes mistakes
|
| of opposite kinds: in a remarkable scholar one not infrequently finds
|
| a mediocre man; and often, even in a mediocre artist, one finds a very
|
| remarkable man.
|
|
|
| 138. We do the same when awake as when dreaming: we only invent and
|
| imagine him with whom we have intercourse--and forget it immediately.
|
|
|
| 139. In revenge and in love woman is more barbarous than man.
|
|
|
| 140. ADVICE AS A RIDDLE.--"If the band is not to break, bite it
|
| first--secure to make!"
|
|
|
| 141. The belly is the reason why man does not so readily take himself
|
| for a God.
|
|
|
| 142. The chastest utterance I ever heard: "Dans le veritable amour c'est
|
| l'ame qui enveloppe le corps."
|
|
|
| 143. Our vanity would like what we do best to pass precisely for what is
|
| most difficult to us.--Concerning the origin of many systems of morals.
|
|
|
| 144. When a woman has scholarly inclinations there is generally
|
| something wrong with her sexual nature. Barrenness itself conduces to a
|
| certain virility of taste; man, indeed, if I may say so, is "the barren
|
| animal."
|
|
|
| 145. Comparing man and woman generally, one may say that woman would
|
| not have the genius for adornment, if she had not the instinct for the
|
| SECONDARY role.
|
|
|
| 146. He who fights with monsters should be careful lest he thereby
|
| become a monster. And if thou gaze long into an abyss, the abyss will
|
| also gaze into thee.
|
|
|
| 147. From old Florentine novels--moreover, from life: Buona femmina e
|
| mala femmina vuol bastone.--Sacchetti, Nov. 86.
|
|
|
| 148. To seduce their neighbour to a favourable opinion, and afterwards
|
| to believe implicitly in this opinion of their neighbour--who can do
|
| this conjuring trick so well as women?
|
|
|
| 149. That which an age considers evil is usually an unseasonable echo of
|
| what was formerly considered good--the atavism of an old ideal.
|
|
|
| 150. Around the hero everything becomes a tragedy; around the
|
| demigod everything becomes a satyr-play; and around God everything
|
| becomes--what? perhaps a "world"?
|
|
|
| 151. It is not enough to possess a talent: one must also have your
|
| permission to possess it;--eh, my friends?
|
|
|
| 152. "Where there is the tree of knowledge, there is always Paradise":
|
| so say the most ancient and the most modern serpents.
|
|
|
| 153. What is done out of love always takes place beyond good and evil.
|
|
|
| 154. Objection, evasion, joyous distrust, and love of irony are signs of
|
| health; everything absolute belongs to pathology.
|
|
|
| 155. The sense of the tragic increases and declines with sensuousness.
|
|
|
| 156. Insanity in individuals is something rare--but in groups, parties,
|
| nations, and epochs it is the rule.
|
|
|
| 157. The thought of suicide is a great consolation: by means of it one
|
| gets successfully through many a bad night.
|
|
|
| 158. Not only our reason, but also our conscience, truckles to our
|
| strongest impulse--the tyrant in us.
|
|
|
| 159. One MUST repay good and ill; but why just to the person who did us
|
| good or ill?
|
|
|
| 160. One no longer loves one's knowledge sufficiently after one has
|
| communicated it.
|
|
|
| 161. Poets act shamelessly towards their experiences: they exploit them.
|
|
|
| 162. "Our fellow-creature is not our neighbour, but our neighbour's
|
| neighbour":--so thinks every nation.
|
|
|
| 163. Love brings to light the noble and hidden qualities of a lover--his
|
| rare and exceptional traits: it is thus liable to be deceptive as to his
|
| normal character.
|
|
|
| 164. Jesus said to his Jews: "The law was for servants;--love God as I
|
| love him, as his Son! What have we Sons of God to do with morals!"
|
|
|
| 165. IN SIGHT OF EVERY PARTY.--A shepherd has always need of a
|
| bell-wether--or he has himself to be a wether occasionally.
|
|
|
| 166. One may indeed lie with the mouth; but with the accompanying
|
| grimace one nevertheless tells the truth.
|
|
|
| 167. To vigorous men intimacy is a matter of shame--and something
|
| precious.
|
|
|
| 168. Christianity gave Eros poison to drink; he did not die of it,
|
| certainly, but degenerated to Vice.
|
|
|
| 169. To talk much about oneself may also be a means of concealing
|
| oneself.
|
|
|
| 170. In praise there is more obtrusiveness than in blame.
|
|
|
| 171. Pity has an almost ludicrous effect on a man of knowledge, like
|
| tender hands on a Cyclops.
|
|
|
| 172. One occasionally embraces some one or other, out of love to mankind
|
| (because one cannot embrace all); but this is what one must never
|
| confess to the individual.
|
|
|
| 173. One does not hate as long as one disesteems, but only when one
|
| esteems equal or superior.
|
|
|
| 174. Ye Utilitarians--ye, too, love the UTILE only as a VEHICLE for
|
| your inclinations,--ye, too, really find the noise of its wheels
|
| insupportable!
|
|
|
| 175. One loves ultimately one's desires, not the thing desired.
|
|
|
| 176. The vanity of others is only counter to our taste when it is
|
| counter to our vanity.
|
|
|
| 177. With regard to what "truthfulness" is, perhaps nobody has ever been
|
| sufficiently truthful.
|
|
|
| 178. One does not believe in the follies of clever men: what a
|
| forfeiture of the rights of man!
|
|
|
| 179. The consequences of our actions seize us by the forelock, very
|
| indifferent to the fact that we have meanwhile "reformed."
|
|
|
| 180. There is an innocence in lying which is the sign of good faith in a
|
| cause.
|
|
|
| 181. It is inhuman to bless when one is being cursed.
|
|
|
| 182. The familiarity of superiors embitters one, because it may not be
|
| returned.
|
|
|
| 183. "I am affected, not because you have deceived me, but because I can
|
| no longer believe in you."
|
|
|
| 184. There is a haughtiness of kindness which has the appearance of
|
| wickedness.
|
|
|
| 185. "I dislike him."--Why?--"I am not a match for him."--Did any one
|
| ever answer so?
|
|
|
| CHAPTER V. THE NATURAL HISTORY OF MORALS
|
|
|
| 186. The moral sentiment in Europe at present is perhaps as subtle,
|
| belated, diverse, sensitive, and refined, as the "Science of Morals"
|
| belonging thereto is recent, initial, awkward, and coarse-fingered:--an
|
| interesting contrast, which sometimes becomes incarnate and obvious
|
| in the very person of a moralist. Indeed, the expression, "Science
|
| of Morals" is, in respect to what is designated thereby, far too
|
| presumptuous and counter to GOOD taste,--which is always a foretaste of
|
| more modest expressions. One ought to avow with the utmost fairness WHAT
|
| is still necessary here for a long time, WHAT is alone proper for the
|
| present: namely, the collection of material, the comprehensive survey
|
| and classification of an immense domain of delicate sentiments of worth,
|
| and distinctions of worth, which live, grow, propagate, and perish--and
|
| perhaps attempts to give a clear idea of the recurring and more common
|
| forms of these living crystallizations--as preparation for a THEORY OF
|
| TYPES of morality. To be sure, people have not hitherto been so modest.
|
| All the philosophers, with a pedantic and ridiculous seriousness,
|
| demanded of themselves something very much higher, more pretentious, and
|
| ceremonious, when they concerned themselves with morality as a science:
|
| they wanted to GIVE A BASIC to morality--and every philosopher hitherto
|
| has believed that he has given it a basis; morality itself, however, has
|
| been regarded as something "given." How far from their awkward pride
|
| was the seemingly insignificant problem--left in dust and decay--of a
|
| description of forms of morality, notwithstanding that the finest hands
|
| and senses could hardly be fine enough for it! It was precisely owing to
|
| moral philosophers' knowing the moral facts imperfectly, in an arbitrary
|
| epitome, or an accidental abridgement--perhaps as the morality of
|
| their environment, their position, their church, their Zeitgeist, their
|
| climate and zone--it was precisely because they were badly instructed
|
| with regard to nations, eras, and past ages, and were by no means eager
|
| to know about these matters, that they did not even come in sight of the
|
| real problems of morals--problems which only disclose themselves by
|
| a comparison of MANY kinds of morality. In every "Science of Morals"
|
| hitherto, strange as it may sound, the problem of morality itself
|
| has been OMITTED: there has been no suspicion that there was anything
|
| problematic there! That which philosophers called "giving a basis to
|
| morality," and endeavoured to realize, has, when seen in a right light,
|
| proved merely a learned form of good FAITH in prevailing morality, a new
|
| means of its EXPRESSION, consequently just a matter-of-fact within the
|
| sphere of a definite morality, yea, in its ultimate motive, a sort of
|
| denial that it is LAWFUL for this morality to be called in question--and
|
| in any case the reverse of the testing, analyzing, doubting, and
|
| vivisecting of this very faith. Hear, for instance, with what
|
| innocence--almost worthy of honour--Schopenhauer represents his own
|
| task, and draw your conclusions concerning the scientificness of a
|
| "Science" whose latest master still talks in the strain of children and
|
| old wives: "The principle," he says (page 136 of the Grundprobleme der
|
| Ethik), [Footnote: Pages 54-55 of Schopenhauer's Basis of Morality,
|
| translated by Arthur B. Bullock, M.A. (1903).] "the axiom about the
|
| purport of which all moralists are PRACTICALLY agreed: neminem laede,
|
| immo omnes quantum potes juva--is REALLY the proposition which all moral
|
| teachers strive to establish, ... the REAL basis of ethics which
|
| has been sought, like the philosopher's stone, for centuries."--The
|
| difficulty of establishing the proposition referred to may indeed be
|
| great--it is well known that Schopenhauer also was unsuccessful in his
|
| efforts; and whoever has thoroughly realized how absurdly false and
|
| sentimental this proposition is, in a world whose essence is Will
|
| to Power, may be reminded that Schopenhauer, although a pessimist,
|
| ACTUALLY--played the flute... daily after dinner: one may read about
|
| the matter in his biography. A question by the way: a pessimist, a
|
| repudiator of God and of the world, who MAKES A HALT at morality--who
|
| assents to morality, and plays the flute to laede-neminem morals, what?
|
| Is that really--a pessimist?
|
|
|
| 187. Apart from the value of such assertions as "there is a categorical
|
| imperative in us," one can always ask: What does such an assertion
|
| indicate about him who makes it? There are systems of morals which are
|
| meant to justify their author in the eyes of other people; other systems
|
| of morals are meant to tranquilize him, and make him self-satisfied;
|
| with other systems he wants to crucify and humble himself, with others
|
| he wishes to take revenge, with others to conceal himself, with others
|
| to glorify himself and gave superiority and distinction,--this system of
|
| morals helps its author to forget, that system makes him, or something
|
| of him, forgotten, many a moralist would like to exercise power and
|
| creative arbitrariness over mankind, many another, perhaps, Kant
|
| especially, gives us to understand by his morals that "what is estimable
|
| in me, is that I know how to obey--and with you it SHALL not be
|
| otherwise than with me!" In short, systems of morals are only a
|
| SIGN-LANGUAGE OF THE EMOTIONS.
|
|
|
| 188. In contrast to laisser-aller, every system of morals is a sort of
|
| tyranny against "nature" and also against "reason", that is, however, no
|
| objection, unless one should again decree by some system of morals, that
|
| all kinds of tyranny and unreasonableness are unlawful What is
|
| essential and invaluable in every system of morals, is that it is a
|
| long constraint. In order to understand Stoicism, or Port Royal,
|
| or Puritanism, one should remember the constraint under which every
|
| language has attained to strength and freedom--the metrical constraint,
|
| the tyranny of rhyme and rhythm. How much trouble have the poets and
|
| orators of every nation given themselves!--not excepting some of
|
| the prose writers of today, in whose ear dwells an inexorable
|
| conscientiousness--"for the sake of a folly," as utilitarian bunglers
|
| say, and thereby deem themselves wise--"from submission to arbitrary
|
| laws," as the anarchists say, and thereby fancy themselves "free," even
|
| free-spirited. The singular fact remains, however, that everything
|
| of the nature of freedom, elegance, boldness, dance, and masterly
|
| certainty, which exists or has existed, whether it be in thought itself,
|
| or in administration, or in speaking and persuading, in art just as in
|
| conduct, has only developed by means of the tyranny of such arbitrary
|
| law, and in all seriousness, it is not at all improbable that precisely
|
| this is "nature" and "natural"--and not laisser-aller! Every artist
|
| knows how different from the state of letting himself go, is his
|
| "most natural" condition, the free arranging, locating, disposing,
|
| and constructing in the moments of "inspiration"--and how strictly and
|
| delicately he then obeys a thousand laws, which, by their very rigidness
|
| and precision, defy all formulation by means of ideas (even the most
|
| stable idea has, in comparison therewith, something floating, manifold,
|
| and ambiguous in it). The essential thing "in heaven and in earth" is,
|
| apparently (to repeat it once more), that there should be long OBEDIENCE
|
| in the same direction, there thereby results, and has always resulted in
|
| the long run, something which has made life worth living; for instance,
|
| virtue, art, music, dancing, reason, spirituality--anything whatever
|
| that is transfiguring, refined, foolish, or divine. The long bondage of
|
| the spirit, the distrustful constraint in the communicability of
|
| ideas, the discipline which the thinker imposed on himself to think
|
| in accordance with the rules of a church or a court, or conformable
|
| to Aristotelian premises, the persistent spiritual will to interpret
|
| everything that happened according to a Christian scheme, and in every
|
| occurrence to rediscover and justify the Christian God:--all this
|
| violence, arbitrariness, severity, dreadfulness, and unreasonableness,
|
| has proved itself the disciplinary means whereby the European spirit has
|
| attained its strength, its remorseless curiosity and subtle mobility;
|
| granted also that much irrecoverable strength and spirit had to be
|
| stifled, suffocated, and spoilt in the process (for here, as everywhere,
|
| "nature" shows herself as she is, in all her extravagant and INDIFFERENT
|
| magnificence, which is shocking, but nevertheless noble). That
|
| for centuries European thinkers only thought in order to prove
|
| something--nowadays, on the contrary, we are suspicious of every thinker
|
| who "wishes to prove something"--that it was always settled beforehand
|
| what WAS TO BE the result of their strictest thinking, as it was perhaps
|
| in the Asiatic astrology of former times, or as it is still at the
|
| present day in the innocent, Christian-moral explanation of immediate
|
| personal events "for the glory of God," or "for the good of the
|
| soul":--this tyranny, this arbitrariness, this severe and magnificent
|
| stupidity, has EDUCATED the spirit; slavery, both in the coarser and
|
| the finer sense, is apparently an indispensable means even of spiritual
|
| education and discipline. One may look at every system of morals in this
|
| light: it is "nature" therein which teaches to hate the laisser-aller,
|
| the too great freedom, and implants the need for limited horizons, for
|
| immediate duties--it teaches the NARROWING OF PERSPECTIVES, and thus, in
|
| a certain sense, that stupidity is a condition of life and development.
|
| "Thou must obey some one, and for a long time; OTHERWISE thou wilt come
|
| to grief, and lose all respect for thyself"--this seems to me to be the
|
| moral imperative of nature, which is certainly neither "categorical,"
|
| as old Kant wished (consequently the "otherwise"), nor does it address
|
| itself to the individual (what does nature care for the individual!),
|
| but to nations, races, ages, and ranks; above all, however, to the
|
| animal "man" generally, to MANKIND.
|
|
|
| 189. Industrious races find it a great hardship to be idle: it was a
|
| master stroke of ENGLISH instinct to hallow and begloom Sunday to such
|
| an extent that the Englishman unconsciously hankers for his week--and
|
| work-day again:--as a kind of cleverly devised, cleverly intercalated
|
| FAST, such as is also frequently found in the ancient world (although,
|
| as is appropriate in southern nations, not precisely with respect
|
| to work). Many kinds of fasts are necessary; and wherever powerful
|
| influences and habits prevail, legislators have to see that intercalary
|
| days are appointed, on which such impulses are fettered, and learn to
|
| hunger anew. Viewed from a higher standpoint, whole generations and
|
| epochs, when they show themselves infected with any moral fanaticism,
|
| seem like those intercalated periods of restraint and fasting, during
|
| which an impulse learns to humble and submit itself--at the same time
|
| also to PURIFY and SHARPEN itself; certain philosophical sects likewise
|
| admit of a similar interpretation (for instance, the Stoa, in the midst
|
| of Hellenic culture, with the atmosphere rank and overcharged with
|
| Aphrodisiacal odours).--Here also is a hint for the explanation of the
|
| paradox, why it was precisely in the most Christian period of European
|
| history, and in general only under the pressure of Christian sentiments,
|
| that the sexual impulse sublimated into love (amour-passion).
|
|
|
| 190. There is something in the morality of Plato which does not really
|
| belong to Plato, but which only appears in his philosophy, one might
|
| say, in spite of him: namely, Socratism, for which he himself was
|
| too noble. "No one desires to injure himself, hence all evil is done
|
| unwittingly. The evil man inflicts injury on himself; he would not do
|
| so, however, if he knew that evil is evil. The evil man, therefore, is
|
| only evil through error; if one free him from error one will necessarily
|
| make him--good."--This mode of reasoning savours of the POPULACE, who
|
| perceive only the unpleasant consequences of evil-doing, and practically
|
| judge that "it is STUPID to do wrong"; while they accept "good" as
|
| identical with "useful and pleasant," without further thought. As
|
| regards every system of utilitarianism, one may at once assume that it
|
| has the same origin, and follow the scent: one will seldom err.--Plato
|
| did all he could to interpret something refined and noble into the
|
| tenets of his teacher, and above all to interpret himself into them--he,
|
| the most daring of all interpreters, who lifted the entire Socrates out
|
| of the street, as a popular theme and song, to exhibit him in endless
|
| and impossible modifications--namely, in all his own disguises and
|
| multiplicities. In jest, and in Homeric language as well, what is the
|
| Platonic Socrates, if not--[Greek words inserted here.]
|
|
|
| 191. The old theological problem of "Faith" and "Knowledge," or more
|
| plainly, of instinct and reason--the question whether, in respect to the
|
| valuation of things, instinct deserves more authority than rationality,
|
| which wants to appreciate and act according to motives, according to
|
| a "Why," that is to say, in conformity to purpose and utility--it
|
| is always the old moral problem that first appeared in the person of
|
| Socrates, and had divided men's minds long before Christianity. Socrates
|
| himself, following, of course, the taste of his talent--that of a
|
| surpassing dialectician--took first the side of reason; and, in fact,
|
| what did he do all his life but laugh at the awkward incapacity of the
|
| noble Athenians, who were men of instinct, like all noble men, and could
|
| never give satisfactory answers concerning the motives of their actions?
|
| In the end, however, though silently and secretly, he laughed also
|
| at himself: with his finer conscience and introspection, he found
|
| in himself the same difficulty and incapacity. "But why"--he said
|
| to himself--"should one on that account separate oneself from the
|
| instincts! One must set them right, and the reason ALSO--one must follow
|
| the instincts, but at the same time persuade the reason to support them
|
| with good arguments." This was the real FALSENESS of that great and
|
| mysterious ironist; he brought his conscience up to the point that he
|
| was satisfied with a kind of self-outwitting: in fact, he perceived
|
| the irrationality in the moral judgment.--Plato, more innocent in such
|
| matters, and without the craftiness of the plebeian, wished to prove to
|
| himself, at the expenditure of all his strength--the greatest strength
|
| a philosopher had ever expended--that reason and instinct lead
|
| spontaneously to one goal, to the good, to "God"; and since Plato, all
|
| theologians and philosophers have followed the same path--which means
|
| that in matters of morality, instinct (or as Christians call it,
|
| "Faith," or as I call it, "the herd") has hitherto triumphed. Unless
|
| one should make an exception in the case of Descartes, the father of
|
| rationalism (and consequently the grandfather of the Revolution), who
|
| recognized only the authority of reason: but reason is only a tool, and
|
| Descartes was superficial.
|
|
|
| 192. Whoever has followed the history of a single science, finds in
|
| its development a clue to the understanding of the oldest and commonest
|
| processes of all "knowledge and cognizance": there, as here, the
|
| premature hypotheses, the fictions, the good stupid will to "belief,"
|
| and the lack of distrust and patience are first developed--our senses
|
| learn late, and never learn completely, to be subtle, reliable, and
|
| cautious organs of knowledge. Our eyes find it easier on a given
|
| occasion to produce a picture already often produced, than to seize upon
|
| the divergence and novelty of an impression: the latter requires more
|
| force, more "morality." It is difficult and painful for the ear to
|
| listen to anything new; we hear strange music badly. When we hear
|
| another language spoken, we involuntarily attempt to form the sounds
|
| into words with which we are more familiar and conversant--it was thus,
|
| for example, that the Germans modified the spoken word ARCUBALISTA into
|
| ARMBRUST (cross-bow). Our senses are also hostile and averse to the
|
| new; and generally, even in the "simplest" processes of sensation, the
|
| emotions DOMINATE--such as fear, love, hatred, and the passive emotion
|
| of indolence.--As little as a reader nowadays reads all the single words
|
| (not to speak of syllables) of a page--he rather takes about five out
|
| of every twenty words at random, and "guesses" the probably appropriate
|
| sense to them--just as little do we see a tree correctly and completely
|
| in respect to its leaves, branches, colour, and shape; we find it so
|
| much easier to fancy the chance of a tree. Even in the midst of the
|
| most remarkable experiences, we still do just the same; we fabricate the
|
| greater part of the experience, and can hardly be made to contemplate
|
| any event, EXCEPT as "inventors" thereof. All this goes to prove
|
| that from our fundamental nature and from remote ages we have
|
| been--ACCUSTOMED TO LYING. Or, to express it more politely and
|
| hypocritically, in short, more pleasantly--one is much more of an artist
|
| than one is aware of.--In an animated conversation, I often see the face
|
| of the person with whom I am speaking so clearly and sharply defined
|
| before me, according to the thought he expresses, or which I believe to
|
| be evoked in his mind, that the degree of distinctness far exceeds the
|
| STRENGTH of my visual faculty--the delicacy of the play of the muscles
|
| and of the expression of the eyes MUST therefore be imagined by me.
|
| Probably the person put on quite a different expression, or none at all.
|
|
|
| 193. Quidquid luce fuit, tenebris agit: but also contrariwise. What we
|
| experience in dreams, provided we experience it often, pertains at
|
| last just as much to the general belongings of our soul as anything
|
| "actually" experienced; by virtue thereof we are richer or poorer, we
|
| have a requirement more or less, and finally, in broad daylight, and
|
| even in the brightest moments of our waking life, we are ruled to some
|
| extent by the nature of our dreams. Supposing that someone has often
|
| flown in his dreams, and that at last, as soon as he dreams, he is
|
| conscious of the power and art of flying as his privilege and his
|
| peculiarly enviable happiness; such a person, who believes that on the
|
| slightest impulse, he can actualize all sorts of curves and angles, who
|
| knows the sensation of a certain divine levity, an "upwards"
|
| without effort or constraint, a "downwards" without descending
|
| or lowering--without TROUBLE!--how could the man with such
|
| dream-experiences and dream-habits fail to find "happiness" differently
|
| coloured and defined, even in his waking hours! How could he fail--to
|
| long DIFFERENTLY for happiness? "Flight," such as is described by poets,
|
| must, when compared with his own "flying," be far too earthly, muscular,
|
| violent, far too "troublesome" for him.
|
|
|
| 194. The difference among men does not manifest itself only in the
|
| difference of their lists of desirable things--in their regarding
|
| different good things as worth striving for, and being disagreed as to
|
| the greater or less value, the order of rank, of the commonly recognized
|
| desirable things:--it manifests itself much more in what they regard as
|
| actually HAVING and POSSESSING a desirable thing. As regards a woman,
|
| for instance, the control over her body and her sexual gratification
|
| serves as an amply sufficient sign of ownership and possession to the
|
| more modest man; another with a more suspicious and ambitious thirst for
|
| possession, sees the "questionableness," the mere apparentness of such
|
| ownership, and wishes to have finer tests in order to know especially
|
| whether the woman not only gives herself to him, but also gives up for
|
| his sake what she has or would like to have--only THEN does he look upon
|
| her as "possessed." A third, however, has not even here got to the limit
|
| of his distrust and his desire for possession: he asks himself whether
|
| the woman, when she gives up everything for him, does not perhaps do
|
| so for a phantom of him; he wishes first to be thoroughly, indeed,
|
| profoundly well known; in order to be loved at all he ventures to let
|
| himself be found out. Only then does he feel the beloved one fully in
|
| his possession, when she no longer deceives herself about him, when
|
| she loves him just as much for the sake of his devilry and concealed
|
| insatiability, as for his goodness, patience, and spirituality. One
|
| man would like to possess a nation, and he finds all the higher arts of
|
| Cagliostro and Catalina suitable for his purpose. Another, with a more
|
| refined thirst for possession, says to himself: "One may not deceive
|
| where one desires to possess"--he is irritated and impatient at the idea
|
| that a mask of him should rule in the hearts of the people: "I must,
|
| therefore, MAKE myself known, and first of all learn to know myself!"
|
| Among helpful and charitable people, one almost always finds the awkward
|
| craftiness which first gets up suitably him who has to be helped, as
|
| though, for instance, he should "merit" help, seek just THEIR help, and
|
| would show himself deeply grateful, attached, and subservient to them
|
| for all help. With these conceits, they take control of the needy as a
|
| property, just as in general they are charitable and helpful out of a
|
| desire for property. One finds them jealous when they are crossed or
|
| forestalled in their charity. Parents involuntarily make something like
|
| themselves out of their children--they call that "education"; no mother
|
| doubts at the bottom of her heart that the child she has borne is
|
| thereby her property, no father hesitates about his right to HIS OWN
|
| ideas and notions of worth. Indeed, in former times fathers deemed it
|
| right to use their discretion concerning the life or death of the newly
|
| born (as among the ancient Germans). And like the father, so also do the
|
| teacher, the class, the priest, and the prince still see in every new
|
| individual an unobjectionable opportunity for a new possession. The
|
| consequence is...
|
|
|
| 195. The Jews--a people "born for slavery," as Tacitus and the whole
|
| ancient world say of them; "the chosen people among the nations," as
|
| they themselves say and believe--the Jews performed the miracle of the
|
| inversion of valuations, by means of which life on earth obtained a new
|
| and dangerous charm for a couple of millenniums. Their prophets fused
|
| into one the expressions "rich," "godless," "wicked," "violent,"
|
| "sensual," and for the first time coined the word "world" as a term of
|
| reproach. In this inversion of valuations (in which is also included
|
| the use of the word "poor" as synonymous with "saint" and "friend") the
|
| significance of the Jewish people is to be found; it is with THEM that
|
| the SLAVE-INSURRECTION IN MORALS commences.
|
|
|
| 196. It is to be INFERRED that there are countless dark bodies near the
|
| sun--such as we shall never see. Among ourselves, this is an allegory;
|
| and the psychologist of morals reads the whole star-writing merely as an
|
| allegorical and symbolic language in which much may be unexpressed.
|
|
|
| 197. The beast of prey and the man of prey (for instance, Caesar Borgia)
|
| are fundamentally misunderstood, "nature" is misunderstood, so long as
|
| one seeks a "morbidness" in the constitution of these healthiest of
|
| all tropical monsters and growths, or even an innate "hell" in them--as
|
| almost all moralists have done hitherto. Does it not seem that there is
|
| a hatred of the virgin forest and of the tropics among moralists? And
|
| that the "tropical man" must be discredited at all costs, whether
|
| as disease and deterioration of mankind, or as his own hell and
|
| self-torture? And why? In favour of the "temperate zones"? In favour
|
| of the temperate men? The "moral"? The mediocre?--This for the chapter:
|
| "Morals as Timidity."
|
|
|
| 198. All the systems of morals which address themselves with a view to
|
| their "happiness," as it is called--what else are they but suggestions
|
| for behaviour adapted to the degree of DANGER from themselves in which
|
| the individuals live; recipes for their passions, their good and bad
|
| propensities, insofar as such have the Will to Power and would like
|
| to play the master; small and great expediencies and elaborations,
|
| permeated with the musty odour of old family medicines and old-wife
|
| wisdom; all of them grotesque and absurd in their form--because
|
| they address themselves to "all," because they generalize where
|
| generalization is not authorized; all of them speaking unconditionally,
|
| and taking themselves unconditionally; all of them flavoured not merely
|
| with one grain of salt, but rather endurable only, and sometimes even
|
| seductive, when they are over-spiced and begin to smell dangerously,
|
| especially of "the other world." That is all of little value when
|
| estimated intellectually, and is far from being "science," much less
|
| "wisdom"; but, repeated once more, and three times repeated, it is
|
| expediency, expediency, expediency, mixed with stupidity, stupidity,
|
| stupidity--whether it be the indifference and statuesque coldness
|
| towards the heated folly of the emotions, which the Stoics advised and
|
| fostered; or the no-more-laughing and no-more-weeping of Spinoza, the
|
| destruction of the emotions by their analysis and vivisection, which he
|
| recommended so naively; or the lowering of the emotions to an innocent
|
| mean at which they may be satisfied, the Aristotelianism of morals;
|
| or even morality as the enjoyment of the emotions in a voluntary
|
| attenuation and spiritualization by the symbolism of art, perhaps as
|
| music, or as love of God, and of mankind for God's sake--for in religion
|
| the passions are once more enfranchised, provided that...; or, finally,
|
| even the complaisant and wanton surrender to the emotions, as has
|
| been taught by Hafis and Goethe, the bold letting-go of the reins, the
|
| spiritual and corporeal licentia morum in the exceptional cases of
|
| wise old codgers and drunkards, with whom it "no longer has much
|
| danger."--This also for the chapter: "Morals as Timidity."
|
|
|
| 199. Inasmuch as in all ages, as long as mankind has existed, there have
|
| also been human herds (family alliances, communities, tribes, peoples,
|
| states, churches), and always a great number who obey in proportion
|
| to the small number who command--in view, therefore, of the fact that
|
| obedience has been most practiced and fostered among mankind hitherto,
|
| one may reasonably suppose that, generally speaking, the need thereof is
|
| now innate in every one, as a kind of FORMAL CONSCIENCE which gives
|
| the command "Thou shalt unconditionally do something, unconditionally
|
| refrain from something", in short, "Thou shalt". This need tries to
|
| satisfy itself and to fill its form with a content, according to its
|
| strength, impatience, and eagerness, it at once seizes as an omnivorous
|
| appetite with little selection, and accepts whatever is shouted into
|
| its ear by all sorts of commanders--parents, teachers, laws, class
|
| prejudices, or public opinion. The extraordinary limitation of human
|
| development, the hesitation, protractedness, frequent retrogression, and
|
| turning thereof, is attributable to the fact that the herd-instinct of
|
| obedience is transmitted best, and at the cost of the art of command. If
|
| one imagine this instinct increasing to its greatest extent, commanders
|
| and independent individuals will finally be lacking altogether, or they
|
| will suffer inwardly from a bad conscience, and will have to impose
|
| a deception on themselves in the first place in order to be able to
|
| command just as if they also were only obeying. This condition of things
|
| actually exists in Europe at present--I call it the moral hypocrisy of
|
| the commanding class. They know no other way of protecting themselves
|
| from their bad conscience than by playing the role of executors of older
|
| and higher orders (of predecessors, of the constitution, of justice, of
|
| the law, or of God himself), or they even justify themselves by maxims
|
| from the current opinions of the herd, as "first servants of their
|
| people," or "instruments of the public weal". On the other hand, the
|
| gregarious European man nowadays assumes an air as if he were the only
|
| kind of man that is allowable, he glorifies his qualities, such as
|
| public spirit, kindness, deference, industry, temperance, modesty,
|
| indulgence, sympathy, by virtue of which he is gentle, endurable, and
|
| useful to the herd, as the peculiarly human virtues. In cases, however,
|
| where it is believed that the leader and bell-wether cannot be dispensed
|
| with, attempt after attempt is made nowadays to replace commanders
|
| by the summing together of clever gregarious men all representative
|
| constitutions, for example, are of this origin. In spite of all, what a
|
| blessing, what a deliverance from a weight becoming unendurable, is the
|
| appearance of an absolute ruler for these gregarious Europeans--of this
|
| fact the effect of the appearance of Napoleon was the last great proof
|
| the history of the influence of Napoleon is almost the history of
|
| the higher happiness to which the entire century has attained in its
|
| worthiest individuals and periods.
|
|
|
| 200. The man of an age of dissolution which mixes the races with
|
| one another, who has the inheritance of a diversified descent in his
|
| body--that is to say, contrary, and often not only contrary, instincts
|
| and standards of value, which struggle with one another and are seldom
|
| at peace--such a man of late culture and broken lights, will, on an
|
| average, be a weak man. His fundamental desire is that the war which is
|
| IN HIM should come to an end; happiness appears to him in the character
|
| of a soothing medicine and mode of thought (for instance, Epicurean
|
| or Christian); it is above all things the happiness of repose, of
|
| undisturbedness, of repletion, of final unity--it is the "Sabbath of
|
| Sabbaths," to use the expression of the holy rhetorician, St. Augustine,
|
| who was himself such a man.--Should, however, the contrariety and
|
| conflict in such natures operate as an ADDITIONAL incentive and stimulus
|
| to life--and if, on the other hand, in addition to their powerful and
|
| irreconcilable instincts, they have also inherited and indoctrinated
|
| into them a proper mastery and subtlety for carrying on the conflict
|
| with themselves (that is to say, the faculty of self-control and
|
| self-deception), there then arise those marvelously incomprehensible and
|
| inexplicable beings, those enigmatical men, predestined for conquering
|
| and circumventing others, the finest examples of which are Alcibiades
|
| and Caesar (with whom I should like to associate the FIRST of Europeans
|
| according to my taste, the Hohenstaufen, Frederick the Second), and
|
| among artists, perhaps Leonardo da Vinci. They appear precisely in the
|
| same periods when that weaker type, with its longing for repose, comes
|
| to the front; the two types are complementary to each other, and spring
|
| from the same causes.
|
|
|
| 201. As long as the utility which determines moral estimates is only
|
| gregarious utility, as long as the preservation of the community is only
|
| kept in view, and the immoral is sought precisely and exclusively in
|
| what seems dangerous to the maintenance of the community, there can be
|
| no "morality of love to one's neighbour." Granted even that there is
|
| already a little constant exercise of consideration, sympathy, fairness,
|
| gentleness, and mutual assistance, granted that even in this condition
|
| of society all those instincts are already active which are latterly
|
| distinguished by honourable names as "virtues," and eventually almost
|
| coincide with the conception "morality": in that period they do not
|
| as yet belong to the domain of moral valuations--they are still
|
| ULTRA-MORAL. A sympathetic action, for instance, is neither called good
|
| nor bad, moral nor immoral, in the best period of the Romans; and should
|
| it be praised, a sort of resentful disdain is compatible with this
|
| praise, even at the best, directly the sympathetic action is compared
|
| with one which contributes to the welfare of the whole, to the RES
|
| PUBLICA. After all, "love to our neighbour" is always a secondary
|
| matter, partly conventional and arbitrarily manifested in relation to
|
| our FEAR OF OUR NEIGHBOUR. After the fabric of society seems on the
|
| whole established and secured against external dangers, it is this
|
| fear of our neighbour which again creates new perspectives of moral
|
| valuation. Certain strong and dangerous instincts, such as the love of
|
| enterprise, foolhardiness, revengefulness, astuteness, rapacity, and
|
| love of power, which up till then had not only to be honoured from the
|
| point of view of general utility--under other names, of course, than
|
| those here given--but had to be fostered and cultivated (because they
|
| were perpetually required in the common danger against the common
|
| enemies), are now felt in their dangerousness to be doubly strong--when
|
| the outlets for them are lacking--and are gradually branded as immoral
|
| and given over to calumny. The contrary instincts and inclinations now
|
| attain to moral honour, the gregarious instinct gradually draws its
|
| conclusions. How much or how little dangerousness to the community or
|
| to equality is contained in an opinion, a condition, an emotion, a
|
| disposition, or an endowment--that is now the moral perspective, here
|
| again fear is the mother of morals. It is by the loftiest and strongest
|
| instincts, when they break out passionately and carry the individual
|
| far above and beyond the average, and the low level of the gregarious
|
| conscience, that the self-reliance of the community is destroyed, its
|
| belief in itself, its backbone, as it were, breaks, consequently these
|
| very instincts will be most branded and defamed. The lofty independent
|
| spirituality, the will to stand alone, and even the cogent reason, are
|
| felt to be dangers, everything that elevates the individual above the
|
| herd, and is a source of fear to the neighbour, is henceforth called
|
| EVIL, the tolerant, unassuming, self-adapting, self-equalizing
|
| disposition, the MEDIOCRITY of desires, attains to moral distinction and
|
| honour. Finally, under very peaceful circumstances, there is always
|
| less opportunity and necessity for training the feelings to severity
|
| and rigour, and now every form of severity, even in justice, begins
|
| to disturb the conscience, a lofty and rigorous nobleness and
|
| self-responsibility almost offends, and awakens distrust, "the lamb,"
|
| and still more "the sheep," wins respect. There is a point of diseased
|
| mellowness and effeminacy in the history of society, at which society
|
| itself takes the part of him who injures it, the part of the CRIMINAL,
|
| and does so, in fact, seriously and honestly. To punish, appears to it
|
| to be somehow unfair--it is certain that the idea of "punishment" and
|
| "the obligation to punish" are then painful and alarming to people. "Is
|
| it not sufficient if the criminal be rendered HARMLESS? Why should we
|
| still punish? Punishment itself is terrible!"--with these questions
|
| gregarious morality, the morality of fear, draws its ultimate
|
| conclusion. If one could at all do away with danger, the cause of fear,
|
| one would have done away with this morality at the same time, it
|
| would no longer be necessary, it WOULD NOT CONSIDER ITSELF any longer
|
| necessary!--Whoever examines the conscience of the present-day European,
|
| will always elicit the same imperative from its thousand moral folds
|
| and hidden recesses, the imperative of the timidity of the herd "we wish
|
| that some time or other there may be NOTHING MORE TO FEAR!" Some time
|
| or other--the will and the way THERETO is nowadays called "progress" all
|
| over Europe.
|
|
|
| 202. Let us at once say again what we have already said a hundred
|
| times, for people's ears nowadays are unwilling to hear such truths--OUR
|
| truths. We know well enough how offensive it sounds when any one
|
| plainly, and without metaphor, counts man among the animals, but it will
|
| be accounted to us almost a CRIME, that it is precisely in respect to
|
| men of "modern ideas" that we have constantly applied the terms "herd,"
|
| "herd-instincts," and such like expressions. What avail is it? We cannot
|
| do otherwise, for it is precisely here that our new insight is. We
|
| have found that in all the principal moral judgments, Europe has become
|
| unanimous, including likewise the countries where European influence
|
| prevails in Europe people evidently KNOW what Socrates thought he
|
| did not know, and what the famous serpent of old once promised to
|
| teach--they "know" today what is good and evil. It must then sound hard
|
| and be distasteful to the ear, when we always insist that that which
|
| here thinks it knows, that which here glorifies itself with praise
|
| and blame, and calls itself good, is the instinct of the herding human
|
| animal, the instinct which has come and is ever coming more and more
|
| to the front, to preponderance and supremacy over other instincts,
|
| according to the increasing physiological approximation and resemblance
|
| of which it is the symptom. MORALITY IN EUROPE AT PRESENT IS
|
| HERDING-ANIMAL MORALITY, and therefore, as we understand the matter,
|
| only one kind of human morality, beside which, before which, and after
|
| which many other moralities, and above all HIGHER moralities, are or
|
| should be possible. Against such a "possibility," against such a "should
|
| be," however, this morality defends itself with all its strength, it
|
| says obstinately and inexorably "I am morality itself and nothing else
|
| is morality!" Indeed, with the help of a religion which has humoured
|
| and flattered the sublimest desires of the herding-animal, things have
|
| reached such a point that we always find a more visible expression of
|
| this morality even in political and social arrangements: the DEMOCRATIC
|
| movement is the inheritance of the Christian movement. That its TEMPO,
|
| however, is much too slow and sleepy for the more impatient ones, for
|
| those who are sick and distracted by the herding-instinct, is indicated
|
| by the increasingly furious howling, and always less disguised
|
| teeth-gnashing of the anarchist dogs, who are now roving through the
|
| highways of European culture. Apparently in opposition to the peacefully
|
| industrious democrats and Revolution-ideologues, and still more so
|
| to the awkward philosophasters and fraternity-visionaries who call
|
| themselves Socialists and want a "free society," those are really at one
|
| with them all in their thorough and instinctive hostility to every form
|
| of society other than that of the AUTONOMOUS herd (to the extent even of
|
| repudiating the notions "master" and "servant"--ni dieu ni maitre, says
|
| a socialist formula); at one in their tenacious opposition to every
|
| special claim, every special right and privilege (this means ultimately
|
| opposition to EVERY right, for when all are equal, no one needs "rights"
|
| any longer); at one in their distrust of punitive justice (as though it
|
| were a violation of the weak, unfair to the NECESSARY consequences of
|
| all former society); but equally at one in their religion of sympathy,
|
| in their compassion for all that feels, lives, and suffers (down to the
|
| very animals, up even to "God"--the extravagance of "sympathy for
|
| God" belongs to a democratic age); altogether at one in the cry and
|
| impatience of their sympathy, in their deadly hatred of suffering
|
| generally, in their almost feminine incapacity for witnessing it or
|
| ALLOWING it; at one in their involuntary beglooming and heart-softening,
|
| under the spell of which Europe seems to be threatened with a new
|
| Buddhism; at one in their belief in the morality of MUTUAL sympathy, as
|
| though it were morality in itself, the climax, the ATTAINED climax of
|
| mankind, the sole hope of the future, the consolation of the present,
|
| the great discharge from all the obligations of the past; altogether at
|
| one in their belief in the community as the DELIVERER, in the herd, and
|
| therefore in "themselves."
|
|
|
| 203. We, who hold a different belief--we, who regard the democratic
|
| movement, not only as a degenerating form of political organization, but
|
| as equivalent to a degenerating, a waning type of man, as involving his
|
| mediocrising and depreciation: where have WE to fix our hopes? In
|
| NEW PHILOSOPHERS--there is no other alternative: in minds strong and
|
| original enough to initiate opposite estimates of value, to transvalue
|
| and invert "eternal valuations"; in forerunners, in men of the future,
|
| who in the present shall fix the constraints and fasten the knots which
|
| will compel millenniums to take NEW paths. To teach man the future
|
| of humanity as his WILL, as depending on human will, and to make
|
| preparation for vast hazardous enterprises and collective attempts in
|
| rearing and educating, in order thereby to put an end to the frightful
|
| rule of folly and chance which has hitherto gone by the name of
|
| "history" (the folly of the "greatest number" is only its last
|
| form)--for that purpose a new type of philosopher and commander will
|
| some time or other be needed, at the very idea of which everything that
|
| has existed in the way of occult, terrible, and benevolent beings might
|
| look pale and dwarfed. The image of such leaders hovers before OUR
|
| eyes:--is it lawful for me to say it aloud, ye free spirits? The
|
| conditions which one would partly have to create and partly utilize for
|
| their genesis; the presumptive methods and tests by virtue of which
|
| a soul should grow up to such an elevation and power as to feel a
|
| CONSTRAINT to these tasks; a transvaluation of values, under the new
|
| pressure and hammer of which a conscience should be steeled and a heart
|
| transformed into brass, so as to bear the weight of such responsibility;
|
| and on the other hand the necessity for such leaders, the dreadful
|
| danger that they might be lacking, or miscarry and degenerate:--these
|
| are OUR real anxieties and glooms, ye know it well, ye free spirits!
|
| these are the heavy distant thoughts and storms which sweep across the
|
| heaven of OUR life. There are few pains so grievous as to have seen,
|
| divined, or experienced how an exceptional man has missed his way and
|
| deteriorated; but he who has the rare eye for the universal danger
|
| of "man" himself DETERIORATING, he who like us has recognized the
|
| extraordinary fortuitousness which has hitherto played its game in
|
| respect to the future of mankind--a game in which neither the hand, nor
|
| even a "finger of God" has participated!--he who divines the fate that
|
| is hidden under the idiotic unwariness and blind confidence of
|
| "modern ideas," and still more under the whole of Christo-European
|
| morality--suffers from an anguish with which no other is to be compared.
|
| He sees at a glance all that could still BE MADE OUT OF MAN through
|
| a favourable accumulation and augmentation of human powers and
|
| arrangements; he knows with all the knowledge of his conviction how
|
| unexhausted man still is for the greatest possibilities, and how often
|
| in the past the type man has stood in presence of mysterious decisions
|
| and new paths:--he knows still better from his painfulest recollections
|
| on what wretched obstacles promising developments of the highest rank
|
| have hitherto usually gone to pieces, broken down, sunk, and become
|
| contemptible. The UNIVERSAL DEGENERACY OF MANKIND to the level of
|
| the "man of the future"--as idealized by the socialistic fools and
|
| shallow-pates--this degeneracy and dwarfing of man to an absolutely
|
| gregarious animal (or as they call it, to a man of "free society"),
|
| this brutalizing of man into a pigmy with equal rights and claims, is
|
| undoubtedly POSSIBLE! He who has thought out this possibility to its
|
| ultimate conclusion knows ANOTHER loathing unknown to the rest of
|
| mankind--and perhaps also a new MISSION!
|
|
|
| CHAPTER VI. WE SCHOLARS
|
|
|
| 204. At the risk that moralizing may also reveal itself here as that
|
| which it has always been--namely, resolutely MONTRER SES PLAIES,
|
| according to Balzac--I would venture to protest against an improper and
|
| injurious alteration of rank, which quite unnoticed, and as if with the
|
| best conscience, threatens nowadays to establish itself in the relations
|
| of science and philosophy. I mean to say that one must have the right
|
| out of one's own EXPERIENCE--experience, as it seems to me, always
|
| implies unfortunate experience?--to treat of such an important question
|
| of rank, so as not to speak of colour like the blind, or AGAINST science
|
| like women and artists ("Ah! this dreadful science!" sigh their instinct
|
| and their shame, "it always FINDS THINGS OUT!"). The declaration of
|
| independence of the scientific man, his emancipation from philosophy,
|
| is one of the subtler after-effects of democratic organization and
|
| disorganization: the self-glorification and self-conceitedness of
|
| the learned man is now everywhere in full bloom, and in its best
|
| springtime--which does not mean to imply that in this case self-praise
|
| smells sweet. Here also the instinct of the populace cries, "Freedom
|
| from all masters!" and after science has, with the happiest results,
|
| resisted theology, whose "hand-maid" it had been too long, it now
|
| proposes in its wantonness and indiscretion to lay down laws for
|
| philosophy, and in its turn to play the "master"--what am I saying!
|
| to play the PHILOSOPHER on its own account. My memory--the memory of
|
| a scientific man, if you please!--teems with the naivetes of insolence
|
| which I have heard about philosophy and philosophers from young
|
| naturalists and old physicians (not to mention the most cultured and
|
| most conceited of all learned men, the philologists and schoolmasters,
|
| who are both the one and the other by profession). On one occasion it
|
| was the specialist and the Jack Horner who instinctively stood on the
|
| defensive against all synthetic tasks and capabilities; at another time
|
| it was the industrious worker who had got a scent of OTIUM and refined
|
| luxuriousness in the internal economy of the philosopher, and felt
|
| himself aggrieved and belittled thereby. On another occasion it was the
|
| colour-blindness of the utilitarian, who sees nothing in philosophy but
|
| a series of REFUTED systems, and an extravagant expenditure which "does
|
| nobody any good". At another time the fear of disguised mysticism and of
|
| the boundary-adjustment of knowledge became conspicuous, at another
|
| time the disregard of individual philosophers, which had involuntarily
|
| extended to disregard of philosophy generally. In fine, I found most
|
| frequently, behind the proud disdain of philosophy in young scholars,
|
| the evil after-effect of some particular philosopher, to whom on the
|
| whole obedience had been foresworn, without, however, the spell of his
|
| scornful estimates of other philosophers having been got rid of--the
|
| result being a general ill-will to all philosophy. (Such seems to
|
| me, for instance, the after-effect of Schopenhauer on the most modern
|
| Germany: by his unintelligent rage against Hegel, he has succeeded in
|
| severing the whole of the last generation of Germans from its connection
|
| with German culture, which culture, all things considered, has been
|
| an elevation and a divining refinement of the HISTORICAL SENSE, but
|
| precisely at this point Schopenhauer himself was poor, irreceptive,
|
| and un-German to the extent of ingeniousness.) On the whole, speaking
|
| generally, it may just have been the humanness, all-too-humanness of the
|
| modern philosophers themselves, in short, their contemptibleness, which
|
| has injured most radically the reverence for philosophy and opened the
|
| doors to the instinct of the populace. Let it but be acknowledged to
|
| what an extent our modern world diverges from the whole style of the
|
| world of Heraclitus, Plato, Empedocles, and whatever else all the royal
|
| and magnificent anchorites of the spirit were called, and with what
|
| justice an honest man of science MAY feel himself of a better family and
|
| origin, in view of such representatives of philosophy, who, owing to
|
| the fashion of the present day, are just as much aloft as they are down
|
| below--in Germany, for instance, the two lions of Berlin, the anarchist
|
| Eugen Duhring and the amalgamist Eduard von Hartmann. It is especially
|
| the sight of those hotch-potch philosophers, who call themselves
|
| "realists," or "positivists," which is calculated to implant a
|
| dangerous distrust in the soul of a young and ambitious scholar those
|
| philosophers, at the best, are themselves but scholars and specialists,
|
| that is very evident! All of them are persons who have been vanquished
|
| and BROUGHT BACK AGAIN under the dominion of science, who at one time
|
| or another claimed more from themselves, without having a right to the
|
| "more" and its responsibility--and who now, creditably, rancorously, and
|
| vindictively, represent in word and deed, DISBELIEF in the master-task
|
| and supremacy of philosophy After all, how could it be otherwise?
|
| Science flourishes nowadays and has the good conscience clearly visible
|
| on its countenance, while that to which the entire modern philosophy has
|
| gradually sunk, the remnant of philosophy of the present day, excites
|
| distrust and displeasure, if not scorn and pity Philosophy reduced to
|
| a "theory of knowledge," no more in fact than a diffident science of
|
| epochs and doctrine of forbearance a philosophy that never even
|
| gets beyond the threshold, and rigorously DENIES itself the right
|
| to enter--that is philosophy in its last throes, an end, an agony,
|
| something that awakens pity. How could such a philosophy--RULE!
|
|
|
| 205. The dangers that beset the evolution of the philosopher are, in
|
| fact, so manifold nowadays, that one might doubt whether this fruit
|
| could still come to maturity. The extent and towering structure of the
|
| sciences have increased enormously, and therewith also the probability
|
| that the philosopher will grow tired even as a learner, or will attach
|
| himself somewhere and "specialize" so that he will no longer attain to
|
| his elevation, that is to say, to his superspection, his circumspection,
|
| and his DESPECTION. Or he gets aloft too late, when the best of his
|
| maturity and strength is past, or when he is impaired, coarsened, and
|
| deteriorated, so that his view, his general estimate of things, is no
|
| longer of much importance. It is perhaps just the refinement of his
|
| intellectual conscience that makes him hesitate and linger on the
|
| way, he dreads the temptation to become a dilettante, a millepede, a
|
| milleantenna, he knows too well that as a discerner, one who has lost
|
| his self-respect no longer commands, no longer LEADS, unless he should
|
| aspire to become a great play-actor, a philosophical Cagliostro and
|
| spiritual rat-catcher--in short, a misleader. This is in the last
|
| instance a question of taste, if it has not really been a question of
|
| conscience. To double once more the philosopher's difficulties, there is
|
| also the fact that he demands from himself a verdict, a Yea or Nay, not
|
| concerning science, but concerning life and the worth of life--he learns
|
| unwillingly to believe that it is his right and even his duty to obtain
|
| this verdict, and he has to seek his way to the right and the belief
|
| only through the most extensive (perhaps disturbing and destroying)
|
| experiences, often hesitating, doubting, and dumbfounded. In fact, the
|
| philosopher has long been mistaken and confused by the multitude, either
|
| with the scientific man and ideal scholar, or with the religiously
|
| elevated, desensualized, desecularized visionary and God-intoxicated
|
| man; and even yet when one hears anybody praised, because he lives
|
| "wisely," or "as a philosopher," it hardly means anything more than
|
| "prudently and apart." Wisdom: that seems to the populace to be a kind
|
| of flight, a means and artifice for withdrawing successfully from a
|
| bad game; but the GENUINE philosopher--does it not seem so to US,
|
| my friends?--lives "unphilosophically" and "unwisely," above all,
|
| IMPRUDENTLY, and feels the obligation and burden of a hundred attempts
|
| and temptations of life--he risks HIMSELF constantly, he plays THIS bad
|
| game.
|
|
|
| 206. In relation to the genius, that is to say, a being who either
|
| ENGENDERS or PRODUCES--both words understood in their fullest sense--the
|
| man of learning, the scientific average man, has always something of
|
| the old maid about him; for, like her, he is not conversant with the two
|
| principal functions of man. To both, of course, to the scholar and
|
| to the old maid, one concedes respectability, as if by way of
|
| indemnification--in these cases one emphasizes the respectability--and
|
| yet, in the compulsion of this concession, one has the same admixture
|
| of vexation. Let us examine more closely: what is the scientific man?
|
| Firstly, a commonplace type of man, with commonplace virtues: that is
|
| to say, a non-ruling, non-authoritative, and non-self-sufficient type
|
| of man; he possesses industry, patient adaptableness to rank and file,
|
| equability and moderation in capacity and requirement; he has the
|
| instinct for people like himself, and for that which they require--for
|
| instance: the portion of independence and green meadow without which
|
| there is no rest from labour, the claim to honour and consideration
|
| (which first and foremost presupposes recognition and recognisability),
|
| the sunshine of a good name, the perpetual ratification of his value and
|
| usefulness, with which the inward DISTRUST which lies at the bottom of
|
| the heart of all dependent men and gregarious animals, has again and
|
| again to be overcome. The learned man, as is appropriate, has also
|
| maladies and faults of an ignoble kind: he is full of petty envy, and
|
| has a lynx-eye for the weak points in those natures to whose elevations
|
| he cannot attain. He is confiding, yet only as one who lets himself go,
|
| but does not FLOW; and precisely before the man of the great current he
|
| stands all the colder and more reserved--his eye is then like a smooth
|
| and irresponsive lake, which is no longer moved by rapture or sympathy.
|
| The worst and most dangerous thing of which a scholar is capable results
|
| from the instinct of mediocrity of his type, from the Jesuitism of
|
| mediocrity, which labours instinctively for the destruction of
|
| the exceptional man, and endeavours to break--or still better, to
|
| relax--every bent bow To relax, of course, with consideration, and
|
| naturally with an indulgent hand--to RELAX with confiding sympathy
|
| that is the real art of Jesuitism, which has always understood how to
|
| introduce itself as the religion of sympathy.
|
|
|
| 207. However gratefully one may welcome the OBJECTIVE spirit--and
|
| who has not been sick to death of all subjectivity and its confounded
|
| IPSISIMOSITY!--in the end, however, one must learn caution even with
|
| regard to one's gratitude, and put a stop to the exaggeration with
|
| which the unselfing and depersonalizing of the spirit has recently been
|
| celebrated, as if it were the goal in itself, as if it were salvation
|
| and glorification--as is especially accustomed to happen in the
|
| pessimist school, which has also in its turn good reasons for paying the
|
| highest honours to "disinterested knowledge" The objective man, who no
|
| longer curses and scolds like the pessimist, the IDEAL man of learning
|
| in whom the scientific instinct blossoms forth fully after a thousand
|
| complete and partial failures, is assuredly one of the most costly
|
| instruments that exist, but his place is in the hand of one who is more
|
| powerful He is only an instrument, we may say, he is a MIRROR--he is no
|
| "purpose in himself" The objective man is in truth a mirror accustomed
|
| to prostration before everything that wants to be known, with such
|
| desires only as knowing or "reflecting" implies--he waits until
|
| something comes, and then expands himself sensitively, so that even the
|
| light footsteps and gliding-past of spiritual beings may not be lost on
|
| his surface and film Whatever "personality" he still possesses seems to
|
| him accidental, arbitrary, or still oftener, disturbing, so much has he
|
| come to regard himself as the passage and reflection of outside forms
|
| and events He calls up the recollection of "himself" with an effort,
|
| and not infrequently wrongly, he readily confounds himself with other
|
| persons, he makes mistakes with regard to his own needs, and here only
|
| is he unrefined and negligent Perhaps he is troubled about the health,
|
| or the pettiness and confined atmosphere of wife and friend, or the lack
|
| of companions and society--indeed, he sets himself to reflect on his
|
| suffering, but in vain! His thoughts already rove away to the MORE
|
| GENERAL case, and tomorrow he knows as little as he knew yesterday how
|
| to help himself He does not now take himself seriously and devote time
|
| to himself he is serene, NOT from lack of trouble, but from lack
|
| of capacity for grasping and dealing with HIS trouble The habitual
|
| complaisance with respect to all objects and experiences, the radiant
|
| and impartial hospitality with which he receives everything that
|
| comes his way, his habit of inconsiderate good-nature, of dangerous
|
| indifference as to Yea and Nay: alas! there are enough of cases in which
|
| he has to atone for these virtues of his!--and as man generally, he
|
| becomes far too easily the CAPUT MORTUUM of such virtues. Should one
|
| wish love or hatred from him--I mean love and hatred as God, woman, and
|
| animal understand them--he will do what he can, and furnish what he can.
|
| But one must not be surprised if it should not be much--if he should
|
| show himself just at this point to be false, fragile, questionable, and
|
| deteriorated. His love is constrained, his hatred is artificial, and
|
| rather UN TOUR DE FORCE, a slight ostentation and exaggeration. He is
|
| only genuine so far as he can be objective; only in his serene totality
|
| is he still "nature" and "natural." His mirroring and eternally
|
| self-polishing soul no longer knows how to affirm, no longer how to
|
| deny; he does not command; neither does he destroy. "JE NE MEPRISE
|
| PRESQUE RIEN"--he says, with Leibniz: let us not overlook nor undervalue
|
| the PRESQUE! Neither is he a model man; he does not go in advance of any
|
| one, nor after, either; he places himself generally too far off to have
|
| any reason for espousing the cause of either good or evil. If he has
|
| been so long confounded with the PHILOSOPHER, with the Caesarian trainer
|
| and dictator of civilization, he has had far too much honour, and what
|
| is more essential in him has been overlooked--he is an instrument,
|
| something of a slave, though certainly the sublimest sort of slave, but
|
| nothing in himself--PRESQUE RIEN! The objective man is an instrument,
|
| a costly, easily injured, easily tarnished measuring instrument and
|
| mirroring apparatus, which is to be taken care of and respected; but he
|
| is no goal, not outgoing nor upgoing, no complementary man in whom the
|
| REST of existence justifies itself, no termination--and still less a
|
| commencement, an engendering, or primary cause, nothing hardy, powerful,
|
| self-centred, that wants to be master; but rather only a soft, inflated,
|
| delicate, movable potter's-form, that must wait for some kind of content
|
| and frame to "shape" itself thereto--for the most part a man without
|
| frame and content, a "selfless" man. Consequently, also, nothing for
|
| women, IN PARENTHESI.
|
|
|
| 208. When a philosopher nowadays makes known that he is not a skeptic--I
|
| hope that has been gathered from the foregoing description of the
|
| objective spirit?--people all hear it impatiently; they regard him on
|
| that account with some apprehension, they would like to ask so many,
|
| many questions... indeed among timid hearers, of whom there are now so
|
| many, he is henceforth said to be dangerous. With his repudiation of
|
| skepticism, it seems to them as if they heard some evil-threatening
|
| sound in the distance, as if a new kind of explosive were being tried
|
| somewhere, a dynamite of the spirit, perhaps a newly discovered Russian
|
| NIHILINE, a pessimism BONAE VOLUNTATIS, that not only denies, means
|
| denial, but--dreadful thought! PRACTISES denial. Against this kind of
|
| "good-will"--a will to the veritable, actual negation of life--there is,
|
| as is generally acknowledged nowadays, no better soporific and sedative
|
| than skepticism, the mild, pleasing, lulling poppy of skepticism;
|
| and Hamlet himself is now prescribed by the doctors of the day as an
|
| antidote to the "spirit," and its underground noises. "Are not our ears
|
| already full of bad sounds?" say the skeptics, as lovers of repose, and
|
| almost as a kind of safety police; "this subterranean Nay is terrible!
|
| Be still, ye pessimistic moles!" The skeptic, in effect, that delicate
|
| creature, is far too easily frightened; his conscience is schooled so
|
| as to start at every Nay, and even at that sharp, decided Yea, and feels
|
| something like a bite thereby. Yea! and Nay!--they seem to him opposed
|
| to morality; he loves, on the contrary, to make a festival to his virtue
|
| by a noble aloofness, while perhaps he says with Montaigne: "What do I
|
| know?" Or with Socrates: "I know that I know nothing." Or: "Here I do
|
| not trust myself, no door is open to me." Or: "Even if the door were
|
| open, why should I enter immediately?" Or: "What is the use of any hasty
|
| hypotheses? It might quite well be in good taste to make no hypotheses
|
| at all. Are you absolutely obliged to straighten at once what is
|
| crooked? to stuff every hole with some kind of oakum? Is there not time
|
| enough for that? Has not the time leisure? Oh, ye demons, can ye not
|
| at all WAIT? The uncertain also has its charms, the Sphinx, too, is a
|
| Circe, and Circe, too, was a philosopher."--Thus does a skeptic console
|
| himself; and in truth he needs some consolation. For skepticism is
|
| the most spiritual expression of a certain many-sided physiological
|
| temperament, which in ordinary language is called nervous debility and
|
| sickliness; it arises whenever races or classes which have been long
|
| separated, decisively and suddenly blend with one another. In the new
|
| generation, which has inherited as it were different standards and
|
| valuations in its blood, everything is disquiet, derangement, doubt, and
|
| tentativeness; the best powers operate restrictively, the very virtues
|
| prevent each other growing and becoming strong, equilibrium, ballast,
|
| and perpendicular stability are lacking in body and soul. That, however,
|
| which is most diseased and degenerated in such nondescripts is the
|
| WILL; they are no longer familiar with independence of decision, or
|
| the courageous feeling of pleasure in willing--they are doubtful of the
|
| "freedom of the will" even in their dreams Our present-day Europe,
|
| the scene of a senseless, precipitate attempt at a radical blending of
|
| classes, and CONSEQUENTLY of races, is therefore skeptical in all its
|
| heights and depths, sometimes exhibiting the mobile skepticism which
|
| springs impatiently and wantonly from branch to branch, sometimes with
|
| gloomy aspect, like a cloud over-charged with interrogative signs--and
|
| often sick unto death of its will! Paralysis of will, where do we not
|
| find this cripple sitting nowadays! And yet how bedecked oftentimes' How
|
| seductively ornamented! There are the finest gala dresses and disguises
|
| for this disease, and that, for instance, most of what places itself
|
| nowadays in the show-cases as "objectiveness," "the scientific spirit,"
|
| "L'ART POUR L'ART," and "pure voluntary knowledge," is only decked-out
|
| skepticism and paralysis of will--I am ready to answer for this
|
| diagnosis of the European disease--The disease of the will is diffused
|
| unequally over Europe, it is worst and most varied where civilization
|
| has longest prevailed, it decreases according as "the barbarian"
|
| still--or again--asserts his claims under the loose drapery of Western
|
| culture It is therefore in the France of today, as can be readily
|
| disclosed and comprehended, that the will is most infirm, and France,
|
| which has always had a masterly aptitude for converting even the
|
| portentous crises of its spirit into something charming and seductive,
|
| now manifests emphatically its intellectual ascendancy over Europe,
|
| by being the school and exhibition of all the charms of skepticism The
|
| power to will and to persist, moreover, in a resolution, is already
|
| somewhat stronger in Germany, and again in the North of Germany it
|
| is stronger than in Central Germany, it is considerably stronger in
|
| England, Spain, and Corsica, associated with phlegm in the former and
|
| with hard skulls in the latter--not to mention Italy, which is too young
|
| yet to know what it wants, and must first show whether it can exercise
|
| will, but it is strongest and most surprising of all in that immense
|
| middle empire where Europe as it were flows back to Asia--namely, in
|
| Russia There the power to will has been long stored up and accumulated,
|
| there the will--uncertain whether to be negative or affirmative--waits
|
| threateningly to be discharged (to borrow their pet phrase from our
|
| physicists) Perhaps not only Indian wars and complications in Asia would
|
| be necessary to free Europe from its greatest danger, but also internal
|
| subversion, the shattering of the empire into small states, and above
|
| all the introduction of parliamentary imbecility, together with the
|
| obligation of every one to read his newspaper at breakfast I do not
|
| say this as one who desires it, in my heart I should rather prefer the
|
| contrary--I mean such an increase in the threatening attitude of
|
| Russia, that Europe would have to make up its mind to become equally
|
| threatening--namely, TO ACQUIRE ONE WILL, by means of a new caste to
|
| rule over the Continent, a persistent, dreadful will of its own, that
|
| can set its aims thousands of years ahead; so that the long spun-out
|
| comedy of its petty-statism, and its dynastic as well as its democratic
|
| many-willed-ness, might finally be brought to a close. The time for
|
| petty politics is past; the next century will bring the struggle for the
|
| dominion of the world--the COMPULSION to great politics.
|
|
|
| 209. As to how far the new warlike age on which we Europeans have
|
| evidently entered may perhaps favour the growth of another and stronger
|
| kind of skepticism, I should like to express myself preliminarily
|
| merely by a parable, which the lovers of German history will already
|
| understand. That unscrupulous enthusiast for big, handsome grenadiers
|
| (who, as King of Prussia, brought into being a military and skeptical
|
| genius--and therewith, in reality, the new and now triumphantly emerged
|
| type of German), the problematic, crazy father of Frederick the Great,
|
| had on one point the very knack and lucky grasp of the genius: he knew
|
| what was then lacking in Germany, the want of which was a hundred times
|
| more alarming and serious than any lack of culture and social form--his
|
| ill-will to the young Frederick resulted from the anxiety of a profound
|
| instinct. MEN WERE LACKING; and he suspected, to his bitterest regret,
|
| that his own son was not man enough. There, however, he deceived
|
| himself; but who would not have deceived himself in his place? He saw
|
| his son lapsed to atheism, to the ESPRIT, to the pleasant frivolity of
|
| clever Frenchmen--he saw in the background the great bloodsucker, the
|
| spider skepticism; he suspected the incurable wretchedness of a heart no
|
| longer hard enough either for evil or good, and of a broken will that no
|
| longer commands, is no longer ABLE to command. Meanwhile, however,
|
| there grew up in his son that new kind of harder and more dangerous
|
| skepticism--who knows TO WHAT EXTENT it was encouraged just by
|
| his father's hatred and the icy melancholy of a will condemned to
|
| solitude?--the skepticism of daring manliness, which is closely related
|
| to the genius for war and conquest, and made its first entrance into
|
| Germany in the person of the great Frederick. This skepticism despises
|
| and nevertheless grasps; it undermines and takes possession; it does
|
| not believe, but it does not thereby lose itself; it gives the spirit a
|
| dangerous liberty, but it keeps strict guard over the heart. It is the
|
| GERMAN form of skepticism, which, as a continued Fredericianism, risen
|
| to the highest spirituality, has kept Europe for a considerable time
|
| under the dominion of the German spirit and its critical and historical
|
| distrust Owing to the insuperably strong and tough masculine character
|
| of the great German philologists and historical critics (who,
|
| rightly estimated, were also all of them artists of destruction
|
| and dissolution), a NEW conception of the German spirit gradually
|
| established itself--in spite of all Romanticism in music and
|
| philosophy--in which the leaning towards masculine skepticism was
|
| decidedly prominent whether, for instance, as fearlessness of gaze, as
|
| courage and sternness of the dissecting hand, or as resolute will to
|
| dangerous voyages of discovery, to spiritualized North Pole expeditions
|
| under barren and dangerous skies. There may be good grounds for it when
|
| warm-blooded and superficial humanitarians cross themselves before this
|
| spirit, CET ESPRIT FATALISTE, IRONIQUE, MEPHISTOPHELIQUE, as Michelet
|
| calls it, not without a shudder. But if one would realize how
|
| characteristic is this fear of the "man" in the German spirit which
|
| awakened Europe out of its "dogmatic slumber," let us call to mind the
|
| former conception which had to be overcome by this new one--and that
|
| it is not so very long ago that a masculinized woman could dare, with
|
| unbridled presumption, to recommend the Germans to the interest of
|
| Europe as gentle, good-hearted, weak-willed, and poetical fools.
|
| Finally, let us only understand profoundly enough Napoleon's
|
| astonishment when he saw Goethe it reveals what had been regarded for
|
| centuries as the "German spirit" "VOILA UN HOMME!"--that was as much as
|
| to say "But this is a MAN! And I only expected to see a German!"
|
|
|
| 210. Supposing, then, that in the picture of the philosophers of the
|
| future, some trait suggests the question whether they must not perhaps
|
| be skeptics in the last-mentioned sense, something in them would only be
|
| designated thereby--and not they themselves. With equal right they might
|
| call themselves critics, and assuredly they will be men of experiments.
|
| By the name with which I ventured to baptize them, I have already
|
| expressly emphasized their attempting and their love of attempting is
|
| this because, as critics in body and soul, they will love to make use
|
| of experiments in a new, and perhaps wider and more dangerous sense? In
|
| their passion for knowledge, will they have to go further in daring and
|
| painful attempts than the sensitive and pampered taste of a democratic
|
| century can approve of?--There is no doubt these coming ones will be
|
| least able to dispense with the serious and not unscrupulous qualities
|
| which distinguish the critic from the skeptic I mean the certainty as to
|
| standards of worth, the conscious employment of a unity of method,
|
| the wary courage, the standing-alone, and the capacity for
|
| self-responsibility, indeed, they will avow among themselves a DELIGHT
|
| in denial and dissection, and a certain considerate cruelty, which knows
|
| how to handle the knife surely and deftly, even when the heart bleeds
|
| They will be STERNER (and perhaps not always towards themselves only)
|
| than humane people may desire, they will not deal with the "truth" in
|
| order that it may "please" them, or "elevate" and "inspire" them--they
|
| will rather have little faith in "TRUTH" bringing with it such revels
|
| for the feelings. They will smile, those rigorous spirits, when any one
|
| says in their presence "That thought elevates me, why should it not be
|
| true?" or "That work enchants me, why should it not be beautiful?" or
|
| "That artist enlarges me, why should he not be great?" Perhaps they
|
| will not only have a smile, but a genuine disgust for all that is thus
|
| rapturous, idealistic, feminine, and hermaphroditic, and if any one
|
| could look into their inmost hearts, he would not easily find therein
|
| the intention to reconcile "Christian sentiments" with "antique taste,"
|
| or even with "modern parliamentarism" (the kind of reconciliation
|
| necessarily found even among philosophers in our very uncertain and
|
| consequently very conciliatory century). Critical discipline, and every
|
| habit that conduces to purity and rigour in intellectual matters,
|
| will not only be demanded from themselves by these philosophers of
|
| the future, they may even make a display thereof as their special
|
| adornment--nevertheless they will not want to be called critics on that
|
| account. It will seem to them no small indignity to philosophy to
|
| have it decreed, as is so welcome nowadays, that "philosophy itself is
|
| criticism and critical science--and nothing else whatever!" Though this
|
| estimate of philosophy may enjoy the approval of all the Positivists of
|
| France and Germany (and possibly it even flattered the heart and taste
|
| of KANT: let us call to mind the titles of his principal works), our new
|
| philosophers will say, notwithstanding, that critics are instruments of
|
| the philosopher, and just on that account, as instruments, they are
|
| far from being philosophers themselves! Even the great Chinaman of
|
| Konigsberg was only a great critic.
|
|
|
| 211. I insist upon it that people finally cease confounding
|
| philosophical workers, and in general scientific men, with
|
| philosophers--that precisely here one should strictly give "each his
|
| own," and not give those far too much, these far too little. It may
|
| be necessary for the education of the real philosopher that he himself
|
| should have once stood upon all those steps upon which his servants,
|
| the scientific workers of philosophy, remain standing, and MUST remain
|
| standing he himself must perhaps have been critic, and dogmatist,
|
| and historian, and besides, poet, and collector, and traveler, and
|
| riddle-reader, and moralist, and seer, and "free spirit," and almost
|
| everything, in order to traverse the whole range of human values
|
| and estimations, and that he may BE ABLE with a variety of eyes and
|
| consciences to look from a height to any distance, from a depth up
|
| to any height, from a nook into any expanse. But all these are only
|
| preliminary conditions for his task; this task itself demands something
|
| else--it requires him TO CREATE VALUES. The philosophical workers, after
|
| the excellent pattern of Kant and Hegel, have to fix and formalize some
|
| great existing body of valuations--that is to say, former DETERMINATIONS
|
| OF VALUE, creations of value, which have become prevalent, and are for
|
| a time called "truths"--whether in the domain of the LOGICAL, the
|
| POLITICAL (moral), or the ARTISTIC. It is for these investigators to
|
| make whatever has happened and been esteemed hitherto, conspicuous,
|
| conceivable, intelligible, and manageable, to shorten everything long,
|
| even "time" itself, and to SUBJUGATE the entire past: an immense and
|
| wonderful task, in the carrying out of which all refined pride, all
|
| tenacious will, can surely find satisfaction. THE REAL PHILOSOPHERS,
|
| HOWEVER, ARE COMMANDERS AND LAW-GIVERS; they say: "Thus SHALL it be!"
|
| They determine first the Whither and the Why of mankind, and thereby
|
| set aside the previous labour of all philosophical workers, and all
|
| subjugators of the past--they grasp at the future with a creative
|
| hand, and whatever is and was, becomes for them thereby a means, an
|
| instrument, and a hammer. Their "knowing" is CREATING, their creating
|
| is a law-giving, their will to truth is--WILL TO POWER.--Are there at
|
| present such philosophers? Have there ever been such philosophers? MUST
|
| there not be such philosophers some day? ...
|
|
|
| 212. It is always more obvious to me that the philosopher, as a man
|
| INDISPENSABLE for the morrow and the day after the morrow, has ever
|
| found himself, and HAS BEEN OBLIGED to find himself, in contradiction
|
| to the day in which he lives; his enemy has always been the ideal of his
|
| day. Hitherto all those extraordinary furtherers of humanity whom one
|
| calls philosophers--who rarely regarded themselves as lovers of wisdom,
|
| but rather as disagreeable fools and dangerous interrogators--have found
|
| their mission, their hard, involuntary, imperative mission (in the end,
|
| however, the greatness of their mission), in being the bad conscience of
|
| their age. In putting the vivisector's knife to the breast of the very
|
| VIRTUES OF THEIR AGE, they have betrayed their own secret; it has been
|
| for the sake of a NEW greatness of man, a new untrodden path to
|
| his aggrandizement. They have always disclosed how much hypocrisy,
|
| indolence, self-indulgence, and self-neglect, how much falsehood was
|
| concealed under the most venerated types of contemporary morality, how
|
| much virtue was OUTLIVED, they have always said "We must remove hence to
|
| where YOU are least at home" In the face of a world of "modern ideas,"
|
| which would like to confine every one in a corner, in a "specialty," a
|
| philosopher, if there could be philosophers nowadays, would be compelled
|
| to place the greatness of man, the conception of "greatness," precisely
|
| in his comprehensiveness and multifariousness, in his all-roundness, he
|
| would even determine worth and rank according to the amount and variety
|
| of that which a man could bear and take upon himself, according to the
|
| EXTENT to which a man could stretch his responsibility Nowadays the
|
| taste and virtue of the age weaken and attenuate the will, nothing is
|
| so adapted to the spirit of the age as weakness of will consequently, in
|
| the ideal of the philosopher, strength of will, sternness, and capacity
|
| for prolonged resolution, must specially be included in the conception
|
| of "greatness", with as good a right as the opposite doctrine, with its
|
| ideal of a silly, renouncing, humble, selfless humanity, was suited to
|
| an opposite age--such as the sixteenth century, which suffered from its
|
| accumulated energy of will, and from the wildest torrents and floods
|
| of selfishness In the time of Socrates, among men only of worn-out
|
| instincts, old conservative Athenians who let themselves go--"for the
|
| sake of happiness," as they said, for the sake of pleasure, as their
|
| conduct indicated--and who had continually on their lips the old pompous
|
| words to which they had long forfeited the right by the life they led,
|
| IRONY was perhaps necessary for greatness of soul, the wicked Socratic
|
| assurance of the old physician and plebeian, who cut ruthlessly into his
|
| own flesh, as into the flesh and heart of the "noble," with a look that
|
| said plainly enough "Do not dissemble before me! here--we are equal!"
|
| At present, on the contrary, when throughout Europe the herding-animal
|
| alone attains to honours, and dispenses honours, when "equality of
|
| right" can too readily be transformed into equality in wrong--I mean to
|
| say into general war against everything rare, strange, and privileged,
|
| against the higher man, the higher soul, the higher duty, the higher
|
| responsibility, the creative plenipotence and lordliness--at present
|
| it belongs to the conception of "greatness" to be noble, to wish to be
|
| apart, to be capable of being different, to stand alone, to have to live
|
| by personal initiative, and the philosopher will betray something of his
|
| own ideal when he asserts "He shall be the greatest who can be the most
|
| solitary, the most concealed, the most divergent, the man beyond good
|
| and evil, the master of his virtues, and of super-abundance of will;
|
| precisely this shall be called GREATNESS: as diversified as can be
|
| entire, as ample as can be full." And to ask once more the question: Is
|
| greatness POSSIBLE--nowadays?
|
|
|
| 213. It is difficult to learn what a philosopher is, because it cannot
|
| be taught: one must "know" it by experience--or one should have the
|
| pride NOT to know it. The fact that at present people all talk of things
|
| of which they CANNOT have any experience, is true more especially
|
| and unfortunately as concerns the philosopher and philosophical
|
| matters:--the very few know them, are permitted to know them, and
|
| all popular ideas about them are false. Thus, for instance, the truly
|
| philosophical combination of a bold, exuberant spirituality which runs
|
| at presto pace, and a dialectic rigour and necessity which makes no
|
| false step, is unknown to most thinkers and scholars from their own
|
| experience, and therefore, should any one speak of it in their
|
| presence, it is incredible to them. They conceive of every necessity as
|
| troublesome, as a painful compulsory obedience and state of constraint;
|
| thinking itself is regarded by them as something slow and hesitating,
|
| almost as a trouble, and often enough as "worthy of the SWEAT of the
|
| noble"--but not at all as something easy and divine, closely related
|
| to dancing and exuberance! "To think" and to take a matter "seriously,"
|
| "arduously"--that is one and the same thing to them; such only has been
|
| their "experience."--Artists have here perhaps a finer intuition; they
|
| who know only too well that precisely when they no longer do anything
|
| "arbitrarily," and everything of necessity, their feeling of freedom,
|
| of subtlety, of power, of creatively fixing, disposing, and shaping,
|
| reaches its climax--in short, that necessity and "freedom of will" are
|
| then the same thing with them. There is, in fine, a gradation of rank
|
| in psychical states, to which the gradation of rank in the problems
|
| corresponds; and the highest problems repel ruthlessly every one who
|
| ventures too near them, without being predestined for their solution
|
| by the loftiness and power of his spirituality. Of what use is it for
|
| nimble, everyday intellects, or clumsy, honest mechanics and empiricists
|
| to press, in their plebeian ambition, close to such problems, and as
|
| it were into this "holy of holies"--as so often happens nowadays! But
|
| coarse feet must never tread upon such carpets: this is provided for in
|
| the primary law of things; the doors remain closed to those intruders,
|
| though they may dash and break their heads thereon. People have always
|
| to be born to a high station, or, more definitely, they have to be BRED
|
| for it: a person has only a right to philosophy--taking the word in
|
| its higher significance--in virtue of his descent; the ancestors, the
|
| "blood," decide here also. Many generations must have prepared the way
|
| for the coming of the philosopher; each of his virtues must have been
|
| separately acquired, nurtured, transmitted, and embodied; not only the
|
| bold, easy, delicate course and current of his thoughts, but above all
|
| the readiness for great responsibilities, the majesty of ruling glance
|
| and contemning look, the feeling of separation from the multitude with
|
| their duties and virtues, the kindly patronage and defense of whatever
|
| is misunderstood and calumniated, be it God or devil, the delight and
|
| practice of supreme justice, the art of commanding, the amplitude of
|
| will, the lingering eye which rarely admires, rarely looks up, rarely
|
| loves....
|
|
|
| CHAPTER VII. OUR VIRTUES
|
|
|
| 214. OUR Virtues?--It is probable that we, too, have still our virtues,
|
| although naturally they are not those sincere and massive virtues on
|
| account of which we hold our grandfathers in esteem and also at a little
|
| distance from us. We Europeans of the day after tomorrow, we firstlings
|
| of the twentieth century--with all our dangerous curiosity, our
|
| multifariousness and art of disguising, our mellow and seemingly
|
| sweetened cruelty in sense and spirit--we shall presumably, IF we must
|
| have virtues, have those only which have come to agreement with our most
|
| secret and heartfelt inclinations, with our most ardent requirements:
|
| well, then, let us look for them in our labyrinths!--where, as we know,
|
| so many things lose themselves, so many things get quite lost! And is
|
| there anything finer than to SEARCH for one's own virtues? Is it not
|
| almost to BELIEVE in one's own virtues? But this "believing in one's
|
| own virtues"--is it not practically the same as what was formerly called
|
| one's "good conscience," that long, respectable pigtail of an idea,
|
| which our grandfathers used to hang behind their heads, and often enough
|
| also behind their understandings? It seems, therefore, that however
|
| little we may imagine ourselves to be old-fashioned and grandfatherly
|
| respectable in other respects, in one thing we are nevertheless the
|
| worthy grandchildren of our grandfathers, we last Europeans with good
|
| consciences: we also still wear their pigtail.--Ah! if you only knew how
|
| soon, so very soon--it will be different!
|
|
|
| 215. As in the stellar firmament there are sometimes two suns which
|
| determine the path of one planet, and in certain cases suns of different
|
| colours shine around a single planet, now with red light, now with
|
| green, and then simultaneously illumine and flood it with motley
|
| colours: so we modern men, owing to the complicated mechanism of our
|
| "firmament," are determined by DIFFERENT moralities; our actions shine
|
| alternately in different colours, and are seldom unequivocal--and there
|
| are often cases, also, in which our actions are MOTLEY-COLOURED.
|
|
|
| 216. To love one's enemies? I think that has been well learnt: it takes
|
| place thousands of times at present on a large and small scale; indeed,
|
| at times the higher and sublimer thing takes place:--we learn to DESPISE
|
| when we love, and precisely when we love best; all of it, however,
|
| unconsciously, without noise, without ostentation, with the shame and
|
| secrecy of goodness, which forbids the utterance of the pompous word
|
| and the formula of virtue. Morality as attitude--is opposed to our taste
|
| nowadays. This is ALSO an advance, as it was an advance in our fathers
|
| that religion as an attitude finally became opposed to their taste,
|
| including the enmity and Voltairean bitterness against religion (and all
|
| that formerly belonged to freethinker-pantomime). It is the music in our
|
| conscience, the dance in our spirit, to which Puritan litanies, moral
|
| sermons, and goody-goodness won't chime.
|
|
|
| 217. Let us be careful in dealing with those who attach great importance
|
| to being credited with moral tact and subtlety in moral discernment!
|
| They never forgive us if they have once made a mistake BEFORE us
|
| (or even with REGARD to us)--they inevitably become our instinctive
|
| calumniators and detractors, even when they still remain our
|
| "friends."--Blessed are the forgetful: for they "get the better" even of
|
| their blunders.
|
|
|
| 218. The psychologists of France--and where else are there still
|
| psychologists nowadays?--have never yet exhausted their bitter and
|
| manifold enjoyment of the betise bourgeoise, just as though... in
|
| short, they betray something thereby. Flaubert, for instance, the honest
|
| citizen of Rouen, neither saw, heard, nor tasted anything else in the
|
| end; it was his mode of self-torment and refined cruelty. As this is
|
| growing wearisome, I would now recommend for a change something else
|
| for a pleasure--namely, the unconscious astuteness with which good, fat,
|
| honest mediocrity always behaves towards loftier spirits and the tasks
|
| they have to perform, the subtle, barbed, Jesuitical astuteness, which
|
| is a thousand times subtler than the taste and understanding of the
|
| middle-class in its best moments--subtler even than the understanding of
|
| its victims:--a repeated proof that "instinct" is the most intelligent
|
| of all kinds of intelligence which have hitherto been discovered. In
|
| short, you psychologists, study the philosophy of the "rule" in its
|
| struggle with the "exception": there you have a spectacle fit for Gods
|
| and godlike malignity! Or, in plainer words, practise vivisection on
|
| "good people," on the "homo bonae voluntatis," ON YOURSELVES!
|
|
|
| 219. The practice of judging and condemning morally, is the favourite
|
| revenge of the intellectually shallow on those who are less so, it is
|
| also a kind of indemnity for their being badly endowed by nature,
|
| and finally, it is an opportunity for acquiring spirit and BECOMING
|
| subtle--malice spiritualises. They are glad in their inmost heart that
|
| there is a standard according to which those who are over-endowed with
|
| intellectual goods and privileges, are equal to them, they contend for
|
| the "equality of all before God," and almost NEED the belief in God for
|
| this purpose. It is among them that the most powerful antagonists of
|
| atheism are found. If any one were to say to them "A lofty spirituality
|
| is beyond all comparison with the honesty and respectability of a merely
|
| moral man"--it would make them furious, I shall take care not to say
|
| so. I would rather flatter them with my theory that lofty spirituality
|
| itself exists only as the ultimate product of moral qualities, that it
|
| is a synthesis of all qualities attributed to the "merely moral" man,
|
| after they have been acquired singly through long training and practice,
|
| perhaps during a whole series of generations, that lofty spirituality
|
| is precisely the spiritualising of justice, and the beneficent severity
|
| which knows that it is authorized to maintain GRADATIONS OF RANK in the
|
| world, even among things--and not only among men.
|
|
|
| 220. Now that the praise of the "disinterested person" is so popular
|
| one must--probably not without some danger--get an idea of WHAT people
|
| actually take an interest in, and what are the things generally which
|
| fundamentally and profoundly concern ordinary men--including the
|
| cultured, even the learned, and perhaps philosophers also, if
|
| appearances do not deceive. The fact thereby becomes obvious that the
|
| greater part of what interests and charms higher natures, and more
|
| refined and fastidious tastes, seems absolutely "uninteresting" to
|
| the average man--if, notwithstanding, he perceive devotion to these
|
| interests, he calls it desinteresse, and wonders how it is possible to
|
| act "disinterestedly." There have been philosophers who could give this
|
| popular astonishment a seductive and mystical, other-worldly expression
|
| (perhaps because they did not know the higher nature by experience?),
|
| instead of stating the naked and candidly reasonable truth that
|
| "disinterested" action is very interesting and "interested" action,
|
| provided that... "And love?"--What! Even an action for love's sake
|
| shall be "unegoistic"? But you fools--! "And the praise of the
|
| self-sacrificer?"--But whoever has really offered sacrifice knows that
|
| he wanted and obtained something for it--perhaps something from himself
|
| for something from himself; that he relinquished here in order to have
|
| more there, perhaps in general to be more, or even feel himself "more."
|
| But this is a realm of questions and answers in which a more fastidious
|
| spirit does not like to stay: for here truth has to stifle her yawns so
|
| much when she is obliged to answer. And after all, truth is a woman; one
|
| must not use force with her.
|
|
|
| 221. "It sometimes happens," said a moralistic pedant and
|
| trifle-retailer, "that I honour and respect an unselfish man: not,
|
| however, because he is unselfish, but because I think he has a right to
|
| be useful to another man at his own expense. In short, the question
|
| is always who HE is, and who THE OTHER is. For instance, in a person
|
| created and destined for command, self-denial and modest retirement,
|
| instead of being virtues, would be the waste of virtues: so it seems
|
| to me. Every system of unegoistic morality which takes itself
|
| unconditionally and appeals to every one, not only sins against good
|
| taste, but is also an incentive to sins of omission, an ADDITIONAL
|
| seduction under the mask of philanthropy--and precisely a seduction and
|
| injury to the higher, rarer, and more privileged types of men. Moral
|
| systems must be compelled first of all to bow before the GRADATIONS OF
|
| RANK; their presumption must be driven home to their conscience--until
|
| they thoroughly understand at last that it is IMMORAL to say that 'what
|
| is right for one is proper for another.'"--So said my moralistic pedant
|
| and bonhomme. Did he perhaps deserve to be laughed at when he thus
|
| exhorted systems of morals to practise morality? But one should not be
|
| too much in the right if one wishes to have the laughers on ONE'S OWN
|
| side; a grain of wrong pertains even to good taste.
|
|
|
| 222. Wherever sympathy (fellow-suffering) is preached nowadays--and,
|
| if I gather rightly, no other religion is any longer preached--let the
|
| psychologist have his ears open through all the vanity, through all the
|
| noise which is natural to these preachers (as to all preachers), he will
|
| hear a hoarse, groaning, genuine note of SELF-CONTEMPT. It belongs
|
| to the overshadowing and uglifying of Europe, which has been on
|
| the increase for a century (the first symptoms of which are already
|
| specified documentarily in a thoughtful letter of Galiani to Madame
|
| d'Epinay)--IF IT IS NOT REALLY THE CAUSE THEREOF! The man of
|
| "modern ideas," the conceited ape, is excessively dissatisfied with
|
| himself--this is perfectly certain. He suffers, and his vanity wants him
|
| only "to suffer with his fellows."
|
|
|
| 223. The hybrid European--a tolerably ugly plebeian, taken all in
|
| all--absolutely requires a costume: he needs history as a storeroom
|
| of costumes. To be sure, he notices that none of the costumes fit him
|
| properly--he changes and changes. Let us look at the nineteenth century
|
| with respect to these hasty preferences and changes in its masquerades
|
| of style, and also with respect to its moments of desperation on account
|
| of "nothing suiting" us. It is in vain to get ourselves up as romantic,
|
| or classical, or Christian, or Florentine, or barocco, or "national,"
|
| in moribus et artibus: it does not "clothe us"! But the "spirit,"
|
| especially the "historical spirit," profits even by this desperation:
|
| once and again a new sample of the past or of the foreign is tested,
|
| put on, taken off, packed up, and above all studied--we are the first
|
| studious age in puncto of "costumes," I mean as concerns morals,
|
| articles of belief, artistic tastes, and religions; we are prepared as
|
| no other age has ever been for a carnival in the grand style, for the
|
| most spiritual festival--laughter and arrogance, for the transcendental
|
| height of supreme folly and Aristophanic ridicule of the world. Perhaps
|
| we are still discovering the domain of our invention just here, the
|
| domain where even we can still be original, probably as parodists of
|
| the world's history and as God's Merry-Andrews,--perhaps, though nothing
|
| else of the present have a future, our laughter itself may have a
|
| future!
|
|
|
| 224. The historical sense (or the capacity for divining quickly
|
| the order of rank of the valuations according to which a people, a
|
| community, or an individual has lived, the "divining instinct" for the
|
| relationships of these valuations, for the relation of the authority
|
| of the valuations to the authority of the operating forces),--this
|
| historical sense, which we Europeans claim as our specialty, has come
|
| to us in the train of the enchanting and mad semi-barbarity into which
|
| Europe has been plunged by the democratic mingling of classes and
|
| races--it is only the nineteenth century that has recognized this
|
| faculty as its sixth sense. Owing to this mingling, the past of every
|
| form and mode of life, and of cultures which were formerly closely
|
| contiguous and superimposed on one another, flows forth into us "modern
|
| souls"; our instincts now run back in all directions, we ourselves are
|
| a kind of chaos: in the end, as we have said, the spirit perceives its
|
| advantage therein. By means of our semi-barbarity in body and in desire,
|
| we have secret access everywhere, such as a noble age never had; we have
|
| access above all to the labyrinth of imperfect civilizations, and to
|
| every form of semi-barbarity that has at any time existed on earth; and
|
| in so far as the most considerable part of human civilization hitherto
|
| has just been semi-barbarity, the "historical sense" implies almost the
|
| sense and instinct for everything, the taste and tongue for everything:
|
| whereby it immediately proves itself to be an IGNOBLE sense. For
|
| instance, we enjoy Homer once more: it is perhaps our happiest
|
| acquisition that we know how to appreciate Homer, whom men of
|
| distinguished culture (as the French of the seventeenth century, like
|
| Saint-Evremond, who reproached him for his ESPRIT VASTE, and even
|
| Voltaire, the last echo of the century) cannot and could not so easily
|
| appropriate--whom they scarcely permitted themselves to enjoy. The very
|
| decided Yea and Nay of their palate, their promptly ready disgust, their
|
| hesitating reluctance with regard to everything strange, their horror of
|
| the bad taste even of lively curiosity, and in general the averseness of
|
| every distinguished and self-sufficing culture to avow a new desire,
|
| a dissatisfaction with its own condition, or an admiration of what is
|
| strange: all this determines and disposes them unfavourably even towards
|
| the best things of the world which are not their property or could not
|
| become their prey--and no faculty is more unintelligible to such men
|
| than just this historical sense, with its truckling, plebeian
|
| curiosity. The case is not different with Shakespeare, that marvelous
|
| Spanish-Moorish-Saxon synthesis of taste, over whom an ancient Athenian
|
| of the circle of AEschylus would have half-killed himself with laughter
|
| or irritation: but we--accept precisely this wild motleyness, this
|
| medley of the most delicate, the most coarse, and the most artificial,
|
| with a secret confidence and cordiality; we enjoy it as a refinement
|
| of art reserved expressly for us, and allow ourselves to be as little
|
| disturbed by the repulsive fumes and the proximity of the English
|
| populace in which Shakespeare's art and taste lives, as perhaps on
|
| the Chiaja of Naples, where, with all our senses awake, we go our way,
|
| enchanted and voluntarily, in spite of the drain-odour of the lower
|
| quarters of the town. That as men of the "historical sense" we have
|
| our virtues, is not to be disputed:--we are unpretentious, unselfish,
|
| modest, brave, habituated to self-control and self-renunciation, very
|
| grateful, very patient, very complaisant--but with all this we are
|
| perhaps not very "tasteful." Let us finally confess it, that what is
|
| most difficult for us men of the "historical sense" to grasp, feel,
|
| taste, and love, what finds us fundamentally prejudiced and almost
|
| hostile, is precisely the perfection and ultimate maturity in every
|
| culture and art, the essentially noble in works and men, their moment
|
| of smooth sea and halcyon self-sufficiency, the goldenness and coldness
|
| which all things show that have perfected themselves. Perhaps our great
|
| virtue of the historical sense is in necessary contrast to GOOD taste,
|
| at least to the very bad taste; and we can only evoke in ourselves
|
| imperfectly, hesitatingly, and with compulsion the small, short, and
|
| happy godsends and glorifications of human life as they shine here and
|
| there: those moments and marvelous experiences when a great power has
|
| voluntarily come to a halt before the boundless and infinite,--when a
|
| super-abundance of refined delight has been enjoyed by a sudden checking
|
| and petrifying, by standing firmly and planting oneself fixedly on still
|
| trembling ground. PROPORTIONATENESS is strange to us, let us confess it
|
| to ourselves; our itching is really the itching for the infinite, the
|
| immeasurable. Like the rider on his forward panting horse, we let the
|
| reins fall before the infinite, we modern men, we semi-barbarians--and
|
| are only in OUR highest bliss when we--ARE IN MOST DANGER.
|
|
|
| 225. Whether it be hedonism, pessimism, utilitarianism, or eudaemonism,
|
| all those modes of thinking which measure the worth of things according
|
| to PLEASURE and PAIN, that is, according to accompanying circumstances
|
| and secondary considerations, are plausible modes of thought and
|
| naivetes, which every one conscious of CREATIVE powers and an artist's
|
| conscience will look down upon with scorn, though not without sympathy.
|
| Sympathy for you!--to be sure, that is not sympathy as you understand
|
| it: it is not sympathy for social "distress," for "society" with its
|
| sick and misfortuned, for the hereditarily vicious and defective who lie
|
| on the ground around us; still less is it sympathy for the grumbling,
|
| vexed, revolutionary slave-classes who strive after power--they call it
|
| "freedom." OUR sympathy is a loftier and further-sighted sympathy:--we
|
| see how MAN dwarfs himself, how YOU dwarf him! and there are moments
|
| when we view YOUR sympathy with an indescribable anguish, when we resist
|
| it,--when we regard your seriousness as more dangerous than any kind
|
| of levity. You want, if possible--and there is not a more foolish "if
|
| possible"--TO DO AWAY WITH SUFFERING; and we?--it really seems that WE
|
| would rather have it increased and made worse than it has ever been!
|
| Well-being, as you understand it--is certainly not a goal; it seems
|
| to us an END; a condition which at once renders man ludicrous and
|
| contemptible--and makes his destruction DESIRABLE! The discipline
|
| of suffering, of GREAT suffering--know ye not that it is only THIS
|
| discipline that has produced all the elevations of humanity hitherto?
|
| The tension of soul in misfortune which communicates to it its energy,
|
| its shuddering in view of rack and ruin, its inventiveness and bravery
|
| in undergoing, enduring, interpreting, and exploiting misfortune, and
|
| whatever depth, mystery, disguise, spirit, artifice, or greatness has
|
| been bestowed upon the soul--has it not been bestowed through suffering,
|
| through the discipline of great suffering? In man CREATURE and CREATOR
|
| are united: in man there is not only matter, shred, excess, clay, mire,
|
| folly, chaos; but there is also the creator, the sculptor, the hardness
|
| of the hammer, the divinity of the spectator, and the seventh day--do
|
| ye understand this contrast? And that YOUR sympathy for the "creature
|
| in man" applies to that which has to be fashioned, bruised, forged,
|
| stretched, roasted, annealed, refined--to that which must necessarily
|
| SUFFER, and IS MEANT to suffer? And our sympathy--do ye not understand
|
| what our REVERSE sympathy applies to, when it resists your sympathy as
|
| the worst of all pampering and enervation?--So it is sympathy AGAINST
|
| sympathy!--But to repeat it once more, there are higher problems than
|
| the problems of pleasure and pain and sympathy; and all systems of
|
| philosophy which deal only with these are naivetes.
|
|
|
| 226. WE IMMORALISTS.--This world with which WE are concerned, in which
|
| we have to fear and love, this almost invisible, inaudible world of
|
| delicate command and delicate obedience, a world of "almost" in every
|
| respect, captious, insidious, sharp, and tender--yes, it is well
|
| protected from clumsy spectators and familiar curiosity! We are
|
| woven into a strong net and garment of duties, and CANNOT disengage
|
| ourselves--precisely here, we are "men of duty," even we! Occasionally,
|
| it is true, we dance in our "chains" and betwixt our "swords"; it
|
| is none the less true that more often we gnash our teeth under the
|
| circumstances, and are impatient at the secret hardship of our lot. But
|
| do what we will, fools and appearances say of us: "These are men WITHOUT
|
| duty,"--we have always fools and appearances against us!
|
|
|
| 227. Honesty, granting that it is the virtue of which we cannot rid
|
| ourselves, we free spirits--well, we will labour at it with all our
|
| perversity and love, and not tire of "perfecting" ourselves in OUR
|
| virtue, which alone remains: may its glance some day overspread like
|
| a gilded, blue, mocking twilight this aging civilization with its dull
|
| gloomy seriousness! And if, nevertheless, our honesty should one day
|
| grow weary, and sigh, and stretch its limbs, and find us too hard, and
|
| would fain have it pleasanter, easier, and gentler, like an agreeable
|
| vice, let us remain HARD, we latest Stoics, and let us send to its
|
| help whatever devilry we have in us:--our disgust at the clumsy
|
| and undefined, our "NITIMUR IN VETITUM," our love of adventure,
|
| our sharpened and fastidious curiosity, our most subtle, disguised,
|
| intellectual Will to Power and universal conquest, which rambles and
|
| roves avidiously around all the realms of the future--let us go with all
|
| our "devils" to the help of our "God"! It is probable that people will
|
| misunderstand and mistake us on that account: what does it matter! They
|
| will say: "Their 'honesty'--that is their devilry, and nothing else!"
|
| What does it matter! And even if they were right--have not all Gods
|
| hitherto been such sanctified, re-baptized devils? And after all, what
|
| do we know of ourselves? And what the spirit that leads us wants TO BE
|
| CALLED? (It is a question of names.) And how many spirits we harbour?
|
| Our honesty, we free spirits--let us be careful lest it become our
|
| vanity, our ornament and ostentation, our limitation, our stupidity!
|
| Every virtue inclines to stupidity, every stupidity to virtue; "stupid
|
| to the point of sanctity," they say in Russia,--let us be careful lest
|
| out of pure honesty we eventually become saints and bores! Is not life
|
| a hundred times too short for us--to bore ourselves? One would have to
|
| believe in eternal life in order to...
|
|
|
| 228. I hope to be forgiven for discovering that all moral philosophy
|
| hitherto has been tedious and has belonged to the soporific
|
| appliances--and that "virtue," in my opinion, has been MORE injured
|
| by the TEDIOUSNESS of its advocates than by anything else; at the same
|
| time, however, I would not wish to overlook their general usefulness. It
|
| is desirable that as few people as possible should reflect upon morals,
|
| and consequently it is very desirable that morals should not some day
|
| become interesting! But let us not be afraid! Things still remain today
|
| as they have always been: I see no one in Europe who has (or DISCLOSES)
|
| an idea of the fact that philosophizing concerning morals might be
|
| conducted in a dangerous, captious, and ensnaring manner--that CALAMITY
|
| might be involved therein. Observe, for example, the indefatigable,
|
| inevitable English utilitarians: how ponderously and respectably they
|
| stalk on, stalk along (a Homeric metaphor expresses it better) in the
|
| footsteps of Bentham, just as he had already stalked in the footsteps of
|
| the respectable Helvetius! (no, he was not a dangerous man, Helvetius,
|
| CE SENATEUR POCOCURANTE, to use an expression of Galiani). No new
|
| thought, nothing of the nature of a finer turning or better expression
|
| of an old thought, not even a proper history of what has been previously
|
| thought on the subject: an IMPOSSIBLE literature, taking it all in all,
|
| unless one knows how to leaven it with some mischief. In effect, the
|
| old English vice called CANT, which is MORAL TARTUFFISM, has insinuated
|
| itself also into these moralists (whom one must certainly read with an
|
| eye to their motives if one MUST read them), concealed this time under
|
| the new form of the scientific spirit; moreover, there is not absent
|
| from them a secret struggle with the pangs of conscience, from which a
|
| race of former Puritans must naturally suffer, in all their scientific
|
| tinkering with morals. (Is not a moralist the opposite of a Puritan?
|
| That is to say, as a thinker who regards morality as questionable,
|
| as worthy of interrogation, in short, as a problem? Is moralizing
|
| not-immoral?) In the end, they all want English morality to be
|
| recognized as authoritative, inasmuch as mankind, or the "general
|
| utility," or "the happiness of the greatest number,"--no! the happiness
|
| of ENGLAND, will be best served thereby. They would like, by all means,
|
| to convince themselves that the striving after English happiness, I
|
| mean after COMFORT and FASHION (and in the highest instance, a seat in
|
| Parliament), is at the same time the true path of virtue; in fact, that
|
| in so far as there has been virtue in the world hitherto, it has
|
| just consisted in such striving. Not one of those ponderous,
|
| conscience-stricken herding-animals (who undertake to advocate the
|
| cause of egoism as conducive to the general welfare) wants to have
|
| any knowledge or inkling of the facts that the "general welfare" is
|
| no ideal, no goal, no notion that can be at all grasped, but is only a
|
| nostrum,--that what is fair to one MAY NOT at all be fair to another,
|
| that the requirement of one morality for all is really a detriment to
|
| higher men, in short, that there is a DISTINCTION OF RANK between man
|
| and man, and consequently between morality and morality. They are an
|
| unassuming and fundamentally mediocre species of men, these utilitarian
|
| Englishmen, and, as already remarked, in so far as they are tedious, one
|
| cannot think highly enough of their utility. One ought even to ENCOURAGE
|
| them, as has been partially attempted in the following rhymes:--
|
|
|
| Hail, ye worthies, barrow-wheeling,
|
| "Longer--better," aye revealing,
|
|
|
| Stiffer aye in head and knee;
|
| Unenraptured, never jesting,
|
| Mediocre everlasting,
|
|
|
| SANS GENIE ET SANS ESPRIT!
|
|
|
| 229. In these later ages, which may be proud of their humanity, there
|
| still remains so much fear, so much SUPERSTITION of the fear, of the
|
| "cruel wild beast," the mastering of which constitutes the very pride of
|
| these humaner ages--that even obvious truths, as if by the agreement
|
| of centuries, have long remained unuttered, because they have the
|
| appearance of helping the finally slain wild beast back to life again.
|
| I perhaps risk something when I allow such a truth to escape; let
|
| others capture it again and give it so much "milk of pious sentiment"
|
| [FOOTNOTE: An expression from Schiller's William Tell, Act IV, Scene
|
| 3.] to drink, that it will lie down quiet and forgotten, in its old
|
| corner.--One ought to learn anew about cruelty, and open one's eyes;
|
| one ought at last to learn impatience, in order that such immodest
|
| gross errors--as, for instance, have been fostered by ancient and
|
| modern philosophers with regard to tragedy--may no longer wander about
|
| virtuously and boldly. Almost everything that we call "higher culture"
|
| is based upon the spiritualising and intensifying of CRUELTY--this is
|
| my thesis; the "wild beast" has not been slain at all, it lives, it
|
| flourishes, it has only been--transfigured. That which constitutes the
|
| painful delight of tragedy is cruelty; that which operates agreeably in
|
| so-called tragic sympathy, and at the basis even of everything sublime,
|
| up to the highest and most delicate thrills of metaphysics, obtains its
|
| sweetness solely from the intermingled ingredient of cruelty. What the
|
| Roman enjoys in the arena, the Christian in the ecstasies of the cross,
|
| the Spaniard at the sight of the faggot and stake, or of the bull-fight,
|
| the present-day Japanese who presses his way to the tragedy, the workman
|
| of the Parisian suburbs who has a homesickness for bloody revolutions,
|
| the Wagnerienne who, with unhinged will, "undergoes" the performance of
|
| "Tristan and Isolde"--what all these enjoy, and strive with mysterious
|
| ardour to drink in, is the philtre of the great Circe "cruelty." Here,
|
| to be sure, we must put aside entirely the blundering psychology of
|
| former times, which could only teach with regard to cruelty that
|
| it originated at the sight of the suffering of OTHERS: there is an
|
| abundant, super-abundant enjoyment even in one's own suffering, in
|
| causing one's own suffering--and wherever man has allowed himself to be
|
| persuaded to self-denial in the RELIGIOUS sense, or to self-mutilation,
|
| as among the Phoenicians and ascetics, or in general, to
|
| desensualisation, decarnalisation, and contrition, to Puritanical
|
| repentance-spasms, to vivisection of conscience and to Pascal-like
|
| SACRIFIZIA DELL' INTELLETO, he is secretly allured and impelled
|
| forwards by his cruelty, by the dangerous thrill of cruelty TOWARDS
|
| HIMSELF.--Finally, let us consider that even the seeker of knowledge
|
| operates as an artist and glorifier of cruelty, in that he compels his
|
| spirit to perceive AGAINST its own inclination, and often enough against
|
| the wishes of his heart:--he forces it to say Nay, where he would like
|
| to affirm, love, and adore; indeed, every instance of taking a thing
|
| profoundly and fundamentally, is a violation, an intentional injuring
|
| of the fundamental will of the spirit, which instinctively aims at
|
| appearance and superficiality,--even in every desire for knowledge there
|
| is a drop of cruelty.
|
|
|
| 230. Perhaps what I have said here about a "fundamental will of the
|
| spirit" may not be understood without further details; I may be allowed
|
| a word of explanation.--That imperious something which is popularly
|
| called "the spirit," wishes to be master internally and externally,
|
| and to feel itself master; it has the will of a multiplicity for a
|
| simplicity, a binding, taming, imperious, and essentially ruling will.
|
| Its requirements and capacities here, are the same as those assigned by
|
| physiologists to everything that lives, grows, and multiplies. The power
|
| of the spirit to appropriate foreign elements reveals itself in a strong
|
| tendency to assimilate the new to the old, to simplify the manifold,
|
| to overlook or repudiate the absolutely contradictory; just as it
|
| arbitrarily re-underlines, makes prominent, and falsifies for itself
|
| certain traits and lines in the foreign elements, in every portion of
|
| the "outside world." Its object thereby is the incorporation of new
|
| "experiences," the assortment of new things in the old arrangements--in
|
| short, growth; or more properly, the FEELING of growth, the feeling of
|
| increased power--is its object. This same will has at its service an
|
| apparently opposed impulse of the spirit, a suddenly adopted preference
|
| of ignorance, of arbitrary shutting out, a closing of windows, an inner
|
| denial of this or that, a prohibition to approach, a sort of defensive
|
| attitude against much that is knowable, a contentment with obscurity,
|
| with the shutting-in horizon, an acceptance and approval of ignorance:
|
| as that which is all necessary according to the degree of its
|
| appropriating power, its "digestive power," to speak figuratively (and
|
| in fact "the spirit" resembles a stomach more than anything else). Here
|
| also belong an occasional propensity of the spirit to let itself be
|
| deceived (perhaps with a waggish suspicion that it is NOT so and so,
|
| but is only allowed to pass as such), a delight in uncertainty and
|
| ambiguity, an exulting enjoyment of arbitrary, out-of-the-way narrowness
|
| and mystery, of the too-near, of the foreground, of the magnified,
|
| the diminished, the misshapen, the beautified--an enjoyment of the
|
| arbitrariness of all these manifestations of power. Finally, in this
|
| connection, there is the not unscrupulous readiness of the spirit to
|
| deceive other spirits and dissemble before them--the constant pressing
|
| and straining of a creating, shaping, changeable power: the spirit
|
| enjoys therein its craftiness and its variety of disguises, it enjoys
|
| also its feeling of security therein--it is precisely by its Protean
|
| arts that it is best protected and concealed!--COUNTER TO this
|
| propensity for appearance, for simplification, for a disguise, for a
|
| cloak, in short, for an outside--for every outside is a cloak--there
|
| operates the sublime tendency of the man of knowledge, which takes, and
|
| INSISTS on taking things profoundly, variously, and thoroughly; as a
|
| kind of cruelty of the intellectual conscience and taste, which every
|
| courageous thinker will acknowledge in himself, provided, as it ought
|
| to be, that he has sharpened and hardened his eye sufficiently long for
|
| introspection, and is accustomed to severe discipline and even severe
|
| words. He will say: "There is something cruel in the tendency of my
|
| spirit": let the virtuous and amiable try to convince him that it is not
|
| so! In fact, it would sound nicer, if, instead of our cruelty, perhaps
|
| our "extravagant honesty" were talked about, whispered about, and
|
| glorified--we free, VERY free spirits--and some day perhaps SUCH will
|
| actually be our--posthumous glory! Meanwhile--for there is plenty of
|
| time until then--we should be least inclined to deck ourselves out in
|
| such florid and fringed moral verbiage; our whole former work has
|
| just made us sick of this taste and its sprightly exuberance. They are
|
| beautiful, glistening, jingling, festive words: honesty, love of truth,
|
| love of wisdom, sacrifice for knowledge, heroism of the truthful--there
|
| is something in them that makes one's heart swell with pride. But we
|
| anchorites and marmots have long ago persuaded ourselves in all the
|
| secrecy of an anchorite's conscience, that this worthy parade of
|
| verbiage also belongs to the old false adornment, frippery, and
|
| gold-dust of unconscious human vanity, and that even under such
|
| flattering colour and repainting, the terrible original text HOMO NATURA
|
| must again be recognized. In effect, to translate man back again into
|
| nature; to master the many vain and visionary interpretations and
|
| subordinate meanings which have hitherto been scratched and daubed over
|
| the eternal original text, HOMO NATURA; to bring it about that man shall
|
| henceforth stand before man as he now, hardened by the discipline
|
| of science, stands before the OTHER forms of nature, with fearless
|
| Oedipus-eyes, and stopped Ulysses-ears, deaf to the enticements of old
|
| metaphysical bird-catchers, who have piped to him far too long: "Thou
|
| art more! thou art higher! thou hast a different origin!"--this may be
|
| a strange and foolish task, but that it is a TASK, who can deny! Why did
|
| we choose it, this foolish task? Or, to put the question differently:
|
| "Why knowledge at all?" Every one will ask us about this. And thus
|
| pressed, we, who have asked ourselves the question a hundred times, have
|
| not found and cannot find any better answer....
|
|
|
| 231. Learning alters us, it does what all nourishment does that does not
|
| merely "conserve"--as the physiologist knows. But at the bottom of our
|
| souls, quite "down below," there is certainly something unteachable,
|
| a granite of spiritual fate, of predetermined decision and answer to
|
| predetermined, chosen questions. In each cardinal problem there speaks
|
| an unchangeable "I am this"; a thinker cannot learn anew about man and
|
| woman, for instance, but can only learn fully--he can only follow to the
|
| end what is "fixed" about them in himself. Occasionally we find certain
|
| solutions of problems which make strong beliefs for us; perhaps they
|
| are henceforth called "convictions." Later on--one sees in them only
|
| footsteps to self-knowledge, guide-posts to the problem which we
|
| ourselves ARE--or more correctly to the great stupidity which we embody,
|
| our spiritual fate, the UNTEACHABLE in us, quite "down below."--In view
|
| of this liberal compliment which I have just paid myself, permission
|
| will perhaps be more readily allowed me to utter some truths about
|
| "woman as she is," provided that it is known at the outset how literally
|
| they are merely--MY truths.
|
|
|
| 232. Woman wishes to be independent, and therefore she begins to
|
| enlighten men about "woman as she is"--THIS is one of the worst
|
| developments of the general UGLIFYING of Europe. For what must these
|
| clumsy attempts of feminine scientificality and self-exposure bring
|
| to light! Woman has so much cause for shame; in woman there is so
|
| much pedantry, superficiality, schoolmasterliness, petty presumption,
|
| unbridledness, and indiscretion concealed--study only woman's behaviour
|
| towards children!--which has really been best restrained and dominated
|
| hitherto by the FEAR of man. Alas, if ever the "eternally tedious in
|
| woman"--she has plenty of it!--is allowed to venture forth! if she
|
| begins radically and on principle to unlearn her wisdom and art-of
|
| charming, of playing, of frightening away sorrow, of alleviating and
|
| taking easily; if she forgets her delicate aptitude for agreeable
|
| desires! Female voices are already raised, which, by Saint Aristophanes!
|
| make one afraid:--with medical explicitness it is stated in a
|
| threatening manner what woman first and last REQUIRES from man. Is
|
| it not in the very worst taste that woman thus sets herself up to be
|
| scientific? Enlightenment hitherto has fortunately been men's affair,
|
| men's gift--we remained therewith "among ourselves"; and in the end,
|
| in view of all that women write about "woman," we may well have
|
| considerable doubt as to whether woman really DESIRES enlightenment
|
| about herself--and CAN desire it. If woman does not thereby seek a new
|
| ORNAMENT for herself--I believe ornamentation belongs to the eternally
|
| feminine?--why, then, she wishes to make herself feared: perhaps she
|
| thereby wishes to get the mastery. But she does not want truth--what
|
| does woman care for truth? From the very first, nothing is more foreign,
|
| more repugnant, or more hostile to woman than truth--her great art is
|
| falsehood, her chief concern is appearance and beauty. Let us confess
|
| it, we men: we honour and love this very art and this very instinct in
|
| woman: we who have the hard task, and for our recreation gladly seek the
|
| company of beings under whose hands, glances, and delicate follies, our
|
| seriousness, our gravity, and profundity appear almost like follies to
|
| us. Finally, I ask the question: Did a woman herself ever acknowledge
|
| profundity in a woman's mind, or justice in a woman's heart? And is it
|
| not true that on the whole "woman" has hitherto been most despised by
|
| woman herself, and not at all by us?--We men desire that woman should
|
| not continue to compromise herself by enlightening us; just as it was
|
| man's care and the consideration for woman, when the church decreed:
|
| mulier taceat in ecclesia. It was to the benefit of woman when Napoleon
|
| gave the too eloquent Madame de Stael to understand: mulier taceat in
|
| politicis!--and in my opinion, he is a true friend of woman who calls
|
| out to women today: mulier taceat de mulierel.
|
|
|
| 233. It betrays corruption of the instincts--apart from the fact that
|
| it betrays bad taste--when a woman refers to Madame Roland, or Madame de
|
| Stael, or Monsieur George Sand, as though something were proved thereby
|
| in favour of "woman as she is." Among men, these are the three comical
|
| women as they are--nothing more!--and just the best involuntary
|
| counter-arguments against feminine emancipation and autonomy.
|
|
|
| 234. Stupidity in the kitchen; woman as cook; the terrible
|
| thoughtlessness with which the feeding of the family and the master of
|
| the house is managed! Woman does not understand what food means, and she
|
| insists on being cook! If woman had been a thinking creature, she should
|
| certainly, as cook for thousands of years, have discovered the most
|
| important physiological facts, and should likewise have got possession
|
| of the healing art! Through bad female cooks--through the entire lack
|
| of reason in the kitchen--the development of mankind has been longest
|
| retarded and most interfered with: even today matters are very little
|
| better. A word to High School girls.
|
|
|
| 235. There are turns and casts of fancy, there are sentences, little
|
| handfuls of words, in which a whole culture, a whole society suddenly
|
| crystallises itself. Among these is the incidental remark of Madame de
|
| Lambert to her son: "MON AMI, NE VOUS PERMETTEZ JAMAIS QUE DES FOLIES,
|
| QUI VOUS FERONT GRAND PLAISIR"--the motherliest and wisest remark, by
|
| the way, that was ever addressed to a son.
|
|
|
| 236. I have no doubt that every noble woman will oppose what Dante and
|
| Goethe believed about woman--the former when he sang, "ELLA GUARDAVA
|
| SUSO, ED IO IN LEI," and the latter when he interpreted it, "the
|
| eternally feminine draws us ALOFT"; for THIS is just what she believes
|
| of the eternally masculine.
|
|
|
| 237.
|
|
|
| SEVEN APOPHTHEGMS FOR WOMEN
|
|
|
| How the longest ennui flees, When a man comes to our knees!
|
|
|
| Age, alas! and science staid, Furnish even weak virtue aid.
|
|
|
| Sombre garb and silence meet: Dress for every dame--discreet.
|
|
|
| Whom I thank when in my bliss? God!--and my good tailoress!
|
|
|
| Young, a flower-decked cavern home; Old, a dragon thence doth roam.
|
|
|
| Noble title, leg that's fine, Man as well: Oh, were HE mine!
|
|
|
| Speech in brief and sense in mass--Slippery for the jenny-ass!
|
|
|
| 237A. Woman has hitherto been treated by men like birds, which, losing
|
| their way, have come down among them from an elevation: as something
|
| delicate, fragile, wild, strange, sweet, and animating--but as something
|
| also which must be cooped up to prevent it flying away.
|
|
|
| 238. To be mistaken in the fundamental problem of "man and woman," to
|
| deny here the profoundest antagonism and the necessity for an eternally
|
| hostile tension, to dream here perhaps of equal rights, equal
|
| training, equal claims and obligations: that is a TYPICAL sign of
|
| shallow-mindedness; and a thinker who has proved himself shallow at
|
| this dangerous spot--shallow in instinct!--may generally be regarded as
|
| suspicious, nay more, as betrayed, as discovered; he will probably prove
|
| too "short" for all fundamental questions of life, future as well as
|
| present, and will be unable to descend into ANY of the depths. On the
|
| other hand, a man who has depth of spirit as well as of desires, and
|
| has also the depth of benevolence which is capable of severity and
|
| harshness, and easily confounded with them, can only think of woman as
|
| ORIENTALS do: he must conceive of her as a possession, as confinable
|
| property, as a being predestined for service and accomplishing her
|
| mission therein--he must take his stand in this matter upon the immense
|
| rationality of Asia, upon the superiority of the instinct of Asia, as
|
| the Greeks did formerly; those best heirs and scholars of Asia--who,
|
| as is well known, with their INCREASING culture and amplitude of power,
|
| from Homer to the time of Pericles, became gradually STRICTER towards
|
| woman, in short, more Oriental. HOW necessary, HOW logical, even HOW
|
| humanely desirable this was, let us consider for ourselves!
|
|
|
| 239. The weaker sex has in no previous age been treated with so
|
| much respect by men as at present--this belongs to the tendency and
|
| fundamental taste of democracy, in the same way as disrespectfulness to
|
| old age--what wonder is it that abuse should be immediately made of
|
| this respect? They want more, they learn to make claims, the tribute
|
| of respect is at last felt to be well-nigh galling; rivalry for rights,
|
| indeed actual strife itself, would be preferred: in a word, woman is
|
| losing modesty. And let us immediately add that she is also losing
|
| taste. She is unlearning to FEAR man: but the woman who "unlearns to
|
| fear" sacrifices her most womanly instincts. That woman should venture
|
| forward when the fear-inspiring quality in man--or more definitely,
|
| the MAN in man--is no longer either desired or fully developed, is
|
| reasonable enough and also intelligible enough; what is more difficult
|
| to understand is that precisely thereby--woman deteriorates. This is
|
| what is happening nowadays: let us not deceive ourselves about it!
|
| Wherever the industrial spirit has triumphed over the military
|
| and aristocratic spirit, woman strives for the economic and legal
|
| independence of a clerk: "woman as clerkess" is inscribed on the portal
|
| of the modern society which is in course of formation. While she
|
| thus appropriates new rights, aspires to be "master," and inscribes
|
| "progress" of woman on her flags and banners, the very opposite realises
|
| itself with terrible obviousness: WOMAN RETROGRADES. Since the French
|
| Revolution the influence of woman in Europe has DECLINED in proportion
|
| as she has increased her rights and claims; and the "emancipation of
|
| woman," insofar as it is desired and demanded by women themselves (and
|
| not only by masculine shallow-pates), thus proves to be a remarkable
|
| symptom of the increased weakening and deadening of the most womanly
|
| instincts. There is STUPIDITY in this movement, an almost masculine
|
| stupidity, of which a well-reared woman--who is always a sensible
|
| woman--might be heartily ashamed. To lose the intuition as to the ground
|
| upon which she can most surely achieve victory; to neglect exercise in
|
| the use of her proper weapons; to let-herself-go before man, perhaps
|
| even "to the book," where formerly she kept herself in control and in
|
| refined, artful humility; to neutralize with her virtuous audacity man's
|
| faith in a VEILED, fundamentally different ideal in woman, something
|
| eternally, necessarily feminine; to emphatically and loquaciously
|
| dissuade man from the idea that woman must be preserved, cared for,
|
| protected, and indulged, like some delicate, strangely wild, and
|
| often pleasant domestic animal; the clumsy and indignant collection of
|
| everything of the nature of servitude and bondage which the position of
|
| woman in the hitherto existing order of society has entailed and still
|
| entails (as though slavery were a counter-argument, and not rather a
|
| condition of every higher culture, of every elevation of culture):--what
|
| does all this betoken, if not a disintegration of womanly instincts,
|
| a defeminising? Certainly, there are enough of idiotic friends and
|
| corrupters of woman among the learned asses of the masculine sex, who
|
| advise woman to defeminize herself in this manner, and to imitate
|
| all the stupidities from which "man" in Europe, European "manliness,"
|
| suffers,--who would like to lower woman to "general culture," indeed
|
| even to newspaper reading and meddling with politics. Here and there
|
| they wish even to make women into free spirits and literary workers: as
|
| though a woman without piety would not be something perfectly obnoxious
|
| or ludicrous to a profound and godless man;--almost everywhere her
|
| nerves are being ruined by the most morbid and dangerous kind of music
|
| (our latest German music), and she is daily being made more hysterical
|
| and more incapable of fulfilling her first and last function, that of
|
| bearing robust children. They wish to "cultivate" her in general still
|
| more, and intend, as they say, to make the "weaker sex" STRONG by
|
| culture: as if history did not teach in the most emphatic manner that
|
| the "cultivating" of mankind and his weakening--that is to say, the
|
| weakening, dissipating, and languishing of his FORCE OF WILL--have
|
| always kept pace with one another, and that the most powerful and
|
| influential women in the world (and lastly, the mother of Napoleon)
|
| had just to thank their force of will--and not their schoolmasters--for
|
| their power and ascendancy over men. That which inspires respect
|
| in woman, and often enough fear also, is her NATURE, which is more
|
| "natural" than that of man, her genuine, carnivora-like, cunning
|
| flexibility, her tiger-claws beneath the glove, her NAIVETE in egoism,
|
| her untrainableness and innate wildness, the incomprehensibleness,
|
| extent, and deviation of her desires and virtues. That which, in spite
|
| of fear, excites one's sympathy for the dangerous and beautiful cat,
|
| "woman," is that she seems more afflicted, more vulnerable, more
|
| necessitous of love, and more condemned to disillusionment than any
|
| other creature. Fear and sympathy it is with these feelings that man has
|
| hitherto stood in the presence of woman, always with one foot already in
|
| tragedy, which rends while it delights--What? And all that is now to
|
| be at an end? And the DISENCHANTMENT of woman is in progress? The
|
| tediousness of woman is slowly evolving? Oh Europe! Europe! We know
|
| the horned animal which was always most attractive to thee, from which
|
| danger is ever again threatening thee! Thy old fable might once more
|
| become "history"--an immense stupidity might once again overmaster
|
| thee and carry thee away! And no God concealed beneath it--no! only an
|
| "idea," a "modern idea"!
|
|
|
| CHAPTER VIII. PEOPLES AND COUNTRIES
|
|
|
| 240. I HEARD, once again for the first time, Richard Wagner's overture
|
| to the Mastersinger: it is a piece of magnificent, gorgeous, heavy,
|
| latter-day art, which has the pride to presuppose two centuries of music
|
| as still living, in order that it may be understood:--it is an honour
|
| to Germans that such a pride did not miscalculate! What flavours
|
| and forces, what seasons and climes do we not find mingled in it! It
|
| impresses us at one time as ancient, at another time as foreign, bitter,
|
| and too modern, it is as arbitrary as it is pompously traditional, it
|
| is not infrequently roguish, still oftener rough and coarse--it has fire
|
| and courage, and at the same time the loose, dun-coloured skin of fruits
|
| which ripen too late. It flows broad and full: and suddenly there is a
|
| moment of inexplicable hesitation, like a gap that opens between cause
|
| and effect, an oppression that makes us dream, almost a nightmare; but
|
| already it broadens and widens anew, the old stream of delight--the most
|
| manifold delight,--of old and new happiness; including ESPECIALLY
|
| the joy of the artist in himself, which he refuses to conceal, his
|
| astonished, happy cognizance of his mastery of the expedients here
|
| employed, the new, newly acquired, imperfectly tested expedients of art
|
| which he apparently betrays to us. All in all, however, no beauty, no
|
| South, nothing of the delicate southern clearness of the sky, nothing
|
| of grace, no dance, hardly a will to logic; a certain clumsiness even,
|
| which is also emphasized, as though the artist wished to say to us: "It
|
| is part of my intention"; a cumbersome drapery, something arbitrarily
|
| barbaric and ceremonious, a flirring of learned and venerable conceits
|
| and witticisms; something German in the best and worst sense of
|
| the word, something in the German style, manifold, formless, and
|
| inexhaustible; a certain German potency and super-plenitude of
|
| soul, which is not afraid to hide itself under the RAFFINEMENTS of
|
| decadence--which, perhaps, feels itself most at ease there; a real,
|
| genuine token of the German soul, which is at the same time young and
|
| aged, too ripe and yet still too rich in futurity. This kind of music
|
| expresses best what I think of the Germans: they belong to the day
|
| before yesterday and the day after tomorrow--THEY HAVE AS YET NO TODAY.
|
|
|
| 241. We "good Europeans," we also have hours when we allow ourselves a
|
| warm-hearted patriotism, a plunge and relapse into old loves and narrow
|
| views--I have just given an example of it--hours of national excitement,
|
| of patriotic anguish, and all other sorts of old-fashioned floods of
|
| sentiment. Duller spirits may perhaps only get done with what confines
|
| its operations in us to hours and plays itself out in hours--in a
|
| considerable time: some in half a year, others in half a lifetime,
|
| according to the speed and strength with which they digest and "change
|
| their material." Indeed, I could think of sluggish, hesitating races,
|
| which even in our rapidly moving Europe, would require half a century
|
| ere they could surmount such atavistic attacks of patriotism and
|
| soil-attachment, and return once more to reason, that is to say, to
|
| "good Europeanism." And while digressing on this possibility, I
|
| happen to become an ear-witness of a conversation between two old
|
| patriots--they were evidently both hard of hearing and consequently
|
| spoke all the louder. "HE has as much, and knows as much, philosophy as
|
| a peasant or a corps-student," said the one--"he is still innocent. But
|
| what does that matter nowadays! It is the age of the masses: they lie on
|
| their belly before everything that is massive. And so also in politicis.
|
| A statesman who rears up for them a new Tower of Babel, some monstrosity
|
| of empire and power, they call 'great'--what does it matter that we more
|
| prudent and conservative ones do not meanwhile give up the old belief
|
| that it is only the great thought that gives greatness to an action or
|
| affair. Supposing a statesman were to bring his people into the position
|
| of being obliged henceforth to practise 'high politics,' for which they
|
| were by nature badly endowed and prepared, so that they would have
|
| to sacrifice their old and reliable virtues, out of love to a new and
|
| doubtful mediocrity;--supposing a statesman were to condemn his people
|
| generally to 'practise politics,' when they have hitherto had something
|
| better to do and think about, and when in the depths of their souls
|
| they have been unable to free themselves from a prudent loathing of
|
| the restlessness, emptiness, and noisy wranglings of the essentially
|
| politics-practising nations;--supposing such a statesman were to
|
| stimulate the slumbering passions and avidities of his people, were to
|
| make a stigma out of their former diffidence and delight in aloofness,
|
| an offence out of their exoticism and hidden permanency, were to
|
| depreciate their most radical proclivities, subvert their consciences,
|
| make their minds narrow, and their tastes 'national'--what! a statesman
|
| who should do all this, which his people would have to do penance for
|
| throughout their whole future, if they had a future, such a statesman
|
| would be GREAT, would he?"--"Undoubtedly!" replied the other old patriot
|
| vehemently, "otherwise he COULD NOT have done it! It was mad perhaps to
|
| wish such a thing! But perhaps everything great has been just as mad
|
| at its commencement!"--"Misuse of words!" cried his interlocutor,
|
| contradictorily--"strong! strong! Strong and mad! NOT great!"--The old
|
| men had obviously become heated as they thus shouted their "truths" in
|
| each other's faces, but I, in my happiness and apartness, considered how
|
| soon a stronger one may become master of the strong, and also that
|
| there is a compensation for the intellectual superficialising of a
|
| nation--namely, in the deepening of another.
|
|
|
| 242. Whether we call it "civilization," or "humanising," or "progress,"
|
| which now distinguishes the European, whether we call it simply, without
|
| praise or blame, by the political formula the DEMOCRATIC movement in
|
| Europe--behind all the moral and political foregrounds pointed to by
|
| such formulas, an immense PHYSIOLOGICAL PROCESS goes on, which is ever
|
| extending the process of the assimilation of Europeans, their
|
| increasing detachment from the conditions under which, climatically and
|
| hereditarily, united races originate, their increasing independence of
|
| every definite milieu, that for centuries would fain inscribe itself
|
| with equal demands on soul and body,--that is to say, the slow emergence
|
| of an essentially SUPER-NATIONAL and nomadic species of man, who
|
| possesses, physiologically speaking, a maximum of the art and power
|
| of adaptation as his typical distinction. This process of the EVOLVING
|
| EUROPEAN, which can be retarded in its TEMPO by great relapses, but
|
| will perhaps just gain and grow thereby in vehemence and depth--the
|
| still-raging storm and stress of "national sentiment" pertains to it,
|
| and also the anarchism which is appearing at present--this process
|
| will probably arrive at results on which its naive propagators and
|
| panegyrists, the apostles of "modern ideas," would least care to reckon.
|
| The same new conditions under which on an average a levelling and
|
| mediocrising of man will take place--a useful, industrious, variously
|
| serviceable, and clever gregarious man--are in the highest degree
|
| suitable to give rise to exceptional men of the most dangerous and
|
| attractive qualities. For, while the capacity for adaptation, which is
|
| every day trying changing conditions, and begins a new work with every
|
| generation, almost with every decade, makes the POWERFULNESS of the type
|
| impossible; while the collective impression of such future Europeans
|
| will probably be that of numerous, talkative, weak-willed, and very
|
| handy workmen who REQUIRE a master, a commander, as they require their
|
| daily bread; while, therefore, the democratising of Europe will tend to
|
| the production of a type prepared for SLAVERY in the most subtle
|
| sense of the term: the STRONG man will necessarily in individual and
|
| exceptional cases, become stronger and richer than he has perhaps ever
|
| been before--owing to the unprejudicedness of his schooling, owing to
|
| the immense variety of practice, art, and disguise. I meant to say
|
| that the democratising of Europe is at the same time an involuntary
|
| arrangement for the rearing of TYRANTS--taking the word in all its
|
| meanings, even in its most spiritual sense.
|
|
|
| 243. I hear with pleasure that our sun is moving rapidly towards the
|
| constellation Hercules: and I hope that the men on this earth will do
|
| like the sun. And we foremost, we good Europeans!
|
|
|
| 244. There was a time when it was customary to call Germans "deep"
|
| by way of distinction; but now that the most successful type of new
|
| Germanism is covetous of quite other honours, and perhaps misses
|
| "smartness" in all that has depth, it is almost opportune and patriotic
|
| to doubt whether we did not formerly deceive ourselves with that
|
| commendation: in short, whether German depth is not at bottom something
|
| different and worse--and something from which, thank God, we are on the
|
| point of successfully ridding ourselves. Let us try, then, to relearn
|
| with regard to German depth; the only thing necessary for the purpose is
|
| a little vivisection of the German soul.--The German soul is above all
|
| manifold, varied in its source, aggregated and super-imposed, rather
|
| than actually built: this is owing to its origin. A German who would
|
| embolden himself to assert: "Two souls, alas, dwell in my breast," would
|
| make a bad guess at the truth, or, more correctly, he would come far
|
| short of the truth about the number of souls. As a people made up of
|
| the most extraordinary mixing and mingling of races, perhaps even with a
|
| preponderance of the pre-Aryan element as the "people of the centre" in
|
| every sense of the term, the Germans are more intangible, more ample,
|
| more contradictory, more unknown, more incalculable, more surprising,
|
| and even more terrifying than other peoples are to themselves:--they
|
| escape DEFINITION, and are thereby alone the despair of the French. It
|
| IS characteristic of the Germans that the question: "What is German?"
|
| never dies out among them. Kotzebue certainly knew his Germans well
|
| enough: "We are known," they cried jubilantly to him--but Sand also
|
| thought he knew them. Jean Paul knew what he was doing when he declared
|
| himself incensed at Fichte's lying but patriotic flatteries and
|
| exaggerations,--but it is probable that Goethe thought differently about
|
| Germans from Jean Paul, even though he acknowledged him to be right with
|
| regard to Fichte. It is a question what Goethe really thought about the
|
| Germans?--But about many things around him he never spoke explicitly,
|
| and all his life he knew how to keep an astute silence--probably he
|
| had good reason for it. It is certain that it was not the "Wars of
|
| Independence" that made him look up more joyfully, any more than it was
|
| the French Revolution,--the event on account of which he RECONSTRUCTED
|
| his "Faust," and indeed the whole problem of "man," was the appearance
|
| of Napoleon. There are words of Goethe in which he condemns with
|
| impatient severity, as from a foreign land, that which Germans take a
|
| pride in, he once defined the famous German turn of mind as "Indulgence
|
| towards its own and others' weaknesses." Was he wrong? it is
|
| characteristic of Germans that one is seldom entirely wrong about them.
|
| The German soul has passages and galleries in it, there are caves,
|
| hiding-places, and dungeons therein, its disorder has much of the charm
|
| of the mysterious, the German is well acquainted with the bypaths to
|
| chaos. And as everything loves its symbol, so the German loves the
|
| clouds and all that is obscure, evolving, crepuscular, damp, and
|
| shrouded, it seems to him that everything uncertain, undeveloped,
|
| self-displacing, and growing is "deep". The German himself does not
|
| EXIST, he is BECOMING, he is "developing himself". "Development" is
|
| therefore the essentially German discovery and hit in the great domain
|
| of philosophical formulas,--a ruling idea, which, together with German
|
| beer and German music, is labouring to Germanise all Europe. Foreigners
|
| are astonished and attracted by the riddles which the conflicting nature
|
| at the basis of the German soul propounds to them (riddles which
|
| Hegel systematised and Richard Wagner has in the end set to music).
|
| "Good-natured and spiteful"--such a juxtaposition, preposterous in the
|
| case of every other people, is unfortunately only too often justified
|
| in Germany one has only to live for a while among Swabians to know this!
|
| The clumsiness of the German scholar and his social distastefulness
|
| agree alarmingly well with his physical rope-dancing and nimble
|
| boldness, of which all the Gods have learnt to be afraid. If any one
|
| wishes to see the "German soul" demonstrated ad oculos, let him
|
| only look at German taste, at German arts and manners what boorish
|
| indifference to "taste"! How the noblest and the commonest stand there
|
| in juxtaposition! How disorderly and how rich is the whole constitution
|
| of this soul! The German DRAGS at his soul, he drags at everything he
|
| experiences. He digests his events badly; he never gets "done"
|
| with them; and German depth is often only a difficult, hesitating
|
| "digestion." And just as all chronic invalids, all dyspeptics like what
|
| is convenient, so the German loves "frankness" and "honesty"; it is
|
| so CONVENIENT to be frank and honest!--This confidingness, this
|
| complaisance, this showing-the-cards of German HONESTY, is probably the
|
| most dangerous and most successful disguise which the German is up to
|
| nowadays: it is his proper Mephistophelean art; with this he can "still
|
| achieve much"! The German lets himself go, and thereby gazes with
|
| faithful, blue, empty German eyes--and other countries immediately
|
| confound him with his dressing-gown!--I meant to say that, let "German
|
| depth" be what it will--among ourselves alone we perhaps take the
|
| liberty to laugh at it--we shall do well to continue henceforth to
|
| honour its appearance and good name, and not barter away too cheaply our
|
| old reputation as a people of depth for Prussian "smartness," and
|
| Berlin wit and sand. It is wise for a people to pose, and LET itself
|
| be regarded, as profound, clumsy, good-natured, honest, and foolish: it
|
| might even be--profound to do so! Finally, we should do honour to
|
| our name--we are not called the "TIUSCHE VOLK" (deceptive people) for
|
| nothing....
|
|
|
| 245. The "good old" time is past, it sang itself out in Mozart--how
|
| happy are WE that his ROCOCO still speaks to us, that his "good
|
| company," his tender enthusiasm, his childish delight in the Chinese and
|
| its flourishes, his courtesy of heart, his longing for the elegant, the
|
| amorous, the tripping, the tearful, and his belief in the South, can
|
| still appeal to SOMETHING LEFT in us! Ah, some time or other it will be
|
| over with it!--but who can doubt that it will be over still sooner with
|
| the intelligence and taste for Beethoven! For he was only the last echo
|
| of a break and transition in style, and NOT, like Mozart, the last echo
|
| of a great European taste which had existed for centuries. Beethoven
|
| is the intermediate event between an old mellow soul that is constantly
|
| breaking down, and a future over-young soul that is always COMING;
|
| there is spread over his music the twilight of eternal loss and eternal
|
| extravagant hope,--the same light in which Europe was bathed when it
|
| dreamed with Rousseau, when it danced round the Tree of Liberty of the
|
| Revolution, and finally almost fell down in adoration before Napoleon.
|
| But how rapidly does THIS very sentiment now pale, how difficult
|
| nowadays is even the APPREHENSION of this sentiment, how strangely does
|
| the language of Rousseau, Schiller, Shelley, and Byron sound to our ear,
|
| in whom COLLECTIVELY the same fate of Europe was able to SPEAK, which
|
| knew how to SING in Beethoven!--Whatever German music came afterwards,
|
| belongs to Romanticism, that is to say, to a movement which,
|
| historically considered, was still shorter, more fleeting, and more
|
| superficial than that great interlude, the transition of Europe from
|
| Rousseau to Napoleon, and to the rise of democracy. Weber--but what do
|
| WE care nowadays for "Freischutz" and "Oberon"! Or Marschner's "Hans
|
| Heiling" and "Vampyre"! Or even Wagner's "Tannhauser"! That is extinct,
|
| although not yet forgotten music. This whole music of Romanticism,
|
| besides, was not noble enough, was not musical enough, to maintain its
|
| position anywhere but in the theatre and before the masses; from the
|
| beginning it was second-rate music, which was little thought of by
|
| genuine musicians. It was different with Felix Mendelssohn, that halcyon
|
| master, who, on account of his lighter, purer, happier soul, quickly
|
| acquired admiration, and was equally quickly forgotten: as the beautiful
|
| EPISODE of German music. But with regard to Robert Schumann, who took
|
| things seriously, and has been taken seriously from the first--he
|
| was the last that founded a school,--do we not now regard it as a
|
| satisfaction, a relief, a deliverance, that this very Romanticism
|
| of Schumann's has been surmounted? Schumann, fleeing into the "Saxon
|
| Switzerland" of his soul, with a half Werther-like, half Jean-Paul-like
|
| nature (assuredly not like Beethoven! assuredly not like Byron!)--his
|
| MANFRED music is a mistake and a misunderstanding to the extent of
|
| injustice; Schumann, with his taste, which was fundamentally a PETTY
|
| taste (that is to say, a dangerous propensity--doubly dangerous among
|
| Germans--for quiet lyricism and intoxication of the feelings), going
|
| constantly apart, timidly withdrawing and retiring, a noble weakling who
|
| revelled in nothing but anonymous joy and sorrow, from the beginning
|
| a sort of girl and NOLI ME TANGERE--this Schumann was already merely a
|
| GERMAN event in music, and no longer a European event, as Beethoven had
|
| been, as in a still greater degree Mozart had been; with Schumann German
|
| music was threatened with its greatest danger, that of LOSING THE VOICE
|
| FOR THE SOUL OF EUROPE and sinking into a merely national affair.
|
|
|
| 246. What a torture are books written in German to a reader who has a
|
| THIRD ear! How indignantly he stands beside the slowly turning swamp
|
| of sounds without tune and rhythms without dance, which Germans call
|
| a "book"! And even the German who READS books! How lazily, how
|
| reluctantly, how badly he reads! How many Germans know, and consider it
|
| obligatory to know, that there is ART in every good sentence--art which
|
| must be divined, if the sentence is to be understood! If there is a
|
| misunderstanding about its TEMPO, for instance, the sentence itself
|
| is misunderstood! That one must not be doubtful about the
|
| rhythm-determining syllables, that one should feel the breaking of the
|
| too-rigid symmetry as intentional and as a charm, that one should lend a
|
| fine and patient ear to every STACCATO and every RUBATO, that one should
|
| divine the sense in the sequence of the vowels and diphthongs, and how
|
| delicately and richly they can be tinted and retinted in the order of
|
| their arrangement--who among book-reading Germans is complaisant enough
|
| to recognize such duties and requirements, and to listen to so much art
|
| and intention in language? After all, one just "has no ear for it";
|
| and so the most marked contrasts of style are not heard, and the most
|
| delicate artistry is as it were SQUANDERED on the deaf.--These were my
|
| thoughts when I noticed how clumsily and unintuitively two masters in
|
| the art of prose-writing have been confounded: one, whose words drop
|
| down hesitatingly and coldly, as from the roof of a damp cave--he counts
|
| on their dull sound and echo; and another who manipulates his language
|
| like a flexible sword, and from his arm down into his toes feels the
|
| dangerous bliss of the quivering, over-sharp blade, which wishes to
|
| bite, hiss, and cut.
|
|
|
| 247. How little the German style has to do with harmony and with the
|
| ear, is shown by the fact that precisely our good musicians themselves
|
| write badly. The German does not read aloud, he does not read for the
|
| ear, but only with his eyes; he has put his ears away in the drawer for
|
| the time. In antiquity when a man read--which was seldom enough--he read
|
| something to himself, and in a loud voice; they were surprised when
|
| any one read silently, and sought secretly the reason of it. In a
|
| loud voice: that is to say, with all the swellings, inflections, and
|
| variations of key and changes of TEMPO, in which the ancient PUBLIC
|
| world took delight. The laws of the written style were then the same
|
| as those of the spoken style; and these laws depended partly on the
|
| surprising development and refined requirements of the ear and larynx;
|
| partly on the strength, endurance, and power of the ancient lungs. In
|
| the ancient sense, a period is above all a physiological whole, inasmuch
|
| as it is comprised in one breath. Such periods as occur in Demosthenes
|
| and Cicero, swelling twice and sinking twice, and all in one breath,
|
| were pleasures to the men of ANTIQUITY, who knew by their own schooling
|
| how to appreciate the virtue therein, the rareness and the difficulty
|
| in the deliverance of such a period;--WE have really no right to the
|
| BIG period, we modern men, who are short of breath in every sense! Those
|
| ancients, indeed, were all of them dilettanti in speaking, consequently
|
| connoisseurs, consequently critics--they thus brought their orators to
|
| the highest pitch; in the same manner as in the last century, when all
|
| Italian ladies and gentlemen knew how to sing, the virtuosoship of song
|
| (and with it also the art of melody) reached its elevation. In Germany,
|
| however (until quite recently when a kind of platform eloquence began
|
| shyly and awkwardly enough to flutter its young wings), there was
|
| properly speaking only one kind of public and APPROXIMATELY artistical
|
| discourse--that delivered from the pulpit. The preacher was the only one
|
| in Germany who knew the weight of a syllable or a word, in what manner a
|
| sentence strikes, springs, rushes, flows, and comes to a close; he alone
|
| had a conscience in his ears, often enough a bad conscience: for reasons
|
| are not lacking why proficiency in oratory should be especially seldom
|
| attained by a German, or almost always too late. The masterpiece of
|
| German prose is therefore with good reason the masterpiece of its
|
| greatest preacher: the BIBLE has hitherto been the best German
|
| book. Compared with Luther's Bible, almost everything else is merely
|
| "literature"--something which has not grown in Germany, and therefore
|
| has not taken and does not take root in German hearts, as the Bible has
|
| done.
|
|
|
| 248. There are two kinds of geniuses: one which above all engenders and
|
| seeks to engender, and another which willingly lets itself be fructified
|
| and brings forth. And similarly, among the gifted nations, there are
|
| those on whom the woman's problem of pregnancy has devolved, and the
|
| secret task of forming, maturing, and perfecting--the Greeks, for
|
| instance, were a nation of this kind, and so are the French; and others
|
| which have to fructify and become the cause of new modes of life--like
|
| the Jews, the Romans, and, in all modesty be it asked: like the
|
| Germans?--nations tortured and enraptured by unknown fevers and
|
| irresistibly forced out of themselves, amorous and longing for
|
| foreign races (for such as "let themselves be fructified"), and withal
|
| imperious, like everything conscious of being full of generative force,
|
| and consequently empowered "by the grace of God." These two kinds of
|
| geniuses seek each other like man and woman; but they also misunderstand
|
| each other--like man and woman.
|
|
|
| 249. Every nation has its own "Tartuffery," and calls that its
|
| virtue.--One does not know--cannot know, the best that is in one.
|
|
|
| 250. What Europe owes to the Jews?--Many things, good and bad, and above
|
| all one thing of the nature both of the best and the worst: the grand
|
| style in morality, the fearfulness and majesty of infinite demands, of
|
| infinite significations, the whole Romanticism and sublimity of moral
|
| questionableness--and consequently just the most attractive, ensnaring,
|
| and exquisite element in those iridescences and allurements to life,
|
| in the aftersheen of which the sky of our European culture, its evening
|
| sky, now glows--perhaps glows out. For this, we artists among the
|
| spectators and philosophers, are--grateful to the Jews.
|
|
|
| 251. It must be taken into the bargain, if various clouds and
|
| disturbances--in short, slight attacks of stupidity--pass over the
|
| spirit of a people that suffers and WANTS to suffer from national
|
| nervous fever and political ambition: for instance, among present-day
|
| Germans there is alternately the anti-French folly, the anti-Semitic
|
| folly, the anti-Polish folly, the Christian-romantic folly, the
|
| Wagnerian folly, the Teutonic folly, the Prussian folly (just look at
|
| those poor historians, the Sybels and Treitschkes, and their closely
|
| bandaged heads), and whatever else these little obscurations of the
|
| German spirit and conscience may be called. May it be forgiven me that
|
| I, too, when on a short daring sojourn on very infected ground, did not
|
| remain wholly exempt from the disease, but like every one else, began
|
| to entertain thoughts about matters which did not concern me--the first
|
| symptom of political infection. About the Jews, for instance, listen
|
| to the following:--I have never yet met a German who was favourably
|
| inclined to the Jews; and however decided the repudiation of actual
|
| anti-Semitism may be on the part of all prudent and political men, this
|
| prudence and policy is not perhaps directed against the nature of the
|
| sentiment itself, but only against its dangerous excess, and especially
|
| against the distasteful and infamous expression of this excess of
|
| sentiment;--on this point we must not deceive ourselves. That Germany
|
| has amply SUFFICIENT Jews, that the German stomach, the German blood,
|
| has difficulty (and will long have difficulty) in disposing only of this
|
| quantity of "Jew"--as the Italian, the Frenchman, and the Englishman
|
| have done by means of a stronger digestion:--that is the unmistakable
|
| declaration and language of a general instinct, to which one must listen
|
| and according to which one must act. "Let no more Jews come in! And shut
|
| the doors, especially towards the East (also towards Austria)!"--thus
|
| commands the instinct of a people whose nature is still feeble and
|
| uncertain, so that it could be easily wiped out, easily extinguished, by
|
| a stronger race. The Jews, however, are beyond all doubt the strongest,
|
| toughest, and purest race at present living in Europe, they know how
|
| to succeed even under the worst conditions (in fact better than under
|
| favourable ones), by means of virtues of some sort, which one would like
|
| nowadays to label as vices--owing above all to a resolute faith which
|
| does not need to be ashamed before "modern ideas", they alter only,
|
| WHEN they do alter, in the same way that the Russian Empire makes
|
| its conquest--as an empire that has plenty of time and is not of
|
| yesterday--namely, according to the principle, "as slowly as possible"!
|
| A thinker who has the future of Europe at heart, will, in all his
|
| perspectives concerning the future, calculate upon the Jews, as he
|
| will calculate upon the Russians, as above all the surest and likeliest
|
| factors in the great play and battle of forces. That which is at present
|
| called a "nation" in Europe, and is really rather a RES FACTA than NATA
|
| (indeed, sometimes confusingly similar to a RES FICTA ET PICTA), is in
|
| every case something evolving, young, easily displaced, and not yet
|
| a race, much less such a race AERE PERENNUS, as the Jews are such
|
| "nations" should most carefully avoid all hot-headed rivalry and
|
| hostility! It is certain that the Jews, if they desired--or if they
|
| were driven to it, as the anti-Semites seem to wish--COULD now have the
|
| ascendancy, nay, literally the supremacy, over Europe, that they are NOT
|
| working and planning for that end is equally certain. Meanwhile, they
|
| rather wish and desire, even somewhat importunely, to be insorbed and
|
| absorbed by Europe, they long to be finally settled, authorized, and
|
| respected somewhere, and wish to put an end to the nomadic life, to the
|
| "wandering Jew",--and one should certainly take account of this impulse
|
| and tendency, and MAKE ADVANCES to it (it possibly betokens a mitigation
|
| of the Jewish instincts) for which purpose it would perhaps be useful
|
| and fair to banish the anti-Semitic bawlers out of the country. One
|
| should make advances with all prudence, and with selection, pretty much
|
| as the English nobility do It stands to reason that the more powerful
|
| and strongly marked types of new Germanism could enter into relation
|
| with the Jews with the least hesitation, for instance, the nobleman
|
| officer from the Prussian border it would be interesting in many ways
|
| to see whether the genius for money and patience (and especially some
|
| intellect and intellectuality--sadly lacking in the place referred to)
|
| could not in addition be annexed and trained to the hereditary art of
|
| commanding and obeying--for both of which the country in question has
|
| now a classic reputation But here it is expedient to break off my festal
|
| discourse and my sprightly Teutonomania for I have already reached my
|
| SERIOUS TOPIC, the "European problem," as I understand it, the rearing
|
| of a new ruling caste for Europe.
|
|
|
| 252. They are not a philosophical race--the English: Bacon represents an
|
| ATTACK on the philosophical spirit generally, Hobbes, Hume, and Locke,
|
| an abasement, and a depreciation of the idea of a "philosopher" for more
|
| than a century. It was AGAINST Hume that Kant uprose and raised himself;
|
| it was Locke of whom Schelling RIGHTLY said, "JE MEPRISE LOCKE"; in the
|
| struggle against the English mechanical stultification of the world,
|
| Hegel and Schopenhauer (along with Goethe) were of one accord; the
|
| two hostile brother-geniuses in philosophy, who pushed in different
|
| directions towards the opposite poles of German thought, and thereby
|
| wronged each other as only brothers will do.--What is lacking in
|
| England, and has always been lacking, that half-actor and rhetorician
|
| knew well enough, the absurd muddle-head, Carlyle, who sought to conceal
|
| under passionate grimaces what he knew about himself: namely, what was
|
| LACKING in Carlyle--real POWER of intellect, real DEPTH of intellectual
|
| perception, in short, philosophy. It is characteristic of such an
|
| unphilosophical race to hold on firmly to Christianity--they NEED its
|
| discipline for "moralizing" and humanizing. The Englishman, more gloomy,
|
| sensual, headstrong, and brutal than the German--is for that very
|
| reason, as the baser of the two, also the most pious: he has all the
|
| MORE NEED of Christianity. To finer nostrils, this English Christianity
|
| itself has still a characteristic English taint of spleen and alcoholic
|
| excess, for which, owing to good reasons, it is used as an antidote--the
|
| finer poison to neutralize the coarser: a finer form of poisoning is
|
| in fact a step in advance with coarse-mannered people, a step towards
|
| spiritualization. The English coarseness and rustic demureness is still
|
| most satisfactorily disguised by Christian pantomime, and by praying
|
| and psalm-singing (or, more correctly, it is thereby explained and
|
| differently expressed); and for the herd of drunkards and rakes who
|
| formerly learned moral grunting under the influence of Methodism (and
|
| more recently as the "Salvation Army"), a penitential fit may really be
|
| the relatively highest manifestation of "humanity" to which they can
|
| be elevated: so much may reasonably be admitted. That, however, which
|
| offends even in the humanest Englishman is his lack of music, to speak
|
| figuratively (and also literally): he has neither rhythm nor dance in
|
| the movements of his soul and body; indeed, not even the desire for
|
| rhythm and dance, for "music." Listen to him speaking; look at the most
|
| beautiful Englishwoman WALKING--in no country on earth are there more
|
| beautiful doves and swans; finally, listen to them singing! But I ask
|
| too much...
|
|
|
| 253. There are truths which are best recognized by mediocre minds,
|
| because they are best adapted for them, there are truths which only
|
| possess charms and seductive power for mediocre spirits:--one is pushed
|
| to this probably unpleasant conclusion, now that the influence of
|
| respectable but mediocre Englishmen--I may mention Darwin, John
|
| Stuart Mill, and Herbert Spencer--begins to gain the ascendancy in the
|
| middle-class region of European taste. Indeed, who could doubt that it
|
| is a useful thing for SUCH minds to have the ascendancy for a time? It
|
| would be an error to consider the highly developed and independently
|
| soaring minds as specially qualified for determining and collecting many
|
| little common facts, and deducing conclusions from them; as exceptions,
|
| they are rather from the first in no very favourable position towards
|
| those who are "the rules." After all, they have more to do than merely
|
| to perceive:--in effect, they have to BE something new, they have to
|
| SIGNIFY something new, they have to REPRESENT new values! The gulf
|
| between knowledge and capacity is perhaps greater, and also more
|
| mysterious, than one thinks: the capable man in the grand style, the
|
| creator, will possibly have to be an ignorant person;--while on the
|
| other hand, for scientific discoveries like those of Darwin, a certain
|
| narrowness, aridity, and industrious carefulness (in short, something
|
| English) may not be unfavourable for arriving at them.--Finally, let
|
| it not be forgotten that the English, with their profound mediocrity,
|
| brought about once before a general depression of European intelligence.
|
|
|
| What is called "modern ideas," or "the ideas of the eighteenth century,"
|
| or "French ideas"--that, consequently, against which the GERMAN mind
|
| rose up with profound disgust--is of English origin, there is no doubt
|
| about it. The French were only the apes and actors of these ideas, their
|
| best soldiers, and likewise, alas! their first and profoundest VICTIMS;
|
| for owing to the diabolical Anglomania of "modern ideas," the AME
|
| FRANCAIS has in the end become so thin and emaciated, that at present
|
| one recalls its sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, its profound,
|
| passionate strength, its inventive excellency, almost with disbelief.
|
| One must, however, maintain this verdict of historical justice in
|
| a determined manner, and defend it against present prejudices and
|
| appearances: the European NOBLESSE--of sentiment, taste, and manners,
|
| taking the word in every high sense--is the work and invention of
|
| FRANCE; the European ignobleness, the plebeianism of modern ideas--is
|
| ENGLAND'S work and invention.
|
|
|
| 254. Even at present France is still the seat of the most intellectual
|
| and refined culture of Europe, it is still the high school of taste; but
|
| one must know how to find this "France of taste." He who belongs to it
|
| keeps himself well concealed:--they may be a small number in whom it
|
| lives and is embodied, besides perhaps being men who do not stand upon
|
| the strongest legs, in part fatalists, hypochondriacs, invalids, in
|
| part persons over-indulged, over-refined, such as have the AMBITION to
|
| conceal themselves.
|
|
|
| They have all something in common: they keep their ears closed in
|
| presence of the delirious folly and noisy spouting of the democratic
|
| BOURGEOIS. In fact, a besotted and brutalized France at present sprawls
|
| in the foreground--it recently celebrated a veritable orgy of bad taste,
|
| and at the same time of self-admiration, at the funeral of Victor Hugo.
|
| There is also something else common to them: a predilection to resist
|
| intellectual Germanizing--and a still greater inability to do so!
|
| In this France of intellect, which is also a France of pessimism,
|
| Schopenhauer has perhaps become more at home, and more indigenous than
|
| he has ever been in Germany; not to speak of Heinrich Heine, who has
|
| long ago been re-incarnated in the more refined and fastidious lyrists
|
| of Paris; or of Hegel, who at present, in the form of Taine--the FIRST
|
| of living historians--exercises an almost tyrannical influence. As
|
| regards Richard Wagner, however, the more French music learns to
|
| adapt itself to the actual needs of the AME MODERNE, the more will it
|
| "Wagnerite"; one can safely predict that beforehand,--it is already
|
| taking place sufficiently! There are, however, three things which the
|
| French can still boast of with pride as their heritage and possession,
|
| and as indelible tokens of their ancient intellectual superiority
|
| in Europe, in spite of all voluntary or involuntary Germanizing and
|
| vulgarizing of taste. FIRSTLY, the capacity for artistic emotion, for
|
| devotion to "form," for which the expression, L'ART POUR L'ART, along
|
| with numerous others, has been invented:--such capacity has not been
|
| lacking in France for three centuries; and owing to its reverence for
|
| the "small number," it has again and again made a sort of chamber
|
| music of literature possible, which is sought for in vain elsewhere
|
| in Europe.--The SECOND thing whereby the French can lay claim to
|
| a superiority over Europe is their ancient, many-sided, MORALISTIC
|
| culture, owing to which one finds on an average, even in the petty
|
| ROMANCIERS of the newspapers and chance BOULEVARDIERS DE PARIS, a
|
| psychological sensitiveness and curiosity, of which, for example, one
|
| has no conception (to say nothing of the thing itself!) in Germany.
|
| The Germans lack a couple of centuries of the moralistic work requisite
|
| thereto, which, as we have said, France has not grudged: those who call
|
| the Germans "naive" on that account give them commendation for a defect.
|
| (As the opposite of the German inexperience and innocence IN VOLUPTATE
|
| PSYCHOLOGICA, which is not too remotely associated with the tediousness
|
| of German intercourse,--and as the most successful expression of
|
| genuine French curiosity and inventive talent in this domain of delicate
|
| thrills, Henri Beyle may be noted; that remarkable anticipatory and
|
| forerunning man, who, with a Napoleonic TEMPO, traversed HIS Europe,
|
| in fact, several centuries of the European soul, as a surveyor and
|
| discoverer thereof:--it has required two generations to OVERTAKE him
|
| one way or other, to divine long afterwards some of the riddles
|
| that perplexed and enraptured him--this strange Epicurean and man of
|
| interrogation, the last great psychologist of France).--There is yet
|
| a THIRD claim to superiority: in the French character there is a
|
| successful half-way synthesis of the North and South, which makes them
|
| comprehend many things, and enjoins upon them other things, which an
|
| Englishman can never comprehend. Their temperament, turned alternately
|
| to and from the South, in which from time to time the Provencal and
|
| Ligurian blood froths over, preserves them from the dreadful, northern
|
| grey-in-grey, from sunless conceptual-spectrism and from poverty of
|
| blood--our GERMAN infirmity of taste, for the excessive prevalence
|
| of which at the present moment, blood and iron, that is to say "high
|
| politics," has with great resolution been prescribed (according to
|
| a dangerous healing art, which bids me wait and wait, but not yet
|
| hope).--There is also still in France a pre-understanding and
|
| ready welcome for those rarer and rarely gratified men, who are too
|
| comprehensive to find satisfaction in any kind of fatherlandism, and
|
| know how to love the South when in the North and the North when in the
|
| South--the born Midlanders, the "good Europeans." For them BIZET
|
| has made music, this latest genius, who has seen a new beauty and
|
| seduction,--who has discovered a piece of the SOUTH IN MUSIC.
|
|
|
| 255. I hold that many precautions should be taken against German music.
|
| Suppose a person loves the South as I love it--as a great school
|
| of recovery for the most spiritual and the most sensuous ills, as a
|
| boundless solar profusion and effulgence which o'erspreads a sovereign
|
| existence believing in itself--well, such a person will learn to be
|
| somewhat on his guard against German music, because, in injuring his
|
| taste anew, it will also injure his health anew. Such a Southerner, a
|
| Southerner not by origin but by BELIEF, if he should dream of the future
|
| of music, must also dream of it being freed from the influence of the
|
| North; and must have in his ears the prelude to a deeper, mightier, and
|
| perhaps more perverse and mysterious music, a super-German music, which
|
| does not fade, pale, and die away, as all German music does, at the
|
| sight of the blue, wanton sea and the Mediterranean clearness of sky--a
|
| super-European music, which holds its own even in presence of the brown
|
| sunsets of the desert, whose soul is akin to the palm-tree, and can be
|
| at home and can roam with big, beautiful, lonely beasts of prey... I
|
| could imagine a music of which the rarest charm would be that it knew
|
| nothing more of good and evil; only that here and there perhaps some
|
| sailor's home-sickness, some golden shadows and tender weaknesses might
|
| sweep lightly over it; an art which, from the far distance, would see
|
| the colours of a sinking and almost incomprehensible MORAL world fleeing
|
| towards it, and would be hospitable enough and profound enough to
|
| receive such belated fugitives.
|
|
|
| 256. Owing to the morbid estrangement which the nationality-craze has
|
| induced and still induces among the nations of Europe, owing also to the
|
| short-sighted and hasty-handed politicians, who with the help of this
|
| craze, are at present in power, and do not suspect to what extent the
|
| disintegrating policy they pursue must necessarily be only an interlude
|
| policy--owing to all this and much else that is altogether unmentionable
|
| at present, the most unmistakable signs that EUROPE WISHES TO BE ONE,
|
| are now overlooked, or arbitrarily and falsely misinterpreted. With all
|
| the more profound and large-minded men of this century, the real general
|
| tendency of the mysterious labour of their souls was to prepare the way
|
| for that new SYNTHESIS, and tentatively to anticipate the European of
|
| the future; only in their simulations, or in their weaker moments, in
|
| old age perhaps, did they belong to the "fatherlands"--they only rested
|
| from themselves when they became "patriots." I think of such men as
|
| Napoleon, Goethe, Beethoven, Stendhal, Heinrich Heine, Schopenhauer: it
|
| must not be taken amiss if I also count Richard Wagner among them, about
|
| whom one must not let oneself be deceived by his own misunderstandings
|
| (geniuses like him have seldom the right to understand themselves),
|
| still less, of course, by the unseemly noise with which he is now
|
| resisted and opposed in France: the fact remains, nevertheless, that
|
| Richard Wagner and the LATER FRENCH ROMANTICISM of the forties, are
|
| most closely and intimately related to one another. They are akin,
|
| fundamentally akin, in all the heights and depths of their requirements;
|
| it is Europe, the ONE Europe, whose soul presses urgently and longingly,
|
| outwards and upwards, in their multifarious and boisterous art--whither?
|
| into a new light? towards a new sun? But who would attempt to express
|
| accurately what all these masters of new modes of speech could not
|
| express distinctly? It is certain that the same storm and stress
|
| tormented them, that they SOUGHT in the same manner, these last great
|
| seekers! All of them steeped in literature to their eyes and ears--the
|
| first artists of universal literary culture--for the most part even
|
| themselves writers, poets, intermediaries and blenders of the arts and
|
| the senses (Wagner, as musician is reckoned among painters, as poet
|
| among musicians, as artist generally among actors); all of them fanatics
|
| for EXPRESSION "at any cost"--I specially mention Delacroix, the nearest
|
| related to Wagner; all of them great discoverers in the realm of the
|
| sublime, also of the loathsome and dreadful, still greater discoverers
|
| in effect, in display, in the art of the show-shop; all of them talented
|
| far beyond their genius, out and out VIRTUOSI, with mysterious accesses
|
| to all that seduces, allures, constrains, and upsets; born enemies of
|
| logic and of the straight line, hankering after the strange, the
|
| exotic, the monstrous, the crooked, and the self-contradictory; as men,
|
| Tantaluses of the will, plebeian parvenus, who knew themselves to be
|
| incapable of a noble TEMPO or of a LENTO in life and action--think
|
| of Balzac, for instance,--unrestrained workers, almost destroying
|
| themselves by work; antinomians and rebels in manners, ambitious and
|
| insatiable, without equilibrium and enjoyment; all of them finally
|
| shattering and sinking down at the Christian cross (and with right
|
| and reason, for who of them would have been sufficiently profound and
|
| sufficiently original for an ANTI-CHRISTIAN philosophy?);--on the
|
| whole, a boldly daring, splendidly overbearing, high-flying, and
|
| aloft-up-dragging class of higher men, who had first to teach their
|
| century--and it is the century of the MASSES--the conception "higher
|
| man."... Let the German friends of Richard Wagner advise together as to
|
| whether there is anything purely German in the Wagnerian art, or whether
|
| its distinction does not consist precisely in coming from SUPER-GERMAN
|
| sources and impulses: in which connection it may not be underrated
|
| how indispensable Paris was to the development of his type, which the
|
| strength of his instincts made him long to visit at the most
|
| decisive time--and how the whole style of his proceedings, of his
|
| self-apostolate, could only perfect itself in sight of the French
|
| socialistic original. On a more subtle comparison it will perhaps be
|
| found, to the honour of Richard Wagner's German nature, that he has
|
| acted in everything with more strength, daring, severity, and elevation
|
| than a nineteenth-century Frenchman could have done--owing to the
|
| circumstance that we Germans are as yet nearer to barbarism than the
|
| French;--perhaps even the most remarkable creation of Richard Wagner is
|
| not only at present, but for ever inaccessible, incomprehensible, and
|
| inimitable to the whole latter-day Latin race: the figure of Siegfried,
|
| that VERY FREE man, who is probably far too free, too hard, too
|
| cheerful, too healthy, too ANTI-CATHOLIC for the taste of old and mellow
|
| civilized nations. He may even have been a sin against Romanticism, this
|
| anti-Latin Siegfried: well, Wagner atoned amply for this sin in his old
|
| sad days, when--anticipating a taste which has meanwhile passed into
|
| politics--he began, with the religious vehemence peculiar to him, to
|
| preach, at least, THE WAY TO ROME, if not to walk therein.--That
|
| these last words may not be misunderstood, I will call to my aid a few
|
| powerful rhymes, which will even betray to less delicate ears what I
|
| mean--what I mean COUNTER TO the "last Wagner" and his Parsifal music:--
|
|
|
| --Is this our mode?--From German heart came this vexed ululating? From
|
| German body, this self-lacerating? Is ours this priestly hand-dilation,
|
| This incense-fuming exaltation? Is ours this faltering, falling,
|
| shambling, This quite uncertain ding-dong-dangling? This sly
|
| nun-ogling, Ave-hour-bell ringing, This wholly false enraptured
|
| heaven-o'erspringing?--Is this our mode?--Think well!--ye still wait for
|
| admission--For what ye hear is ROME--ROME'S FAITH BY INTUITION!
|
|
|
| CHAPTER IX. WHAT IS NOBLE?
|
|
|
| 257. EVERY elevation of the type "man," has hitherto been the work of an
|
| aristocratic society and so it will always be--a society believing in
|
| a long scale of gradations of rank and differences of worth among human
|
| beings, and requiring slavery in some form or other. Without the PATHOS
|
| OF DISTANCE, such as grows out of the incarnated difference of classes,
|
| out of the constant out-looking and down-looking of the ruling caste on
|
| subordinates and instruments, and out of their equally constant
|
| practice of obeying and commanding, of keeping down and keeping at a
|
| distance--that other more mysterious pathos could never have arisen, the
|
| longing for an ever new widening of distance within the soul itself,
|
| the formation of ever higher, rarer, further, more extended, more
|
| comprehensive states, in short, just the elevation of the type "man,"
|
| the continued "self-surmounting of man," to use a moral formula in
|
| a supermoral sense. To be sure, one must not resign oneself to
|
| any humanitarian illusions about the history of the origin of an
|
| aristocratic society (that is to say, of the preliminary condition for
|
| the elevation of the type "man"): the truth is hard. Let us acknowledge
|
| unprejudicedly how every higher civilization hitherto has ORIGINATED!
|
| Men with a still natural nature, barbarians in every terrible sense of
|
| the word, men of prey, still in possession of unbroken strength of will
|
| and desire for power, threw themselves upon weaker, more moral, more
|
| peaceful races (perhaps trading or cattle-rearing communities), or upon
|
| old mellow civilizations in which the final vital force was flickering
|
| out in brilliant fireworks of wit and depravity. At the commencement,
|
| the noble caste was always the barbarian caste: their superiority did
|
| not consist first of all in their physical, but in their psychical
|
| power--they were more COMPLETE men (which at every point also implies
|
| the same as "more complete beasts").
|
|
|
| 258. Corruption--as the indication that anarchy threatens to break out
|
| among the instincts, and that the foundation of the emotions, called
|
| "life," is convulsed--is something radically different according to
|
| the organization in which it manifests itself. When, for instance, an
|
| aristocracy like that of France at the beginning of the Revolution,
|
| flung away its privileges with sublime disgust and sacrificed itself
|
| to an excess of its moral sentiments, it was corruption:--it was really
|
| only the closing act of the corruption which had existed for centuries,
|
| by virtue of which that aristocracy had abdicated step by step its
|
| lordly prerogatives and lowered itself to a FUNCTION of royalty (in
|
| the end even to its decoration and parade-dress). The essential thing,
|
| however, in a good and healthy aristocracy is that it should not regard
|
| itself as a function either of the kingship or the commonwealth, but
|
| as the SIGNIFICANCE and highest justification thereof--that it should
|
| therefore accept with a good conscience the sacrifice of a legion
|
| of individuals, who, FOR ITS SAKE, must be suppressed and reduced to
|
| imperfect men, to slaves and instruments. Its fundamental belief must
|
| be precisely that society is NOT allowed to exist for its own sake, but
|
| only as a foundation and scaffolding, by means of which a select class
|
| of beings may be able to elevate themselves to their higher duties, and
|
| in general to a higher EXISTENCE: like those sun-seeking climbing plants
|
| in Java--they are called Sipo Matador,--which encircle an oak so
|
| long and so often with their arms, until at last, high above it, but
|
| supported by it, they can unfold their tops in the open light, and
|
| exhibit their happiness.
|
|
|
| 259. To refrain mutually from injury, from violence, from exploitation,
|
| and put one's will on a par with that of others: this may result in a
|
| certain rough sense in good conduct among individuals when the necessary
|
| conditions are given (namely, the actual similarity of the individuals
|
| in amount of force and degree of worth, and their co-relation within one
|
| organization). As soon, however, as one wished to take this principle
|
| more generally, and if possible even as the FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLE OF
|
| SOCIETY, it would immediately disclose what it really is--namely, a Will
|
| to the DENIAL of life, a principle of dissolution and decay. Here one
|
| must think profoundly to the very basis and resist all sentimental
|
| weakness: life itself is ESSENTIALLY appropriation, injury, conquest
|
| of the strange and weak, suppression, severity, obtrusion of
|
| peculiar forms, incorporation, and at the least, putting it mildest,
|
| exploitation;--but why should one for ever use precisely these words
|
| on which for ages a disparaging purpose has been stamped? Even the
|
| organization within which, as was previously supposed, the
|
| individuals treat each other as equal--it takes place in every
|
| healthy aristocracy--must itself, if it be a living and not a dying
|
| organization, do all that towards other bodies, which the individuals
|
| within it refrain from doing to each other it will have to be the
|
| incarnated Will to Power, it will endeavour to grow, to gain ground,
|
| attract to itself and acquire ascendancy--not owing to any morality or
|
| immorality, but because it LIVES, and because life IS precisely Will to
|
| Power. On no point, however, is the ordinary consciousness of Europeans
|
| more unwilling to be corrected than on this matter, people now rave
|
| everywhere, even under the guise of science, about coming conditions of
|
| society in which "the exploiting character" is to be absent--that sounds
|
| to my ears as if they promised to invent a mode of life which should
|
| refrain from all organic functions. "Exploitation" does not belong to a
|
| depraved, or imperfect and primitive society it belongs to the nature of
|
| the living being as a primary organic function, it is a consequence
|
| of the intrinsic Will to Power, which is precisely the Will to
|
| Life--Granting that as a theory this is a novelty--as a reality it is
|
| the FUNDAMENTAL FACT of all history let us be so far honest towards
|
| ourselves!
|
|
|
| 260. In a tour through the many finer and coarser moralities which have
|
| hitherto prevailed or still prevail on the earth, I found certain traits
|
| recurring regularly together, and connected with one another, until
|
| finally two primary types revealed themselves to me, and a radical
|
| distinction was brought to light. There is MASTER-MORALITY and
|
| SLAVE-MORALITY,--I would at once add, however, that in all higher and
|
| mixed civilizations, there are also attempts at the reconciliation of
|
| the two moralities, but one finds still oftener the confusion and
|
| mutual misunderstanding of them, indeed sometimes their close
|
| juxtaposition--even in the same man, within one soul. The distinctions
|
| of moral values have either originated in a ruling caste, pleasantly
|
| conscious of being different from the ruled--or among the ruled class,
|
| the slaves and dependents of all sorts. In the first case, when it is
|
| the rulers who determine the conception "good," it is the exalted, proud
|
| disposition which is regarded as the distinguishing feature, and that
|
| which determines the order of rank. The noble type of man separates
|
| from himself the beings in whom the opposite of this exalted, proud
|
| disposition displays itself he despises them. Let it at once be noted
|
| that in this first kind of morality the antithesis "good" and "bad"
|
| means practically the same as "noble" and "despicable",--the antithesis
|
| "good" and "EVIL" is of a different origin. The cowardly, the timid, the
|
| insignificant, and those thinking merely of narrow utility are despised;
|
| moreover, also, the distrustful, with their constrained glances, the
|
| self-abasing, the dog-like kind of men who let themselves be abused,
|
| the mendicant flatterers, and above all the liars:--it is a fundamental
|
| belief of all aristocrats that the common people are untruthful. "We
|
| truthful ones"--the nobility in ancient Greece called themselves. It is
|
| obvious that everywhere the designations of moral value were at first
|
| applied to MEN; and were only derivatively and at a later period applied
|
| to ACTIONS; it is a gross mistake, therefore, when historians of morals
|
| start with questions like, "Why have sympathetic actions been praised?"
|
| The noble type of man regards HIMSELF as a determiner of values; he
|
| does not require to be approved of; he passes the judgment: "What is
|
| injurious to me is injurious in itself;" he knows that it is he himself
|
| only who confers honour on things; he is a CREATOR OF VALUES. He
|
| honours whatever he recognizes in himself: such morality equals
|
| self-glorification. In the foreground there is the feeling of plenitude,
|
| of power, which seeks to overflow, the happiness of high tension, the
|
| consciousness of a wealth which would fain give and bestow:--the noble
|
| man also helps the unfortunate, but not--or scarcely--out of pity, but
|
| rather from an impulse generated by the super-abundance of power. The
|
| noble man honours in himself the powerful one, him also who has power
|
| over himself, who knows how to speak and how to keep silence, who
|
| takes pleasure in subjecting himself to severity and hardness, and has
|
| reverence for all that is severe and hard. "Wotan placed a hard heart in
|
| my breast," says an old Scandinavian Saga: it is thus rightly expressed
|
| from the soul of a proud Viking. Such a type of man is even proud of not
|
| being made for sympathy; the hero of the Saga therefore adds warningly:
|
| "He who has not a hard heart when young, will never have one." The noble
|
| and brave who think thus are the furthest removed from the morality
|
| which sees precisely in sympathy, or in acting for the good of others,
|
| or in DESINTERESSEMENT, the characteristic of the moral; faith
|
| in oneself, pride in oneself, a radical enmity and irony towards
|
| "selflessness," belong as definitely to noble morality, as do a careless
|
| scorn and precaution in presence of sympathy and the "warm heart."--It
|
| is the powerful who KNOW how to honour, it is their art, their domain
|
| for invention. The profound reverence for age and for tradition--all law
|
| rests on this double reverence,--the belief and prejudice in favour of
|
| ancestors and unfavourable to newcomers, is typical in the morality of
|
| the powerful; and if, reversely, men of "modern ideas" believe almost
|
| instinctively in "progress" and the "future," and are more and more
|
| lacking in respect for old age, the ignoble origin of these "ideas" has
|
| complacently betrayed itself thereby. A morality of the ruling class,
|
| however, is more especially foreign and irritating to present-day taste
|
| in the sternness of its principle that one has duties only to one's
|
| equals; that one may act towards beings of a lower rank, towards all
|
| that is foreign, just as seems good to one, or "as the heart desires,"
|
| and in any case "beyond good and evil": it is here that sympathy and
|
| similar sentiments can have a place. The ability and obligation to
|
| exercise prolonged gratitude and prolonged revenge--both only within the
|
| circle of equals,--artfulness in retaliation, RAFFINEMENT of the idea
|
| in friendship, a certain necessity to have enemies (as outlets for the
|
| emotions of envy, quarrelsomeness, arrogance--in fact, in order to be
|
| a good FRIEND): all these are typical characteristics of the noble
|
| morality, which, as has been pointed out, is not the morality of "modern
|
| ideas," and is therefore at present difficult to realize, and also to
|
| unearth and disclose.--It is otherwise with the second type of morality,
|
| SLAVE-MORALITY. Supposing that the abused, the oppressed, the suffering,
|
| the unemancipated, the weary, and those uncertain of themselves should
|
| moralize, what will be the common element in their moral estimates?
|
| Probably a pessimistic suspicion with regard to the entire situation of
|
| man will find expression, perhaps a condemnation of man, together with
|
| his situation. The slave has an unfavourable eye for the virtues of the
|
| powerful; he has a skepticism and distrust, a REFINEMENT of distrust of
|
| everything "good" that is there honoured--he would fain persuade himself
|
| that the very happiness there is not genuine. On the other hand, THOSE
|
| qualities which serve to alleviate the existence of sufferers are
|
| brought into prominence and flooded with light; it is here that
|
| sympathy, the kind, helping hand, the warm heart, patience, diligence,
|
| humility, and friendliness attain to honour; for here these are the most
|
| useful qualities, and almost the only means of supporting the burden of
|
| existence. Slave-morality is essentially the morality of utility.
|
| Here is the seat of the origin of the famous antithesis "good" and
|
| "evil":--power and dangerousness are assumed to reside in the evil,
|
| a certain dreadfulness, subtlety, and strength, which do not admit of
|
| being despised. According to slave-morality, therefore, the "evil" man
|
| arouses fear; according to master-morality, it is precisely the "good"
|
| man who arouses fear and seeks to arouse it, while the bad man is
|
| regarded as the despicable being. The contrast attains its maximum when,
|
| in accordance with the logical consequences of slave-morality, a shade
|
| of depreciation--it may be slight and well-intentioned--at last attaches
|
| itself to the "good" man of this morality; because, according to the
|
| servile mode of thought, the good man must in any case be the SAFE
|
| man: he is good-natured, easily deceived, perhaps a little stupid, un
|
| bonhomme. Everywhere that slave-morality gains the ascendancy, language
|
| shows a tendency to approximate the significations of the words "good"
|
| and "stupid."--A last fundamental difference: the desire for FREEDOM,
|
| the instinct for happiness and the refinements of the feeling of liberty
|
| belong as necessarily to slave-morals and morality, as artifice and
|
| enthusiasm in reverence and devotion are the regular symptoms of an
|
| aristocratic mode of thinking and estimating.--Hence we can understand
|
| without further detail why love AS A PASSION--it is our European
|
| specialty--must absolutely be of noble origin; as is well known, its
|
| invention is due to the Provencal poet-cavaliers, those brilliant,
|
| ingenious men of the "gai saber," to whom Europe owes so much, and
|
| almost owes itself.
|
|
|
| 261. Vanity is one of the things which are perhaps most difficult for
|
| a noble man to understand: he will be tempted to deny it, where another
|
| kind of man thinks he sees it self-evidently. The problem for him is
|
| to represent to his mind beings who seek to arouse a good opinion of
|
| themselves which they themselves do not possess--and consequently also
|
| do not "deserve,"--and who yet BELIEVE in this good opinion
|
| afterwards. This seems to him on the one hand such bad taste and so
|
| self-disrespectful, and on the other hand so grotesquely unreasonable,
|
| that he would like to consider vanity an exception, and is doubtful
|
| about it in most cases when it is spoken of. He will say, for
|
| instance: "I may be mistaken about my value, and on the other hand
|
| may nevertheless demand that my value should be acknowledged by others
|
| precisely as I rate it:--that, however, is not vanity (but self-conceit,
|
| or, in most cases, that which is called 'humility,' and also
|
| 'modesty')." Or he will even say: "For many reasons I can delight in
|
| the good opinion of others, perhaps because I love and honour them,
|
| and rejoice in all their joys, perhaps also because their good opinion
|
| endorses and strengthens my belief in my own good opinion, perhaps
|
| because the good opinion of others, even in cases where I do not share
|
| it, is useful to me, or gives promise of usefulness:--all this, however,
|
| is not vanity." The man of noble character must first bring it home
|
| forcibly to his mind, especially with the aid of history, that, from
|
| time immemorial, in all social strata in any way dependent, the ordinary
|
| man WAS only that which he PASSED FOR:--not being at all accustomed to
|
| fix values, he did not assign even to himself any other value than that
|
| which his master assigned to him (it is the peculiar RIGHT OF MASTERS to
|
| create values). It may be looked upon as the result of an extraordinary
|
| atavism, that the ordinary man, even at present, is still always WAITING
|
| for an opinion about himself, and then instinctively submitting himself
|
| to it; yet by no means only to a "good" opinion, but also to a bad
|
| and unjust one (think, for instance, of the greater part of the
|
| self-appreciations and self-depreciations which believing women learn
|
| from their confessors, and which in general the believing Christian
|
| learns from his Church). In fact, conformably to the slow rise of the
|
| democratic social order (and its cause, the blending of the blood
|
| of masters and slaves), the originally noble and rare impulse of
|
| the masters to assign a value to themselves and to "think well" of
|
| themselves, will now be more and more encouraged and extended; but
|
| it has at all times an older, ampler, and more radically ingrained
|
| propensity opposed to it--and in the phenomenon of "vanity" this older
|
| propensity overmasters the younger. The vain person rejoices over EVERY
|
| good opinion which he hears about himself (quite apart from the point
|
| of view of its usefulness, and equally regardless of its truth or
|
| falsehood), just as he suffers from every bad opinion: for he subjects
|
| himself to both, he feels himself subjected to both, by that oldest
|
| instinct of subjection which breaks forth in him.--It is "the slave"
|
| in the vain man's blood, the remains of the slave's craftiness--and how
|
| much of the "slave" is still left in woman, for instance!--which
|
| seeks to SEDUCE to good opinions of itself; it is the slave, too, who
|
| immediately afterwards falls prostrate himself before these opinions, as
|
| though he had not called them forth.--And to repeat it again: vanity is
|
| an atavism.
|
|
|
| 262. A SPECIES originates, and a type becomes established and strong in
|
| the long struggle with essentially constant UNFAVOURABLE conditions. On
|
| the other hand, it is known by the experience of breeders that species
|
| which receive super-abundant nourishment, and in general a surplus of
|
| protection and care, immediately tend in the most marked way to develop
|
| variations, and are fertile in prodigies and monstrosities (also in
|
| monstrous vices). Now look at an aristocratic commonwealth, say
|
| an ancient Greek polis, or Venice, as a voluntary or involuntary
|
| contrivance for the purpose of REARING human beings; there are there men
|
| beside one another, thrown upon their own resources, who want to make
|
| their species prevail, chiefly because they MUST prevail, or else
|
| run the terrible danger of being exterminated. The favour, the
|
| super-abundance, the protection are there lacking under which variations
|
| are fostered; the species needs itself as species, as something which,
|
| precisely by virtue of its hardness, its uniformity, and simplicity of
|
| structure, can in general prevail and make itself permanent in
|
| constant struggle with its neighbours, or with rebellious or
|
| rebellion-threatening vassals. The most varied experience teaches it
|
| what are the qualities to which it principally owes the fact that
|
| it still exists, in spite of all Gods and men, and has hitherto been
|
| victorious: these qualities it calls virtues, and these virtues alone
|
| it develops to maturity. It does so with severity, indeed it desires
|
| severity; every aristocratic morality is intolerant in the education
|
| of youth, in the control of women, in the marriage customs, in the
|
| relations of old and young, in the penal laws (which have an eye only
|
| for the degenerating): it counts intolerance itself among the virtues,
|
| under the name of "justice." A type with few, but very marked features,
|
| a species of severe, warlike, wisely silent, reserved, and reticent
|
| men (and as such, with the most delicate sensibility for the charm and
|
| nuances of society) is thus established, unaffected by the vicissitudes
|
| of generations; the constant struggle with uniform UNFAVOURABLE
|
| conditions is, as already remarked, the cause of a type becoming
|
| stable and hard. Finally, however, a happy state of things results, the
|
| enormous tension is relaxed; there are perhaps no more enemies among the
|
| neighbouring peoples, and the means of life, even of the enjoyment
|
| of life, are present in superabundance. With one stroke the bond and
|
| constraint of the old discipline severs: it is no longer regarded as
|
| necessary, as a condition of existence--if it would continue, it can
|
| only do so as a form of LUXURY, as an archaizing TASTE. Variations,
|
| whether they be deviations (into the higher, finer, and rarer), or
|
| deteriorations and monstrosities, appear suddenly on the scene in the
|
| greatest exuberance and splendour; the individual dares to be individual
|
| and detach himself. At this turning-point of history there manifest
|
| themselves, side by side, and often mixed and entangled together, a
|
| magnificent, manifold, virgin-forest-like up-growth and up-striving, a
|
| kind of TROPICAL TEMPO in the rivalry of growth, and an extraordinary
|
| decay and self-destruction, owing to the savagely opposing and seemingly
|
| exploding egoisms, which strive with one another "for sun and light,"
|
| and can no longer assign any limit, restraint, or forbearance for
|
| themselves by means of the hitherto existing morality. It was this
|
| morality itself which piled up the strength so enormously, which bent
|
| the bow in so threatening a manner:--it is now "out of date," it is
|
| getting "out of date." The dangerous and disquieting point has been
|
| reached when the greater, more manifold, more comprehensive life IS
|
| LIVED BEYOND the old morality; the "individual" stands out, and is
|
| obliged to have recourse to his own law-giving, his own arts and
|
| artifices for self-preservation, self-elevation, and self-deliverance.
|
| Nothing but new "Whys," nothing but new "Hows," no common formulas any
|
| longer, misunderstanding and disregard in league with each other, decay,
|
| deterioration, and the loftiest desires frightfully entangled, the
|
| genius of the race overflowing from all the cornucopias of good and bad,
|
| a portentous simultaneousness of Spring and Autumn, full of new charms
|
| and mysteries peculiar to the fresh, still inexhausted, still unwearied
|
| corruption. Danger is again present, the mother of morality, great
|
| danger; this time shifted into the individual, into the neighbour and
|
| friend, into the street, into their own child, into their own heart,
|
| into all the most personal and secret recesses of their desires and
|
| volitions. What will the moral philosophers who appear at this time have
|
| to preach? They discover, these sharp onlookers and loafers, that the
|
| end is quickly approaching, that everything around them decays and
|
| produces decay, that nothing will endure until the day after tomorrow,
|
| except one species of man, the incurably MEDIOCRE. The mediocre alone
|
| have a prospect of continuing and propagating themselves--they will
|
| be the men of the future, the sole survivors; "be like them! become
|
| mediocre!" is now the only morality which has still a significance,
|
| which still obtains a hearing.--But it is difficult to preach this
|
| morality of mediocrity! it can never avow what it is and what it
|
| desires! it has to talk of moderation and dignity and duty and brotherly
|
| love--it will have difficulty IN CONCEALING ITS IRONY!
|
|
|
| 263. There is an INSTINCT FOR RANK, which more than anything else is
|
| already the sign of a HIGH rank; there is a DELIGHT in the NUANCES
|
| of reverence which leads one to infer noble origin and habits. The
|
| refinement, goodness, and loftiness of a soul are put to a perilous test
|
| when something passes by that is of the highest rank, but is not
|
| yet protected by the awe of authority from obtrusive touches and
|
| incivilities: something that goes its way like a living touchstone,
|
| undistinguished, undiscovered, and tentative, perhaps voluntarily veiled
|
| and disguised. He whose task and practice it is to investigate souls,
|
| will avail himself of many varieties of this very art to determine the
|
| ultimate value of a soul, the unalterable, innate order of rank to which
|
| it belongs: he will test it by its INSTINCT FOR REVERENCE. DIFFERENCE
|
| ENGENDRE HAINE: the vulgarity of many a nature spurts up suddenly like
|
| dirty water, when any holy vessel, any jewel from closed shrines, any
|
| book bearing the marks of great destiny, is brought before it; while
|
| on the other hand, there is an involuntary silence, a hesitation of the
|
| eye, a cessation of all gestures, by which it is indicated that a soul
|
| FEELS the nearness of what is worthiest of respect. The way in which, on
|
| the whole, the reverence for the BIBLE has hitherto been maintained
|
| in Europe, is perhaps the best example of discipline and refinement of
|
| manners which Europe owes to Christianity: books of such profoundness
|
| and supreme significance require for their protection an external
|
| tyranny of authority, in order to acquire the PERIOD of thousands of
|
| years which is necessary to exhaust and unriddle them. Much has been
|
| achieved when the sentiment has been at last instilled into the masses
|
| (the shallow-pates and the boobies of every kind) that they are not
|
| allowed to touch everything, that there are holy experiences before
|
| which they must take off their shoes and keep away the unclean hand--it
|
| is almost their highest advance towards humanity. On the contrary, in
|
| the so-called cultured classes, the believers in "modern ideas," nothing
|
| is perhaps so repulsive as their lack of shame, the easy insolence of
|
| eye and hand with which they touch, taste, and finger everything; and it
|
| is possible that even yet there is more RELATIVE nobility of taste, and
|
| more tact for reverence among the people, among the lower classes of
|
| the people, especially among peasants, than among the newspaper-reading
|
| DEMIMONDE of intellect, the cultured class.
|
|
|
| 264. It cannot be effaced from a man's soul what his ancestors have
|
| preferably and most constantly done: whether they were perhaps diligent
|
| economizers attached to a desk and a cash-box, modest and citizen-like
|
| in their desires, modest also in their virtues; or whether they were
|
| accustomed to commanding from morning till night, fond of rude pleasures
|
| and probably of still ruder duties and responsibilities; or whether,
|
| finally, at one time or another, they have sacrificed old privileges of
|
| birth and possession, in order to live wholly for their faith--for their
|
| "God,"--as men of an inexorable and sensitive conscience, which blushes
|
| at every compromise. It is quite impossible for a man NOT to have
|
| the qualities and predilections of his parents and ancestors in his
|
| constitution, whatever appearances may suggest to the contrary. This is
|
| the problem of race. Granted that one knows something of the parents,
|
| it is admissible to draw a conclusion about the child: any kind
|
| of offensive incontinence, any kind of sordid envy, or of clumsy
|
| self-vaunting--the three things which together have constituted the
|
| genuine plebeian type in all times--such must pass over to the child, as
|
| surely as bad blood; and with the help of the best education and culture
|
| one will only succeed in DECEIVING with regard to such heredity.--And
|
| what else does education and culture try to do nowadays! In our very
|
| democratic, or rather, very plebeian age, "education" and "culture" MUST
|
| be essentially the art of deceiving--deceiving with regard to origin,
|
| with regard to the inherited plebeianism in body and soul. An educator
|
| who nowadays preached truthfulness above everything else, and called out
|
| constantly to his pupils: "Be true! Be natural! Show yourselves as you
|
| are!"--even such a virtuous and sincere ass would learn in a short time
|
| to have recourse to the FURCA of Horace, NATURAM EXPELLERE: with what
|
| results? "Plebeianism" USQUE RECURRET. [FOOTNOTE: Horace's "Epistles,"
|
| I. x. 24.]
|
|
|
| 265. At the risk of displeasing innocent ears, I submit that egoism
|
| belongs to the essence of a noble soul, I mean the unalterable belief
|
| that to a being such as "we," other beings must naturally be in
|
| subjection, and have to sacrifice themselves. The noble soul accepts the
|
| fact of his egoism without question, and also without consciousness of
|
| harshness, constraint, or arbitrariness therein, but rather as something
|
| that may have its basis in the primary law of things:--if he sought a
|
| designation for it he would say: "It is justice itself." He acknowledges
|
| under certain circumstances, which made him hesitate at first, that
|
| there are other equally privileged ones; as soon as he has settled this
|
| question of rank, he moves among those equals and equally privileged
|
| ones with the same assurance, as regards modesty and delicate respect,
|
| which he enjoys in intercourse with himself--in accordance with an
|
| innate heavenly mechanism which all the stars understand. It is an
|
| ADDITIONAL instance of his egoism, this artfulness and self-limitation
|
| in intercourse with his equals--every star is a similar egoist; he
|
| honours HIMSELF in them, and in the rights which he concedes to them, he
|
| has no doubt that the exchange of honours and rights, as the ESSENCE of
|
| all intercourse, belongs also to the natural condition of things. The
|
| noble soul gives as he takes, prompted by the passionate and sensitive
|
| instinct of requital, which is at the root of his nature. The notion of
|
| "favour" has, INTER PARES, neither significance nor good repute; there
|
| may be a sublime way of letting gifts as it were light upon one from
|
| above, and of drinking them thirstily like dew-drops; but for those
|
| arts and displays the noble soul has no aptitude. His egoism hinders him
|
| here: in general, he looks "aloft" unwillingly--he looks either FORWARD,
|
| horizontally and deliberately, or downwards--HE KNOWS THAT HE IS ON A
|
| HEIGHT.
|
|
|
| 266. "One can only truly esteem him who does not LOOK OUT FOR
|
| himself."--Goethe to Rath Schlosser.
|
|
|
| 267. The Chinese have a proverb which mothers even teach their children:
|
| "SIAO-SIN" ("MAKE THY HEART SMALL"). This is the essentially fundamental
|
| tendency in latter-day civilizations. I have no doubt that an ancient
|
| Greek, also, would first of all remark the self-dwarfing in us Europeans
|
| of today--in this respect alone we should immediately be "distasteful"
|
| to him.
|
|
|
| 268. What, after all, is ignobleness?--Words are vocal symbols for
|
| ideas; ideas, however, are more or less definite mental symbols
|
| for frequently returning and concurring sensations, for groups of
|
| sensations. It is not sufficient to use the same words in order to
|
| understand one another: we must also employ the same words for the same
|
| kind of internal experiences, we must in the end have experiences IN
|
| COMMON. On this account the people of one nation understand one another
|
| better than those belonging to different nations, even when they use
|
| the same language; or rather, when people have lived long together under
|
| similar conditions (of climate, soil, danger, requirement, toil) there
|
| ORIGINATES therefrom an entity that "understands itself"--namely, a
|
| nation. In all souls a like number of frequently recurring experiences
|
| have gained the upper hand over those occurring more rarely: about
|
| these matters people understand one another rapidly and always more
|
| rapidly--the history of language is the history of a process of
|
| abbreviation; on the basis of this quick comprehension people always
|
| unite closer and closer. The greater the danger, the greater is the
|
| need of agreeing quickly and readily about what is necessary; not to
|
| misunderstand one another in danger--that is what cannot at all be
|
| dispensed with in intercourse. Also in all loves and friendships one has
|
| the experience that nothing of the kind continues when the discovery
|
| has been made that in using the same words, one of the two parties has
|
| feelings, thoughts, intuitions, wishes, or fears different from those of
|
| the other. (The fear of the "eternal misunderstanding": that is the good
|
| genius which so often keeps persons of different sexes from too
|
| hasty attachments, to which sense and heart prompt them--and NOT some
|
| Schopenhauerian "genius of the species"!) Whichever groups of sensations
|
| within a soul awaken most readily, begin to speak, and give the word of
|
| command--these decide as to the general order of rank of its values, and
|
| determine ultimately its list of desirable things. A man's estimates of
|
| value betray something of the STRUCTURE of his soul, and wherein it
|
| sees its conditions of life, its intrinsic needs. Supposing now that
|
| necessity has from all time drawn together only such men as could
|
| express similar requirements and similar experiences by similar symbols,
|
| it results on the whole that the easy COMMUNICABILITY of need,
|
| which implies ultimately the undergoing only of average and COMMON
|
| experiences, must have been the most potent of all the forces which
|
| have hitherto operated upon mankind. The more similar, the more ordinary
|
| people, have always had and are still having the advantage; the more
|
| select, more refined, more unique, and difficultly comprehensible, are
|
| liable to stand alone; they succumb to accidents in their isolation, and
|
| seldom propagate themselves. One must appeal to immense opposing forces,
|
| in order to thwart this natural, all-too-natural PROGRESSUS IN SIMILE,
|
| the evolution of man to the similar, the ordinary, the average, the
|
| gregarious--to the IGNOBLE--!
|
|
|
| 269. The more a psychologist--a born, an unavoidable psychologist
|
| and soul-diviner--turns his attention to the more select cases and
|
| individuals, the greater is his danger of being suffocated by sympathy:
|
| he NEEDS sternness and cheerfulness more than any other man. For
|
| the corruption, the ruination of higher men, of the more unusually
|
| constituted souls, is in fact, the rule: it is dreadful to have such a
|
| rule always before one's eyes. The manifold torment of the psychologist
|
| who has discovered this ruination, who discovers once, and then
|
| discovers ALMOST repeatedly throughout all history, this universal
|
| inner "desperateness" of higher men, this eternal "too late!" in every
|
| sense--may perhaps one day be the cause of his turning with
|
| bitterness against his own lot, and of his making an attempt at
|
| self-destruction--of his "going to ruin" himself. One may perceive
|
| in almost every psychologist a tell-tale inclination for delightful
|
| intercourse with commonplace and well-ordered men; the fact is thereby
|
| disclosed that he always requires healing, that he needs a sort
|
| of flight and forgetfulness, away from what his insight and
|
| incisiveness--from what his "business"--has laid upon his conscience.
|
| The fear of his memory is peculiar to him. He is easily silenced by the
|
| judgment of others; he hears with unmoved countenance how people honour,
|
| admire, love, and glorify, where he has PERCEIVED--or he even conceals
|
| his silence by expressly assenting to some plausible opinion. Perhaps
|
| the paradox of his situation becomes so dreadful that, precisely
|
| where he has learnt GREAT SYMPATHY, together with great CONTEMPT, the
|
| multitude, the educated, and the visionaries, have on their part learnt
|
| great reverence--reverence for "great men" and marvelous animals, for
|
| the sake of whom one blesses and honours the fatherland, the earth, the
|
| dignity of mankind, and one's own self, to whom one points the young,
|
| and in view of whom one educates them. And who knows but in all great
|
| instances hitherto just the same happened: that the multitude worshipped
|
| a God, and that the "God" was only a poor sacrificial animal! SUCCESS
|
| has always been the greatest liar--and the "work" itself is a success;
|
| the great statesman, the conqueror, the discoverer, are disguised in
|
| their creations until they are unrecognizable; the "work" of the artist,
|
| of the philosopher, only invents him who has created it, is REPUTED
|
| to have created it; the "great men," as they are reverenced, are poor
|
| little fictions composed afterwards; in the world of historical values
|
| spurious coinage PREVAILS. Those great poets, for example, such as
|
| Byron, Musset, Poe, Leopardi, Kleist, Gogol (I do not venture to mention
|
| much greater names, but I have them in my mind), as they now appear, and
|
| were perhaps obliged to be: men of the moment, enthusiastic, sensuous,
|
| and childish, light-minded and impulsive in their trust and distrust;
|
| with souls in which usually some flaw has to be concealed; often taking
|
| revenge with their works for an internal defilement, often seeking
|
| forgetfulness in their soaring from a too true memory, often lost in
|
| the mud and almost in love with it, until they become like the
|
| Will-o'-the-Wisps around the swamps, and PRETEND TO BE stars--the people
|
| then call them idealists,--often struggling with protracted disgust,
|
| with an ever-reappearing phantom of disbelief, which makes them cold,
|
| and obliges them to languish for GLORIA and devour "faith as it is"
|
| out of the hands of intoxicated adulators:--what a TORMENT these great
|
| artists are and the so-called higher men in general, to him who has once
|
| found them out! It is thus conceivable that it is just from woman--who
|
| is clairvoyant in the world of suffering, and also unfortunately eager
|
| to help and save to an extent far beyond her powers--that THEY have
|
| learnt so readily those outbreaks of boundless devoted SYMPATHY, which
|
| the multitude, above all the reverent multitude, do not understand,
|
| and overwhelm with prying and self-gratifying interpretations. This
|
| sympathizing invariably deceives itself as to its power; woman would
|
| like to believe that love can do EVERYTHING--it is the SUPERSTITION
|
| peculiar to her. Alas, he who knows the heart finds out how poor,
|
| helpless, pretentious, and blundering even the best and deepest love
|
| is--he finds that it rather DESTROYS than saves!--It is possible that
|
| under the holy fable and travesty of the life of Jesus there is hidden
|
| one of the most painful cases of the martyrdom of KNOWLEDGE ABOUT LOVE:
|
| the martyrdom of the most innocent and most craving heart, that
|
| never had enough of any human love, that DEMANDED love, that demanded
|
| inexorably and frantically to be loved and nothing else, with terrible
|
| outbursts against those who refused him their love; the story of a poor
|
| soul insatiated and insatiable in love, that had to invent hell to send
|
| thither those who WOULD NOT love him--and that at last, enlightened
|
| about human love, had to invent a God who is entire love, entire
|
| CAPACITY for love--who takes pity on human love, because it is so
|
| paltry, so ignorant! He who has such sentiments, he who has such
|
| KNOWLEDGE about love--SEEKS for death!--But why should one deal with
|
| such painful matters? Provided, of course, that one is not obliged to do
|
| so.
|
|
|
| 270. The intellectual haughtiness and loathing of every man who has
|
| suffered deeply--it almost determines the order of rank HOW deeply men
|
| can suffer--the chilling certainty, with which he is thoroughly imbued
|
| and coloured, that by virtue of his suffering he KNOWS MORE than the
|
| shrewdest and wisest can ever know, that he has been familiar with,
|
| and "at home" in, many distant, dreadful worlds of which "YOU know
|
| nothing"!--this silent intellectual haughtiness of the sufferer, this
|
| pride of the elect of knowledge, of the "initiated," of the almost
|
| sacrificed, finds all forms of disguise necessary to protect itself from
|
| contact with officious and sympathizing hands, and in general from all
|
| that is not its equal in suffering. Profound suffering makes noble:
|
| it separates.--One of the most refined forms of disguise is Epicurism,
|
| along with a certain ostentatious boldness of taste, which takes
|
| suffering lightly, and puts itself on the defensive against all that
|
| is sorrowful and profound. They are "gay men" who make use of gaiety,
|
| because they are misunderstood on account of it--they WISH to be
|
| misunderstood. There are "scientific minds" who make use of science,
|
| because it gives a gay appearance, and because scientificness leads to
|
| the conclusion that a person is superficial--they WISH to mislead to a
|
| false conclusion. There are free insolent minds which would fain conceal
|
| and deny that they are broken, proud, incurable hearts (the cynicism of
|
| Hamlet--the case of Galiani); and occasionally folly itself is the mask
|
| of an unfortunate OVER-ASSURED knowledge.--From which it follows that it
|
| is the part of a more refined humanity to have reverence "for the mask,"
|
| and not to make use of psychology and curiosity in the wrong place.
|
|
|
| 271. That which separates two men most profoundly is a different sense
|
| and grade of purity. What does it matter about all their honesty and
|
| reciprocal usefulness, what does it matter about all their mutual
|
| good-will: the fact still remains--they "cannot smell each other!" The
|
| highest instinct for purity places him who is affected with it in the
|
| most extraordinary and dangerous isolation, as a saint: for it is just
|
| holiness--the highest spiritualization of the instinct in question. Any
|
| kind of cognizance of an indescribable excess in the joy of the bath,
|
| any kind of ardour or thirst which perpetually impels the soul out
|
| of night into the morning, and out of gloom, out of "affliction" into
|
| clearness, brightness, depth, and refinement:--just as much as such a
|
| tendency DISTINGUISHES--it is a noble tendency--it also SEPARATES.--The
|
| pity of the saint is pity for the FILTH of the human, all-too-human.
|
| And there are grades and heights where pity itself is regarded by him as
|
| impurity, as filth.
|
|
|
| 272. Signs of nobility: never to think of lowering our duties to the
|
| rank of duties for everybody; to be unwilling to renounce or to share
|
| our responsibilities; to count our prerogatives, and the exercise of
|
| them, among our DUTIES.
|
|
|
| 273. A man who strives after great things, looks upon every one whom
|
| he encounters on his way either as a means of advance, or a delay and
|
| hindrance--or as a temporary resting-place. His peculiar lofty BOUNTY
|
| to his fellow-men is only possible when he attains his elevation and
|
| dominates. Impatience, and the consciousness of being always condemned
|
| to comedy up to that time--for even strife is a comedy, and conceals the
|
| end, as every means does--spoil all intercourse for him; this kind of
|
| man is acquainted with solitude, and what is most poisonous in it.
|
|
|
| 274. THE PROBLEM OF THOSE WHO WAIT.--Happy chances are necessary, and
|
| many incalculable elements, in order that a higher man in whom the
|
| solution of a problem is dormant, may yet take action, or "break forth,"
|
| as one might say--at the right moment. On an average it DOES NOT happen;
|
| and in all corners of the earth there are waiting ones sitting who
|
| hardly know to what extent they are waiting, and still less that they
|
| wait in vain. Occasionally, too, the waking call comes too late--the
|
| chance which gives "permission" to take action--when their best youth,
|
| and strength for action have been used up in sitting still; and how many
|
| a one, just as he "sprang up," has found with horror that his limbs are
|
| benumbed and his spirits are now too heavy! "It is too late," he has
|
| said to himself--and has become self-distrustful and henceforth for ever
|
| useless.--In the domain of genius, may not the "Raphael without
|
| hands" (taking the expression in its widest sense) perhaps not be the
|
| exception, but the rule?--Perhaps genius is by no means so rare: but
|
| rather the five hundred HANDS which it requires in order to tyrannize
|
| over the [GREEK INSERTED HERE], "the right time"--in order to take
|
| chance by the forelock!
|
|
|
| 275. He who does not WISH to see the height of a man, looks all the
|
| more sharply at what is low in him, and in the foreground--and thereby
|
| betrays himself.
|
|
|
| 276. In all kinds of injury and loss the lower and coarser soul is
|
| better off than the nobler soul: the dangers of the latter must be
|
| greater, the probability that it will come to grief and perish is in
|
| fact immense, considering the multiplicity of the conditions of its
|
| existence.--In a lizard a finger grows again which has been lost; not so
|
| in man.--
|
|
|
| 277. It is too bad! Always the old story! When a man has finished
|
| building his house, he finds that he has learnt unawares something
|
| which he OUGHT absolutely to have known before he--began to build. The
|
| eternal, fatal "Too late!" The melancholia of everything COMPLETED--!
|
|
|
| 278.--Wanderer, who art thou? I see thee follow thy path without scorn,
|
| without love, with unfathomable eyes, wet and sad as a plummet which has
|
| returned to the light insatiated out of every depth--what did it seek
|
| down there?--with a bosom that never sighs, with lips that conceal their
|
| loathing, with a hand which only slowly grasps: who art thou? what
|
| hast thou done? Rest thee here: this place has hospitality for every
|
| one--refresh thyself! And whoever thou art, what is it that now pleases
|
| thee? What will serve to refresh thee? Only name it, whatever I have
|
| I offer thee! "To refresh me? To refresh me? Oh, thou prying one,
|
| what sayest thou! But give me, I pray thee---" What? what? Speak out!
|
| "Another mask! A second mask!"
|
|
|
| 279. Men of profound sadness betray themselves when they are happy: they
|
| have a mode of seizing upon happiness as though they would choke and
|
| strangle it, out of jealousy--ah, they know only too well that it will
|
| flee from them!
|
|
|
| 280. "Bad! Bad! What? Does he not--go back?" Yes! But you misunderstand
|
| him when you complain about it. He goes back like every one who is about
|
| to make a great spring.
|
|
|
| 281.--"Will people believe it of me? But I insist that they believe it
|
| of me: I have always thought very unsatisfactorily of myself and about
|
| myself, only in very rare cases, only compulsorily, always without
|
| delight in 'the subject,' ready to digress from 'myself,' and always
|
| without faith in the result, owing to an unconquerable distrust of the
|
| POSSIBILITY of self-knowledge, which has led me so far as to feel a
|
| CONTRADICTIO IN ADJECTO even in the idea of 'direct knowledge' which
|
| theorists allow themselves:--this matter of fact is almost the most
|
| certain thing I know about myself. There must be a sort of repugnance
|
| in me to BELIEVE anything definite about myself.--Is there perhaps
|
| some enigma therein? Probably; but fortunately nothing for my own
|
| teeth.--Perhaps it betrays the species to which I belong?--but not to
|
| myself, as is sufficiently agreeable to me."
|
|
|
| 282.--"But what has happened to you?"--"I do not know," he said,
|
| hesitatingly; "perhaps the Harpies have flown over my table."--It
|
| sometimes happens nowadays that a gentle, sober, retiring man becomes
|
| suddenly mad, breaks the plates, upsets the table, shrieks, raves,
|
| and shocks everybody--and finally withdraws, ashamed, and raging at
|
| himself--whither? for what purpose? To famish apart? To suffocate with
|
| his memories?--To him who has the desires of a lofty and dainty soul,
|
| and only seldom finds his table laid and his food prepared, the danger
|
| will always be great--nowadays, however, it is extraordinarily so.
|
| Thrown into the midst of a noisy and plebeian age, with which he does
|
| not like to eat out of the same dish, he may readily perish of hunger
|
| and thirst--or, should he nevertheless finally "fall to," of sudden
|
| nausea.--We have probably all sat at tables to which we did not belong;
|
| and precisely the most spiritual of us, who are most difficult to
|
| nourish, know the dangerous DYSPEPSIA which originates from a sudden
|
| insight and disillusionment about our food and our messmates--the
|
| AFTER-DINNER NAUSEA.
|
|
|
| 283. If one wishes to praise at all, it is a delicate and at the
|
| same time a noble self-control, to praise only where one DOES NOT
|
| agree--otherwise in fact one would praise oneself, which is contrary
|
| to good taste:--a self-control, to be sure, which offers excellent
|
| opportunity and provocation to constant MISUNDERSTANDING. To be able to
|
| allow oneself this veritable luxury of taste and morality, one must
|
| not live among intellectual imbeciles, but rather among men whose
|
| misunderstandings and mistakes amuse by their refinement--or one will
|
| have to pay dearly for it!--"He praises me, THEREFORE he acknowledges me
|
| to be right"--this asinine method of inference spoils half of the life
|
| of us recluses, for it brings the asses into our neighbourhood and
|
| friendship.
|
|
|
| 284. To live in a vast and proud tranquility; always beyond... To have,
|
| or not to have, one's emotions, one's For and Against, according to
|
| choice; to lower oneself to them for hours; to SEAT oneself on them as
|
| upon horses, and often as upon asses:--for one must know how to make
|
| use of their stupidity as well as of their fire. To conserve one's
|
| three hundred foregrounds; also one's black spectacles: for there are
|
| circumstances when nobody must look into our eyes, still less into our
|
| "motives." And to choose for company that roguish and cheerful vice,
|
| politeness. And to remain master of one's four virtues, courage,
|
| insight, sympathy, and solitude. For solitude is a virtue with us, as
|
| a sublime bent and bias to purity, which divines that in the contact of
|
| man and man--"in society"--it must be unavoidably impure. All society
|
| makes one somehow, somewhere, or sometime--"commonplace."
|
|
|
| 285. The greatest events and thoughts--the greatest thoughts, however,
|
| are the greatest events--are longest in being comprehended: the
|
| generations which are contemporary with them do not EXPERIENCE such
|
| events--they live past them. Something happens there as in the realm of
|
| stars. The light of the furthest stars is longest in reaching man; and
|
| before it has arrived man DENIES--that there are stars there. "How
|
| many centuries does a mind require to be understood?"--that is also a
|
| standard, one also makes a gradation of rank and an etiquette therewith,
|
| such as is necessary for mind and for star.
|
|
|
| 286. "Here is the prospect free, the mind exalted." [FOOTNOTE: Goethe's
|
| "Faust," Part II, Act V. The words of Dr. Marianus.]--But there is a
|
| reverse kind of man, who is also upon a height, and has also a free
|
| prospect--but looks DOWNWARDS.
|
|
|
| 287. What is noble? What does the word "noble" still mean for us
|
| nowadays? How does the noble man betray himself, how is he recognized
|
| under this heavy overcast sky of the commencing plebeianism, by which
|
| everything is rendered opaque and leaden?--It is not his actions which
|
| establish his claim--actions are always ambiguous, always inscrutable;
|
| neither is it his "works." One finds nowadays among artists and scholars
|
| plenty of those who betray by their works that a profound longing for
|
| nobleness impels them; but this very NEED of nobleness is radically
|
| different from the needs of the noble soul itself, and is in fact the
|
| eloquent and dangerous sign of the lack thereof. It is not the works,
|
| but the BELIEF which is here decisive and determines the order of
|
| rank--to employ once more an old religious formula with a new and deeper
|
| meaning--it is some fundamental certainty which a noble soul has about
|
| itself, something which is not to be sought, is not to be found, and
|
| perhaps, also, is not to be lost.--THE NOBLE SOUL HAS REVERENCE FOR
|
| ITSELF.--
|
|
|
| 288. There are men who are unavoidably intellectual, let them turn
|
| and twist themselves as they will, and hold their hands before their
|
| treacherous eyes--as though the hand were not a betrayer; it always
|
| comes out at last that they have something which they hide--namely,
|
| intellect. One of the subtlest means of deceiving, at least as long as
|
| possible, and of successfully representing oneself to be stupider
|
| than one really is--which in everyday life is often as desirable as
|
| an umbrella,--is called ENTHUSIASM, including what belongs to it, for
|
| instance, virtue. For as Galiani said, who was obliged to know it: VERTU
|
| EST ENTHOUSIASME.
|
|
|
| 289. In the writings of a recluse one always hears something of the echo
|
| of the wilderness, something of the murmuring tones and timid vigilance
|
| of solitude; in his strongest words, even in his cry itself, there
|
| sounds a new and more dangerous kind of silence, of concealment. He who
|
| has sat day and night, from year's end to year's end, alone with his
|
| soul in familiar discord and discourse, he who has become a cave-bear,
|
| or a treasure-seeker, or a treasure-guardian and dragon in his cave--it
|
| may be a labyrinth, but can also be a gold-mine--his ideas themselves
|
| eventually acquire a twilight-colour of their own, and an odour, as much
|
| of the depth as of the mould, something uncommunicative and repulsive,
|
| which blows chilly upon every passer-by. The recluse does not believe
|
| that a philosopher--supposing that a philosopher has always in the first
|
| place been a recluse--ever expressed his actual and ultimate opinions in
|
| books: are not books written precisely to hide what is in us?--indeed,
|
| he will doubt whether a philosopher CAN have "ultimate and actual"
|
| opinions at all; whether behind every cave in him there is not, and must
|
| necessarily be, a still deeper cave: an ampler, stranger, richer
|
| world beyond the surface, an abyss behind every bottom, beneath every
|
| "foundation." Every philosophy is a foreground philosophy--this is a
|
| recluse's verdict: "There is something arbitrary in the fact that the
|
| PHILOSOPHER came to a stand here, took a retrospect, and looked around;
|
| that he HERE laid his spade aside and did not dig any deeper--there
|
| is also something suspicious in it." Every philosophy also CONCEALS a
|
| philosophy; every opinion is also a LURKING-PLACE, every word is also a
|
| MASK.
|
|
|
| 290. Every deep thinker is more afraid of being understood than of being
|
| misunderstood. The latter perhaps wounds his vanity; but the former
|
| wounds his heart, his sympathy, which always says: "Ah, why would you
|
| also have as hard a time of it as I have?"
|
|
|
| 291. Man, a COMPLEX, mendacious, artful, and inscrutable animal, uncanny
|
| to the other animals by his artifice and sagacity, rather than by his
|
| strength, has invented the good conscience in order finally to enjoy his
|
| soul as something SIMPLE; and the whole of morality is a long, audacious
|
| falsification, by virtue of which generally enjoyment at the sight of
|
| the soul becomes possible. From this point of view there is perhaps much
|
| more in the conception of "art" than is generally believed.
|
|
|
| 292. A philosopher: that is a man who constantly experiences, sees,
|
| hears, suspects, hopes, and dreams extraordinary things; who is struck
|
| by his own thoughts as if they came from the outside, from above and
|
| below, as a species of events and lightning-flashes PECULIAR TO HIM; who
|
| is perhaps himself a storm pregnant with new lightnings; a portentous
|
| man, around whom there is always rumbling and mumbling and gaping and
|
| something uncanny going on. A philosopher: alas, a being who often
|
| runs away from himself, is often afraid of himself--but whose curiosity
|
| always makes him "come to himself" again.
|
|
|
| 293. A man who says: "I like that, I take it for my own, and mean to
|
| guard and protect it from every one"; a man who can conduct a case,
|
| carry out a resolution, remain true to an opinion, keep hold of a woman,
|
| punish and overthrow insolence; a man who has his indignation and his
|
| sword, and to whom the weak, the suffering, the oppressed, and even the
|
| animals willingly submit and naturally belong; in short, a man who is a
|
| MASTER by nature--when such a man has sympathy, well! THAT sympathy has
|
| value! But of what account is the sympathy of those who suffer! Or of
|
| those even who preach sympathy! There is nowadays, throughout almost the
|
| whole of Europe, a sickly irritability and sensitiveness towards pain,
|
| and also a repulsive irrestrainableness in complaining, an effeminizing,
|
| which, with the aid of religion and philosophical nonsense, seeks
|
| to deck itself out as something superior--there is a regular cult of
|
| suffering. The UNMANLINESS of that which is called "sympathy" by such
|
| groups of visionaries, is always, I believe, the first thing that
|
| strikes the eye.--One must resolutely and radically taboo this latest
|
| form of bad taste; and finally I wish people to put the good amulet,
|
| "GAI SABER" ("gay science," in ordinary language), on heart and neck, as
|
| a protection against it.
|
|
|
| 294. THE OLYMPIAN VICE.--Despite the philosopher who, as a genuine
|
| Englishman, tried to bring laughter into bad repute in all thinking
|
| minds--"Laughing is a bad infirmity of human nature, which every
|
| thinking mind will strive to overcome" (Hobbes),--I would even
|
| allow myself to rank philosophers according to the quality of their
|
| laughing--up to those who are capable of GOLDEN laughter. And supposing
|
| that Gods also philosophize, which I am strongly inclined to believe,
|
| owing to many reasons--I have no doubt that they also know how to laugh
|
| thereby in an overman-like and new fashion--and at the expense of all
|
| serious things! Gods are fond of ridicule: it seems that they cannot
|
| refrain from laughter even in holy matters.
|
|
|
| 295. The genius of the heart, as that great mysterious one possesses
|
| it, the tempter-god and born rat-catcher of consciences, whose voice can
|
| descend into the nether-world of every soul, who neither speaks a word
|
| nor casts a glance in which there may not be some motive or touch
|
| of allurement, to whose perfection it pertains that he knows how to
|
| appear,--not as he is, but in a guise which acts as an ADDITIONAL
|
| constraint on his followers to press ever closer to him, to follow him
|
| more cordially and thoroughly;--the genius of the heart, which imposes
|
| silence and attention on everything loud and self-conceited, which
|
| smoothes rough souls and makes them taste a new longing--to lie placid
|
| as a mirror, that the deep heavens may be reflected in them;--the genius
|
| of the heart, which teaches the clumsy and too hasty hand to hesitate,
|
| and to grasp more delicately; which scents the hidden and forgotten
|
| treasure, the drop of goodness and sweet spirituality under thick dark
|
| ice, and is a divining-rod for every grain of gold, long buried and
|
| imprisoned in mud and sand; the genius of the heart, from contact with
|
| which every one goes away richer; not favoured or surprised, not as
|
| though gratified and oppressed by the good things of others; but richer
|
| in himself, newer than before, broken up, blown upon, and sounded by a
|
| thawing wind; more uncertain, perhaps, more delicate, more fragile, more
|
| bruised, but full of hopes which as yet lack names, full of a new will
|
| and current, full of a new ill-will and counter-current... but what am I
|
| doing, my friends? Of whom am I talking to you? Have I forgotten myself
|
| so far that I have not even told you his name? Unless it be that you
|
| have already divined of your own accord who this questionable God
|
| and spirit is, that wishes to be PRAISED in such a manner? For, as it
|
| happens to every one who from childhood onward has always been on his
|
| legs, and in foreign lands, I have also encountered on my path many
|
| strange and dangerous spirits; above all, however, and again and again,
|
| the one of whom I have just spoken: in fact, no less a personage than
|
| the God DIONYSUS, the great equivocator and tempter, to whom, as you
|
| know, I once offered in all secrecy and reverence my first-fruits--the
|
| last, as it seems to me, who has offered a SACRIFICE to him, for I
|
| have found no one who could understand what I was then doing. In
|
| the meantime, however, I have learned much, far too much, about the
|
| philosophy of this God, and, as I said, from mouth to mouth--I, the last
|
| disciple and initiate of the God Dionysus: and perhaps I might at last
|
| begin to give you, my friends, as far as I am allowed, a little taste of
|
| this philosophy? In a hushed voice, as is but seemly: for it has to do
|
| with much that is secret, new, strange, wonderful, and uncanny. The
|
| very fact that Dionysus is a philosopher, and that therefore Gods also
|
| philosophize, seems to me a novelty which is not unensnaring, and might
|
| perhaps arouse suspicion precisely among philosophers;--among you, my
|
| friends, there is less to be said against it, except that it comes too
|
| late and not at the right time; for, as it has been disclosed to me, you
|
| are loth nowadays to believe in God and gods. It may happen, too, that
|
| in the frankness of my story I must go further than is agreeable to the
|
| strict usages of your ears? Certainly the God in question went further,
|
| very much further, in such dialogues, and was always many paces ahead of
|
| me... Indeed, if it were allowed, I should have to give him, according
|
| to human usage, fine ceremonious tides of lustre and merit, I should
|
| have to extol his courage as investigator and discoverer, his fearless
|
| honesty, truthfulness, and love of wisdom. But such a God does not know
|
| what to do with all that respectable trumpery and pomp. "Keep that," he
|
| would say, "for thyself and those like thee, and whoever else require
|
| it! I--have no reason to cover my nakedness!" One suspects that this
|
| kind of divinity and philosopher perhaps lacks shame?--He once said:
|
| "Under certain circumstances I love mankind"--and referred thereby to
|
| Ariadne, who was present; "in my opinion man is an agreeable, brave,
|
| inventive animal, that has not his equal upon earth, he makes his way
|
| even through all labyrinths. I like man, and often think how I can
|
| still further advance him, and make him stronger, more evil, and more
|
| profound."--"Stronger, more evil, and more profound?" I asked in horror.
|
| "Yes," he said again, "stronger, more evil, and more profound; also more
|
| beautiful"--and thereby the tempter-god smiled with his halcyon smile,
|
| as though he had just paid some charming compliment. One here sees at
|
| once that it is not only shame that this divinity lacks;--and in general
|
| there are good grounds for supposing that in some things the Gods could
|
| all of them come to us men for instruction. We men are--more human.--
|
|
|
| 296. Alas! what are you, after all, my written and painted thoughts! Not
|
| long ago you were so variegated, young and malicious, so full of thorns
|
| and secret spices, that you made me sneeze and laugh--and now? You
|
| have already doffed your novelty, and some of you, I fear, are ready
|
| to become truths, so immortal do they look, so pathetically honest, so
|
| tedious! And was it ever otherwise? What then do we write and paint,
|
| we mandarins with Chinese brush, we immortalisers of things which LEND
|
| themselves to writing, what are we alone capable of painting? Alas, only
|
| that which is just about to fade and begins to lose its odour! Alas,
|
| only exhausted and departing storms and belated yellow sentiments! Alas,
|
| only birds strayed and fatigued by flight, which now let themselves be
|
| captured with the hand--with OUR hand! We immortalize what cannot live
|
| and fly much longer, things only which are exhausted and mellow! And it
|
| is only for your AFTERNOON, you, my written and painted thoughts, for
|
| which alone I have colours, many colours, perhaps, many variegated
|
| softenings, and fifty yellows and browns and greens and reds;--but
|
| nobody will divine thereby how ye looked in your morning, you sudden
|
| sparks and marvels of my solitude, you, my old, beloved--EVIL thoughts!
|
|
|
| FROM THE HEIGHTS
|
|
|
| By F W Nietzsche
|
|
|
| Translated by L. A. Magnus
|
|
|
| 1.
|
|
|
| MIDDAY of Life! Oh, season of delight!
|
| My summer's park!
|
| Uneaseful joy to look, to lurk, to hark--
|
| I peer for friends, am ready day and night,--
|
| Where linger ye, my friends? The time is right!
|
|
|
| 2.
|
|
|
| Is not the glacier's grey today for you
|
| Rose-garlanded?
|
| The brooklet seeks you, wind, cloud, with longing thread
|
| And thrust themselves yet higher to the blue,
|
| To spy for you from farthest eagle's view.
|
|
|
| 3.
|
|
|
| My table was spread out for you on high--
|
| Who dwelleth so
|
| Star-near, so near the grisly pit below?--
|
| My realm--what realm hath wider boundary?
|
| My honey--who hath sipped its fragrancy?
|
|
|
| 4.
|
|
|
| Friends, ye are there! Woe me,--yet I am not
|
| He whom ye seek?
|
| Ye stare and stop--better your wrath could speak!
|
| I am not I? Hand, gait, face, changed? And what
|
| I am, to you my friends, now am I not?
|
|
|
| 5.
|
|
|
| Am I an other? Strange am I to Me?
|
| Yet from Me sprung?
|
| A wrestler, by himself too oft self-wrung?
|
| Hindering too oft my own self's potency,
|
| Wounded and hampered by self-victory?
|
|
|
| 6.
|
|
|
| I sought where-so the wind blows keenest. There
|
| I learned to dwell
|
| Where no man dwells, on lonesome ice-lorn fell,
|
| And unlearned Man and God and curse and prayer?
|
| Became a ghost haunting the glaciers bare?
|
|
|
| 7.
|
|
|
| Ye, my old friends! Look! Ye turn pale, filled o'er
|
| With love and fear!
|
| Go! Yet not in wrath. Ye could ne'er live here.
|
| Here in the farthest realm of ice and scaur,
|
| A huntsman must one be, like chamois soar.
|
|
|
| 8.
|
|
|
| An evil huntsman was I? See how taut
|
| My bow was bent!
|
| Strongest was he by whom such bolt were sent--
|
| Woe now! That arrow is with peril fraught,
|
| Perilous as none.--Have yon safe home ye sought!
|
|
|
| 9.
|
|
|
| Ye go! Thou didst endure enough, oh, heart;--
|
| Strong was thy hope;
|
| Unto new friends thy portals widely ope,
|
| Let old ones be. Bid memory depart!
|
| Wast thou young then, now--better young thou art!
|
|
|
| 10.
|
|
|
| What linked us once together, one hope's tie--
|
| (Who now doth con
|
| Those lines, now fading, Love once wrote thereon?)--
|
| Is like a parchment, which the hand is shy
|
| To touch--like crackling leaves, all seared, all dry.
|
|
|
| 11.
|
|
|
| Oh! Friends no more! They are--what name for those?--
|
| Friends' phantom-flight
|
| Knocking at my heart's window-pane at night,
|
| Gazing on me, that speaks "We were" and goes,--
|
| Oh, withered words, once fragrant as the rose!
|
|
|
| 12.
|
|
|
| Pinings of youth that might not understand!
|
| For which I pined,
|
| Which I deemed changed with me, kin of my kind:
|
| But they grew old, and thus were doomed and banned:
|
| None but new kith are native of my land!
|
|
|
| 13.
|
|
|
| Midday of life! My second youth's delight!
|
| My summer's park!
|
| Unrestful joy to long, to lurk, to hark!
|
| I peer for friends!--am ready day and night,
|
| For my new friends. Come! Come! The time is right!
|
|
|
| 14.
|
|
|
| This song is done,--the sweet sad cry of rue
|
| Sang out its end;
|
| A wizard wrought it, he the timely friend,
|
| The midday-friend,--no, do not ask me who;
|
| At midday 'twas, when one became as two.
|
|
|
| 15.
|
|
|
| We keep our Feast of Feasts, sure of our bourne,
|
| Our aims self-same:
|
| The Guest of Guests, friend Zarathustra, came!
|
| The world now laughs, the grisly veil was torn,
|
| And Light and Dark were one that wedding-morn.
|
|
|
| End of Project Gutenberg's Beyond Good and Evil, by Friedrich Nietzsche |