Human, All-Too-Human
On The History of Moral Feelings
by Friedrich Nietzsche
Published 1878
Translation by Helen Zimmern
Published 1909-191
35
The advantages of psychological observation. That meditating on
things human, all too human (or, as the learned phrase goes, "psychological
observation") is one of the means by which man can ease life's
burden; that by exercising this art, one can secure presence of
mind in difficult situations and entertainment amid boring surroundings;
indeed, that from the thorniest and unhappiest phases of one's own
life one can pluck maxims and feel a bit better thereby: this was
believed, known-in earlier centuries. Why has it been forgotten
in this century, when many signs point, in Germany at least, if
not throughout Europe, to the dearth of psychological observation?
Not particularly in novels, short stories, and philosophical meditations,
for these are the work of exceptional men; but more in the judging
of public events and personalities; most of all we lack the art
of psychological dissection and calculation in all classes of society,
where one hears a lot of talk about men, but none at all about man.
Why do people let the richest and most harmless source of entertainment
get away from them? Why do they not even read the great masters
of the psychological maxim any more? For it is no exaggeration to
say that it is hard to find the cultured European who has read La
Rochefoucauld1 and his spiritual and artistic cousins. Even more
uncommon is the man who knows them and does not despise them. But
even this unusual reader will probably find much less delight in
those artists than their form ought to give him; for not even the
finest mind is capable of adequate appreciation of the art of the
polished maxim if he has not been educated to it, has not been challenged
by it himself. Without such practical learning one takes this form
of creating and forming to be easier than it is; one is not acute
enough in discerning what is successful and attractive. For that
reason present-day readers of maxims take a relatively insignificant
delight in them, scarcely a mouthful of pleasure; they react like
typical viewers of cameos, praising them because they cannot love
them, and quick to admire but even quicker to run away.
36
Objection. Or might there be a counterargument to the thesis that
psychological observation is one of life's best stimulants, remedies,
and palliatives? Might one be so persuaded of the unpleasant consequences
of this art as to intentionally divert the student's gaze from it?
Indeed, a certain blind faith in the goodness of human nature, an
inculcated aversion to dissecting human behavior, a kind of shame
with respect to the naked soul, may really be more desirable for
a man's overall happiness than the trait of psychological sharpsightedness,
which is helpful in isolated instances. And perhaps the belief in
goodness, in virtuous men and actions, in an abundance of impersonal
goodwill in the world has made men better, in that it has made them
less distrustful. If one imitates Plutarch's 2 heroes with enthusiasm
and feels an aversion toward tracing skeptically the motives for
their actions, then the welfare of human society has benefited (even
if the truth of human society has not). Psychological error, and
dullness in this area generally, help humanity forward; but knowledge
of the truth might gain more from the stimulating power of an hypothesis
like the one La Rochefoucauld places at the beginning of the first
edition of his Sentences et maximes morales: "Ce que le monde
nomme vertu n'est d'ordinaire qu'un fantome formé par nos
passions, a qui on donne un nom honnete pour faire impunément
ce qu'on veut." 3 La Rochefoucauld and those other French masters
of soul searching (whose company a German, the author of Psychological
Observations, has recently joined)4 are like accurately aimed arrows,
which hit the mark again 'and again, the black mark of man's nature.
Their skill inspires amazement, but the spectator who is guided
not by the scientific spirit, but by the humane spirit, will eventually
curse an art which seems to implant in the souls of men a predilection
for belittling and doubt.
37
Nevertheless. However the argument and counterargument stand, the
present condition of one certain, single science has made necessary
the awakening of moral observation, and mankind cannot be spared
the horrible sight of the psychological operating table, with its
knives and forceps. For now that science rules which asks after
the origin and history of moral feelings and which tries as it progresses
to pose and solve the complicated sociological problems; the old
philosophy doesn't even acknowledge such problems and has always
used meager excuses to avoid investigating the origin and history
of moral feelings. We can survey the consequences very clearly,
many examples having proven how the errors of the greatest philosophers
usually start from a false explanation of certain human actions
and feelings, how an erroneous analysis of so-called selfless behavior,
for example, can be the basis for false ethics, for whose sake religion
and mythological confusion are then drawn in, and finally how the
shadows of these sad spirits also fall upon physics and the entire
contemplation of the world. But if it is a fact that the superficiality
of psychological observation has laid the most dangerous traps for
human judgment and conclusions, and continues to lay them anew,
then what we need now is a persistence in work that does not tire
of piling stone upon stone, pebble upon pebble; we need a sober
courage to do such humble work without shame and to defy any who
disdain it. It is true that countless individual remarks about things
human and all too human were first detected and stated in those
social circles which would make every sort of sacrifice not for
scientific knowledge, but for a witty coquetry. And because the
scent of that old homeland (a very seductive scent) has attached
itself almost inextricably to the whole genre of the moral maxim,
the scientific man instinctively shows some suspicion towards this
genre and its seriousness. But it suffices to point to the outcome:
already it is becoming clear that the most serious results grow
up from the ground of psychological observation. Which principle
did one of the keenest and coolest thinkers, the author of the book
On the Origin of Moral Feelings, arrive at through his incisive
and piercing analysis of human actions? "The moral man,"
he says, "stands no nearer to the intelligible (metaphysical)
world than does the physical man."5 Perhaps at some point in
the future this principle, grown hard and sharp by the hammerblow
of historical knowledge, can serve as the axe laid to the root of
men's "metaphysical need"6 (whether more as a blessing
than as a curse for the general welfare, who can say?). In any event,
it is a tenet with the most weighty consequences, fruitful and frightful
at the same time, and seeing into the world with that double vision
which all great insights have.
38
How beneficial. Let us table the question, then, of whether psychological
observation brings more advantage or harm upon men. What is certain
is that it is necessary, for science cannot do without it. Science,
however, takes as little consideration of final purposes as does
nature; just as nature sometimes brings about the most useful things
without having wanted to, so too true science, which is the imitation
of nature in concepts, will sometimes, nay often, further man's
benefit and welfare and achieve what is useful-but likewise without
having wanted to. Whoever feels too wintry in the breeze of this
kind of observation has perhaps too little fire in him. Let him
look around meanwhile, and he will perceive diseases which require
cold poultices, and men who are so "moulded" out of glowing
spirit that they have great trouble in finding an atmosphere cold
and biting enough for them anywhere. Moreover, as all overly earnest
individuals and peoples have a need for frivolity; as others, who
are overly excitable and unstable, occasionally need heavy, oppressive
burdens for their health's sake; so should not we-the more intellectual
men in an age that is visibly being set aflame more and more-reach
for all quenching and cooling means available to remain at least
as steady, harmless, and moderate as we now are and thus render
service to this age at some future time as a mirror and self-reflection
of itself?
39
The fable of intelligible freedom.'' The history of those feelings,
by virtue of which we consider a person responsible, the so-called
moral feelings, is divided into the following main phases. At first
we call particular acts good or evil without any consideration of
their motives, but simply on the basis of their beneficial or harmful
consequences. Soon, however, we forget the origin of these terms
and imagine that the quality "good" or "evil"
is inherent in the actions themselves, without consideration of
their consequences; this is the same error language makes when calling
the stone itself hard, the tree itself green-that is, we take the
effect to be the cause. Then we assign the goodness or evil to the
motives, and regard the acts themselves as morally ambiguous. We
go even further and cease to give to the particular motive the predicate
good or evil, but give it rather to the whole nature of a man; the
motive grows out of him as a plant grows out of the earth. So we
make man responsible in turn for the effects of his actions, then
for his actions, then for his motives and finally for his nature.
Ultimately we discover that his nature cannot be responsible either,
in that it is itself an inevitable consequence, an outgrowth of
the elements and influences of past and present things; that is,
man cannot be made responsible for anything, neither for his nature,
nor his motives, nor his actions, nor the effects of his actions.
And thus we come to understand that the history of moral feelings
is the history of an error, an error called "responsibility,"
which in turn rests on an error called "freedom of the will."
Schopenhauer, on the other hand, concluded as follows: because
certain actions produce displeasure ("sense of guilt"),
a responsibility must exist. For there would be no reason for this
displeasure if not only all human actions occurred out of necessity
(as they actually do, according to this philosopher's insight),
but if man himself also acquired his entire nature out of the same
necessity (which Schopenhauer denies). From the fact of man's displeasure,
Schopenhauer thinks he can prove that man somehow must have had
a freedom, a freedom which did not determine his actions but rather
determined his nature: freedom, that is, to be this way or the other,
not to act this way or the other. According to Schopenhauer, "operari"
(doing), the sphere of strict causality, necessity, and lack of
responsibility, follows from esse (being) the sphere of freedom
and responsibility. The displeasure man feels seems to refer to
"operari" (to this extent it is erroneous), but in truth
it refers to esse, which is the act of a free will, the primary
cause of an individual's existence. Man becomes that which he wants
to be; his volition precedes his existence."
In this case, we are concluding falsely that we can deduce the
justification, the rational admissibility of this displeasure, from
the fact that it exists; and from this false deduction Schopenhauer
arrives at his fantastic conclusion of so-called intelligible freedom.
But displeasure after the deed need not be rational at all: in fact,
it certainly is not rational, for its rests on the erroneous assumption
that the deed did not have to follow necessarily. Thus, because
he thinks he is free (but not because he is free), man feels remorse
and the pangs of conscience.
Furthermore, this displeasure is a habit that can be given up;
many men do not feel it at all, even after the same actions that
cause many other men to feel it. Tied to the development of custom
and culture, it is a very changeable thing, and present perhaps
only within a relatively short period of world history.
No one is responsible for his deeds, no one for his nature; to
judge is to be unjust. This is also true when the individual judges
himself. The tenet is as bright as sunlight, and yet everyone prefers
to walk back into the shadow and untruth-for fear of the consequences.
40
The super-animal.9 The beast in us wants to be lied to; morality
is a white lie, to keep it from tearing us apart. Without the errors
inherent in the postulates of morality, man would have remained
an animal. But as it is he has taken himself to be something higher
and has imposed stricter laws upon himself. He therefore has a hatred
of those stages of man that remain closer to the animal state, which
explains why the slave used to be disdained as a nonhuman, a thing.
41
The unchangeable character. In the strict sense, it is not true
that one's character is unchangeable; rather, this popular tenet10
means only that during a man's short lifetime the motives affecting
him cannot normally cut deeply enough to destroy the imprinted writing
of many millennia. If a man eighty thousand years old were conceivable,
his character would in fact be absolutely variable, so that out
of him little by little an abundance of different individuals would
develop. The brevity of human life misleads us to many an erroneous
assertion about the qualities of man.
42
Morality and the ordering of the good. The accepted hierarchy of
the good, based on how a low, higher, or a most high egoism desires
that thing or the other, decides today about morality or immorality.
To prefer a low good (sensual pleasure, for example) to one esteemed
higher (health, for example) is taken for immoral, likewise to prefer
comfort to freedom. The hierarchy of the good, however, is not fixed
and identical at all times. If someone prefers revenge to justice,
he is moral by the standard of an earlier culture, yet by the standard
of the present culture he is immoral. "Immoral" then indicates
that someone has not felt, or not felt strongly enough, the higher,
finer, more spiritual motives which the new culture of the time
has brought with it. It indicates a backward nature, but only in
degree.
The hierarchy itself is not established or changed from the point
of view of morality; nevertheless an action is judged moral or immoral
according to the prevailing determination.
43
Cruel men as backward. We must think of men who are cruel today
as stages of earlier cultures, which have been left over; in their
case, the mountain range of humanity shows openly its deeper formations,
which otherwise lie hidden. They are backward men whose brains,
because of various possible accidents of heredity, have not yet
developed much delicacy or versatility. They show us what we all
were, and frighten us. But they themselves are as little responsible
as a piece of granite for being granite. In our brain, too, there
must be grooves and bends which correspond to that state of mind,
just as there are said to be reminders of the fish state in the
form of certain human organs. I I But these grooves and bends are
no longer the bed in which the river of our feeling courses.
44
Gratitude and revenge. The powerful man feels gratitude for the
following reason: through his good deed, his benefactor has, as
it were, violated the powerful man's sphere and penetrated it. Now
through his act of gratitude the powerful man requites himself by
violating the sphere of the benefactor. It is a milder form of revenge.
Without the satisfaction of gratitude, the powerful man would have
shown himself to be unpowerful and henceforth would be considered
such. For that reason, every society of good men (that is, originally,
of powerful men) places gratitude among its first duties.
Swift remarked that men are grateful in the same proportion as
they cherish revenge. 12
45
Double prehistory of good and evil. The concept of good and evil
has a double prehistory: namely, first of all, in the soul of the
ruling clans and castes. The man who has the power to requite goodness
with goodness, evil with evil, and really does practice requital
by being grateful and vengeful, is called "good." The
man who is unpowerful and cannot requite is taken for bad. As a
good man, one belongs to the "good," a community that
has a communal feeling, because all the individuals are entwined
together by their feeling for requital. As a bad man, one belongs
to the "bad," to a mass of abject, powerless men who have
no communal feeling. The good men are a caste; the bad men are a
multitude, like particles of dust. Good and bad are for a time equivalent
to noble and base, master and slave. Conversely, one does not regard
the enemy as evil: he can requite. In Homer, both the Trojan and
the Greek are good. Not the man who inflicts harm on us, but the
man who is contemptible, is bad. In the community of the good, goodness
is hereditary; it is impossible for a bad man to grow out of such
good soil. Should one of the good men nevertheless do something
unworthy of good men, one resorts to excuses; one blames God, for
example, saying that he struck the good man with blindness and madness.
Then, in the souls of oppressed, powerless men, every other man
is taken for hostile, inconsiderate, exploitative, cruel, sly, whether
he be noble or base. Evil is their epithet for man, indeed for every
possible living being, even, for example, for a god; "human,"
"divine" mean the same as "devilish," "evil."
Signs of goodness, helpfulness, pity are taken anxiously for malice,
the prelude to a terrible outcome, bewilderment, and deception,
in short, for refined evil. With such a state of mind in the individual,
a community can scarcely come about at all-or at most in the crudest
form; so that wherever this concept of good and evil predominates,
the downfall of individuals, their clans and races, is near at hand.
Our present morality has grown up on the ground of the ruling clans
and castes. 13
46
Pity more intense than suffering. 14 There are cases where pity
is more intense than actual suffering. When one of our friends is
guilty of something ignominious, for example, we feel it more painfully
than when we ourselves do it. For we believe in the purity of his
character more than he does. Thus our love for him (probably because
of this very belief) is more intense than his own love for himself.
Even if his egoism suffers more than our egoism, in that he has
to feel the bad consequences of his fault more intensely, our selflessness
(this word must never be taken literally, but only as a euphemism)
is touched more intensely by his guilt than is his selflessness.
47
Hypochondria. There are people who become hypochondriacs out of
compassion and concern for another; the kind of pity which results
is nothing less than a disease. Similarly, there is a Christian
hypochrondria which befalls those lonely, religious-minded people
who continually visualize to themselves the suffering and death
of Christ.
48
Economy of kindness. Kindness and love, the most curative herbs
and agents in human intercourse, are such precious finds that one
would hope these balsamlike remedies would be used as economically
as possible; but this is impossible. Only the boldest Utopians would
dream of the economy of kindness.
49
Goodwill. Among the small but endlessly abundant and therefore
very effective things that science ought to heed more than the great,
rare things, is goodwill. I mean those expressions of a friendly
disposition in interactions, that smile of the eye, those handclasps,
that ease which usually envelops nearly all human actions. Every
teacher, every official brings this ingredient to what he considers
his duty. It is the continual manifestation of our humanity, its
rays of light, so to speak, in which everything grows. Especially
within the narrowest circle, in the family, life sprouts and blossoms
only by this goodwill. Good nature, friendliness, and courtesy of
the heart are ever-flowing tributaries of the selfless drive and
have made much greater contributions to culture than those much
more famous expressions of this drive, called pity, charity, and
self-sacrifice. But we tend to underestimate them, and in fact there
really is not much about them that is selfless. The sum of these
small doses is nevertheless mighty; its cumulative force is among
the strongest of forces.
Similarly, there is much more happiness to be found in the world
than dim eyes can see, if one calculates correctly and does not
forget all those moments of ease which are so plentiful in every
day of every human life, even the most oppressed.
50
Desire to arouse pity. 15 In the most noteworthy passage of his
self-portrait (first published in r658), La Rochefoucauld certainly
hits the mark when he warns all reasonable men against pity,' when
he advises them to leave it to those common people who need passions
(because they are not directed by reason) to bring them to the point
of helping the sufferer and intervening energetically in a misfortune.
For pity, in his (and Plato's)17 judgment, weakens the soul. Of
course one ought to express pity, but one ought to guard against
having it; for unfortunate people are so stupid that they count
the expression of pity as the greatest good on earth.
Perhaps one can warn even more strongly against having pity for
the unfortunate if one does not think of their need for pity as
stupidity and intellectual deficiency, a kind of mental disorder
resulting from their misfortune (this is how La Rochefoucauld seems
to regard it), but rather as something quite different and more
dubious. Observe how children weep and cry, so that they will be
pitied, how they wait for the moment when their condition will be
noticed. Or live among the ill and depressed, and question whether
their eloquent laments and whimpering, the spectacle of their misfortune,
is not basically aimed at hurting those present. The pity that the
spectators then express consoles the weak and suffering, inasmuch
as they see that, despite all their weakness, they still have at
least one power: the power to hurt. When expressions of pity make
the unfortunate man aware of this feeling of superiority, he gets
a kind of pleasure from it; his selfimage revives; he is still important
enough to inflict pain on the world. Thus the thirst for pity is
a thirst for self-enjoyment, and at the expense of one's fellow
men. It reveals man in the complete inconsideration of his most
intimate dear self, but not precisely in his "stupidity,"
as La Rochefoucauld thinks.
In social dialogue, three-quarters of all questions and answers
are framed in order to hurt the participants a little bit; this
is why many men thirst after society so much: it gives them a feeling
of their strength. In these countless, but very small doses, malevolence
takes effect as one of life's powerful stimulants, just as goodwill,
dispensed in the same way throughout the human world, is the perennially
ready cure.
But will there be many people honest enough to admit that it is
a pleasure to inflict pain? That not infrequently one amuses himself
(and well) by offending other men (at least in his thoughts) and
by shooting pellets of petty malice at them? Most people are too
dishonest, and a few men are too good, to know anything about this
source of shame. So they may try to deny that Prosper Merimée
is right when he says, "Sachez aussi qu'il n'y a rien de plus
commun que de faire le mal pour le plaisir de le faire."18
51
How seeming becomes being. 19 Ultimately, not even the deepest
pain can keep the actor from thinking of the impression of his part
and the overall theatrical effect, not even, for example, at his
child's funeral.20 He will be his own audience, and cry about his
own pain as he expresses it. The hypocrite who always plays one
and the same role finally ceases to be a hypocrite. Priests, for
example, who are usually conscious or unconscious hypocrites when
they are young men, finally end by becoming natural, and then they
really are priests, with no affectation. Or if the father does not
get that far, perhaps the son, using his father's headway, inherits
the habit. If someone wants to seem to be something, stubbornly
and for a long time, he eventually finds it hard to be anything
else. The profession of almost every man, even the artist, begins
with hypocrisy, as he imitates from the outside, copies what is
effective. The man who always wears the mask of a friendly countenance
eventually has to gain power over benevolent moods without which
the expression of friendliness cannot be forced-and eventually then
these moods gain power over him, and he is benevolent.
52
The point of honesty in deception. In all great deceivers there
occurs a noteworthy process to which they owe their power. In the
actual act of deception, among all the preparations, the horror
in the voice, expression, gestures, amid the striking scenery, the
belief in themselves overcomes them. It is this that speaks so miraculously
and convincingly to the onlookers. The founders of religions are
distinguished from those other great deceivers by the fact that
they do not come out of this condition of self-deception: or, very
infrequently, they do have those clearer moments, when doubt overwhelms
them; but they usually comfort themselves by foisting these clearer
moments off on the evil adversary. Self-deception must be present,
so that both kinds of deceivers can have a grand effect. For men
will believe something is true, if it is evident that others believe
in it firmly.
53
Alleged levels of truth. One common false conclusion is that because
someone is truthful and upright toward us he is speaking the truth.
Thus the child believes his parents' judgments, the Christian believes
the claims of the church's founders. Likewise, people do not want
to admit that all those things which men have defended with the
sacrifice of their lives and happiness in earlier centuries were
nothing but errors. Perhaps one calls them levels of truth. Basically,
however, one thinks that if someone honestly believed in something
and fought for his belief and died it would be too unfair if he
had actually been inspired by a mere error. Such an occurrence seems
to contradict eternal justice. Therefore the hearts of sensitive
men always decree in opposition to their heads that there must be
a necessary connection between moral actions and intellectual insights.
Unfortunately, it is otherwise, for there is no eternal justice.
54
The lie. Why do men usually tell the truth in daily life? Certainly
not because a god has forbidden lying. Rather it is because, first,
it is more convenient: for lies demand imagination, dissembling,
and memory (which is why Swift says that the man who tells a lie
seldom perceives the heavy burden he is assuming: namely, he must
invent twenty other lies to make good the first). Then, it is because
it is advantageous in ordinary circumstances to say directly: I
want this, I did that, and so on; that is, because the path of obligation
and authority is safer than that of cunning.
If a child has been raised in complicated domestic circumstances,
however, he will employ the lie naturally, and will always say instinctively
that which corresponds to his interests. A feeling for truth, a
distaste for lying in and of itself, is alien to him and inaccessible;
and so he lies in complete innocence.
55
To suspect morality because of belief. No power can maintain itself
if only hypocrites represent it. However many "worldly"
elements the Catholic Church may have, its strength rests on those
priestly natures, still numerous, who make life deep and difficult
for themselves, and whose eye and emaciated body speak of nightly
vigils, fasting, fervent prayers, perhaps even flagellation. These
men shock others and worry them: what if it were necessary to live
like that?-this is the horrible question that the sight of them
brings to the tongue. By spreading this doubt they keep reestablishing
a pillar of their power. Not even the most freeminded dare to resist
so selfless a man with the hard sense for truth, and say: "You
who are deceived, do not deceive others."
Only a difference of insight separates them from this man, by no
means a difference of goodness or badness; but if one does not like
a thing, one generally tends to treat it unjustly, too. Thus one
speaks of the Jesuits' cunning and their infamous art, but overlooks
what self-conquest each single Jesuit imposes upon himself, and
how that lighter regimen preached in Jesuit textbooks is certainly
not for their own benefit, but rather for the layman's. Indeed,
one might ask if we the enlightened, using their tactics and organization,
would be such good instruments, so admirably self-mastering, untiring,
and devoted.
56
Triumph of knowledge over radical evil. The man who wants to gain
wisdom profits greatly from having thought for a time that man is
basically evil and degenerate: this idea is wrong, like its opposite,
but for whole periods of time it was predominant and its roots have
sunk deep into us and into our world. To understand ourselves we
must understand it; but to climb higher, we must then climb over
and beyond it. We recognize that there are no sins in the metaphysical
sense; but, in the same sense, neither are there any virtues; we
recognize that this entire realm of moral ideas is in a continual
state of fluctuation, that there are higher and deeper concepts
of good and evil, moral and immoral. A man who desires no more from
things than to understand them easily makes peace with his soul
and will err (or "sin," as the world calls it) at the
most out of ignorance, but hardly out of desire. He will no longer
want to condemn and root out his desires; but his single goal, governing
him completely, to understand as well as he can at all times, will
cool him down and soften all the wildness in his disposition. In
addition, he has rid himself of a number of tormenting ideas; he
no longer feels anything at the words "pains of hell,"
"sinfulness," "incapacity for the good": for
him they are only the evanescent silhouettes of erroneous thoughts
about life and the world.
57
Morality as man's dividing himself. A good author, who really cares
about his subject, wishes that someone would come and destroy him
by representing the same subject more clearly and by answering every
last question contained in it. The girl in love wishes that she
might prove the devoted faithfulness of her love through her lover's
faithlessness. The soldier wishes that he might fall on the battlefield
for his victorious fatherland, for in the victory of his fatherland
his greatest desire is also victorious. The mother gives the child
what she takes from herself: sleep, the best food, in some instances
even her health, her wealth.
Are all these really selfless states, however? Are these acts of
morality miracles because they are, to use Schopenhauer's phrase,
"impossible and yet real"? Isn't it clear that, in all
these cases, man is loving something of himself, a thought, a longing,
an offspring, more than something else of himself; that he is thus
dividing up his being and sacrificing one part for the other? Is
it something essentially different when a pigheaded man says, "I
would rather be shot at once than move an inch to get out of that
man's
The inclination towards something (a wish, a drive, a longing)
is present in all the above-mentioned cases; to yield to it, with
all its consequences, is in any case not "selfless." In
morality, man treats himself not as an "individuum," but
as a "dividuum."
58
What one can promise. One can promise actions, but not feelings,
for the latter are involuntary. He who promises to love forever
or hate forever or be forever faithful to someone is promising something
that is not in his power. He can, however, promise those actions
that are usually the consequence of love, hatred, or faithfulness,
but that can also spring from other motives: for there are several
paths and motives to an action. A promise to love someone forever,
then, means, "As long as I love you I will render unto you
the actions of love; if I no longer love you, you will continue
to receive the same actions from me, if for other motives."
Thus the illusion remains in the minds of one's fellow men that
the love is unchanged and still the same.
One is promising that the semblance of love will endure, then,
when without self-deception one vows everlasting love.
59
Intellect and morality. One must have a good memory to be able
to keep the promises one has given. One must have strong powers
of imagination to be able to have pity. So closely is morality bound
to the quality of the intellect.
6o
Desire to avenge and vengeance. To have thoughts of revenge and
execute them means to be struck with a violent-but temporary-fever.
But to have thoughts of revenge without the strength or courage
to execute them means to endure a chronic suffering, a poisoning
of body and soul. A morality that notes only the intentions assesses
both cases equally; usually the first case is assessed as worse
(because of the evil consequences that the act of revenge may produce).
Both evaluations are short-sighted.
61
The ability to wait. Being able to wait is so hard that the greatest
poets did not disdain to make the inability to wait the theme of
their poetry. Thus Shakespeare in his Othello, Sophocles in his
Ajax,21 who, as the oracle suggests, might not have thought his
suicide necessary, if only he had been able to let his feeling cool
for one day more. He probably would have outfoxed the terrible promptings
of his wounded vanity and said to himself: "Who, in my situation,
has never once taken a sheep for a warrior? Is that so monstrous?
On the contrary, it is something universally human." Ajax might
have consoled himself thus.
Passion will not wait. The tragedy in the lives of great men often
lies not in their conflict with the times and the baseness of their
fellow men, but rather in their inability to postpone their work
for a year or two. They cannot wait.
In every duel, the advising friends have to determine whether the
parties involved might be able to wait a while longer. If they cannot,
then a duel is reasonable, since each of the parties says to himself:
"Either I continue to live, and the other must die at once,
or vice versa." In that case, to wait would be to continue
suffering the horrible torture of offended honor in the presence
of the offender. And this can be more suffering than life is worth.
62
Reveling in revenge. Crude men who feel themselves insulted tend
to assess the degree of insult as high as possible, and talk about
the offense in greatly exaggerated language, only so they can revel
to their heart's content in the aroused feelings of hatred and revenge.
63
The value of belittling. Not a few, perhaps the great majority
of men, find it necessary, in order to maintain their self-respect
and a certain effectiveness in their actions, to lower and belittle
the image they form of everyone they know. Since, however, the number
of inferior natures is greater, and since it matters a great deal
whether they have that effectiveness or lose it ....
64
Those who flare up. We must beware of the man who flares up at
us as of someone who has once made an attempt upon our life. For
that we are still alive is due to his lacking the power to kill.
If looks could kill, we would long ago have been done for. It is
an act of primitive culture to bring someone to silence by making
physical savageness visible, by inciting fear.
In the same way, the cold glance which elegant people use with
their servants is a vestige from those castelike distinctions between
man and man, an act of primitive antiquity. Women, the guardians
of that which is old, have also been more faithful in preserving
this cultural remnant.
65
Where honesty may lead. Someone had the unfortunate habit of speaking
out from time to time quite honestly about the motives for his actions,
motives which were as good and as bad as those of all other men.
At first, he gave offense, then he awoke suspicion, and at length
he was virtually ostracized and banished. Finally, justice remembered
this depraved creature on occasions when it otherwise averted or
winked its eye. His want of silence about the universal secret,
and his irresponsible inclination to see what no one wants to see-his
own self-brought him to prison and an untimely death.
66
Punishable, never punished. Our crime against criminals is that
we treat them like scoundrels.
67
Sancta simplicitas22 of virtue.. Every virtue has its privileges,
one being to deliver its own little bundle of wood to the funeral
pyre of a condemned man.
68
Morality and success. It is not only the witnesses of a deed who
often measure its moral or immoral nature by its success. No, the
author of a deed does so, too. For motives and intentions are seldom
sufficiently clear and simple, and sometimes even memory seems to
be dimmed by the success of a deed, so that one attributes false
motives to his deed, or treats inessential motives as essential.
Often it is success that gives to a deed the full, honest lustre
of a good conscience; failure lays the shadow of an uneasy conscience
upon the most estimable action. This leads to the politician's well-known
practice of thinking: "Just grant me success; with it I will
bring all honest souls to my side-and make myself honest in my own
sight"
In a similar way, success can take the place of more substantial
arguments. Even now, many educated people think that the victory
of Christianity over Greek philosophy is a proof of the greater
truth of the former-although in this case it is only that something
more crude and violent has triumphed over something more spiritual
and delicate. We can determine which of them has the greater truth
by noting that the awakening sciences have carried on point for
point with the philosophy of Epicurus ,23 but have rejected Christianity
point for point.
69
Love and justice. Why do we overestimate love to the disadvantage
of justice, saying the nicest things about it, as if it were a far
higher essence than justice? Isn't love obviously more foolish?
Of course, but for just that reason so much more pleasant for everyone.
Love is foolish, and possesses a rich horn of plenty; from it she
dispenses her gifts to everyone, even if he does not deserve them,
indeed, even if he does not thank her for them. She is as nonpartisan
as rain, which (according to the Bible 24 and to experience) rains
not only upon the unjust, but sometimes soaks the just man to the
skin, too.
70
Executions. How is it that every execution offends us more than
a murder? It is the coldness of the judges, the painful preparations,
the understanding that a man is here being used as a means to deter
others. For guilt is not being punished, even if there were guilt;
guilt lies in the educators, the parents, the environment, in us,,
not in the murderer-I am talking about the motivating circumstances.
71
Hope. Pandora brought the jar 25 with the evils and opened it.
It was the gods' gift to man, on the outside a beautiful, enticing
gift, called the "lucky jar." Then all the evils, those
lively, winged beings, flew out of it. Since that time, they roam
around and do harm to men by day and night. One single evil had
not yet slipped out of the jar. As Zeus had wished, Pandora slammed
the top down and it remained inside. So now man has the lucky jar
in his house forever and thinks the world of the treasure. It is
at his service; he reaches for it when he fancies it. For he does
not know that that jar which Pandora brought was the jar of evils,
and he takes the remaining evil for the greatest worldly good-it
is hope, for Zeus did not want man to throw his life away, no matter
how much the other evils might torment him, but rather to go on
letting himself be tormented anew. To that end, he gives man hope.
In truth, it is the most evil of evils because it prolongs man's
torment.
72
Degree of moral inflammability unknown. Whether or not our passions
reach the point of red heat and guide our whole life depends on
whether or not we have been exposed to certain shocking sights or
impressions-for example a father falsely executed, killed or tortured;
an unfaithful wife; a cruel ambush by an enemy. No one knows how
far circumstances, pity, or indignation may drive him; he does not
know the degree of his inflammability. Miserable, mean conditions
make one miserable; it is usually not the quality of the experiences
but rather the quantity that determines the lower and the higher
man, in good and in evil.
73
The martyr against his will. In one party, there was a man who
was too anxious and cowardly ever to contradict his comrades. They
used him for every service; they demanded everything of him, because
he was more afraid of the bad opinions of his companions than of
death itself. His was a miserable, weak soul. They recognized this
and on the basis of those qualities they made him first into a hero
and finally into a martyr. Although the cowardly man always said
"no" inwardly, he always said "yes" with his
lips, even on the scaffold, when he died for the views of his party.
Next to him stood one of his old comrades, who tyrannized him so
by word and glance that he really did suffer death in the most seemly
way, and has since been celebrated as a martyr and a man of great
character.
74.
Everyday rule-of-thumb. One will seldom go wrong to attribute extreme
actions to vanity, moderate ones to habit, and petty ones to fear.
75
Misunderstanding about virtue. The man who has come to know vice
in connection with pleasure, like the man who has a pleasure-seeking
youth behind him, imagines that virtue must be associated with displeasure.
On the other hand, the man who has been greatly plagued by his passions
and vices longs to find peace and his soul's happiness in virtue.
Thus it is possible that two virtuous people will not understand
each other at all.
76
The ascetic. The ascetic makes a necessity26 of virtue.
77
The honor of the person applied to the cause. We universally honor
acts of love and sacrifice for the sake of one's neighbor, wherever
we find them. In this way we heighten the value of the things loved
in that way, or for which sacrifices are made, even though they
are in themselves perhaps not worth much. A valiant army convinces
us about the cause for which it is fighting.
78
Ambition as a surrogate for moral sense. Any character lacking
in ambition must not be without a moral sense. Ambitious people
make do without it, and have almost the same success. Thus the sons
of humble families with no ambition will usually turn into complete
cads very quickly, having once lost their moral sense.
79
Vanity enriches. How poor the human spirit would be without vanity!
Instead it is like a warehouse, replete and forever replenishing
its stock. It lures customers of every kind; they can find almost
everything, have everything, assuming that they bring the right
kind of coin (admiration) with them.
80
The old man and death. One may well ask why, aside from the demands
of religion, it is more praiseworthy for a man grown old, who feels
his powers decrease, to await his slow exhaustion and disintegration,
rather than to put a term to his life with complete consciousness?
In this case, suicide is quite natural, obvious, and should by rights
awaken respect for the triumph of reason. This it did in those times
when the leading Greek philosophers and the doughtiest Roman patriots
used to die by suicide. Conversely, the compulsion to prolong life
from day to day, anxiously consulting doctors and accepting the
most painful, humiliating conditions, without the strength to come
nearer the actual goal of one's life: this is far less worthy of
respect. Religions provide abundant excuses to escape the need to
kill oneself: this is how they insinuate themselves with those who
are in love with life.
81
Misunderstanding between the sufferer and the perpetrator. When
a rich man takes a possession from a poor man (for example, when
a prince robs a plebeian of his sweetheart), the poor man misunderstands.
He thinks that the rich man must be a villain to take from him the
little he has. But the rich man does not feel the value of a particular
possession so deeply because he is accustomed to having many. So
he cannot put himself in the place of the poor man, and he is by
no means doing as great an injustice as the poor man believes. Each
has a false idea of the other. The injustice of the mighty, which
enrages us most in history, is by no means as great as it appears.
Simply the inherited feeling of being a higher being, with higher
pretensions, makes one rather cold, and leaves the conscience at
peace. Indeed, none of us feels anything like injustice when there
is a great difference between ourselves and some other being, and
we kill a gnat, for example, without any twinge of conscience. So
it is no sign of wickedness in Xerxes 27 (whom even all the Greeks
portray as exceptionally noble) when he takes a son from his father
and has him cut to pieces, because the father had expressed an anxious
and doubtful distrust of their entire campaign. In this case the
individual man is eliminated like an unpleasant insect; he stands
too low to be allowed to keep on arousing bothersome feelings in
a world ruler. Indeed, no cruel man is cruel to the extent that
the mistreated man believes. The idea of pain is not the same as
the suffering of it. It is the same with an unjust judge, with a
journalist who misleads public opinion by little dishonesties. In
each of these cases, cause and effect are experienced in quite different
categories of thought and feeling; nevertheless, it is automatically
assumed that the perpetrator and sufferer think and feel the same,
and the guilt of the one is therefore measured by the pain of the
other.
82
The skin of the soul. Just as the bones, flesh, intestines, and
blood vessels are enclosed by skin, which makes the sight of a man
bearable, so the stirrings and passions of the soul are covered
up by vanity: it is the skin of the soul.
83
Sleep of virtue. When virtue has slept, it will arise refreshed.
84
Refinement of shame. Men are not ashamed to think something dirty,
but they are ashamed when they imagine that others might believe
them capable of these dirty thoughts.
85
Malice is rare. Most men are much too concerned with themselves
to be malicious.
86
Tipping the scales. We praise or find fault, depending on which
of the two provides more opportunity for our powers of judgment
to shine.
87
Luke 18:14, 28 improved. He who humbleth himself wants to be exalted.
88
Prevention of suicide. There is a justice according to which we
take a man's life, but no justice according to which we take his
death: that is nothing but cruelty.
89
Vanity. We care about the good opinion of others first because
it is profitable, and then because we want to give others joy (children
want to give joy to their parents, pupils to their teachers, men
of good will to all other men). Only when someone holds the good
opinion of others to be .important without regard to his interests
or his wish to give joy, do we speak of vanity. In this case, the
man wants to give joy to himself, but at the expense of his fellow
men, in that he either misleads them to a false opinion about himself
or aims at a degree of "good opinion" that would have
to cause them all pain (by arousing their envy). Usually the individual
wants to confirm the opinion he has of himself through the opinion
of others and strengthen it in his own eyes; but the mighty habituation
to authority (which is as old as man) also leads many to base their
own belief in themselves upon authority, to accept it only from
the hand of others. They trust other people's powers of judgment
more than their own.
In the vain man, interest in himself, his wish to please himself,
reaches such a peak that he misleads others to assess him wrongly,
to overvalue him greatly, and then he adheres to their authority;
that is, he brings about the error and then believes in it.
One must admit, then, that vain men want to please not only others,
but also themselves, and that they go so far as to neglect their
own interests thereby; for they are often concerned to make their
fellow men ill-disposed, hostile, envious, and thus destructive
toward them, only for the sake of having pleasure in themselves,
self-enjoyment.
90
Limit of human love. Any man who has once declared the other man
to be a fool, a bad fellow, is annoyed when that man ends by showing
that he is not.
91
Moralité larmoyante.29 How much pleasure we get from morality!
Just think what a river of agreeable tears has flowed at tales of
noble, generous actions. This one of life's delights would vanish
away if the belief in complete irresponsibility were to get the
upper hand.
92
Origin of justice. Justice (fairness) originates among approximately
equal powers, as Thucydides (in the horrifying conversation between
the Athenian and Melian envoys)30 rightly understood. When there
is no clearly recognizable supreme power and a battle would lead
to fruitless and mutual injury, one begins to think of reaching
an understanding and negotiating the claims on both sides: the initial
character of justice is barter. Each satisfies the other in that
each gets what he values more than the other. Each man gives the
other what he wants, to keep henceforth, and receives in turn that
which he wishes. Thus, justice is requital and exchange on the assumption
of approximately equal positions of strength. For this reason, revenge
belongs initially to the realm of justice: it is an exchange. Likewise
gratitude.
Justice naturally goes back to the viewpoint of an insightful self-preservation,
that is, to the egoism of this consideration: "Why should I
uselessly injure myself and perhaps not reach my goal anyway?"
So much about the origin of justice. Because men, in line with
their intellectual habits, have forgotten the original purpose of
socalled just, fair actions, and particularly because children have
been taught for centuries to admire and imitate such actions, it
has gradually come to appear that a just action is a selfless one.
The high esteem of these actions rests upon this appearance, an
esteem which, like all estimations, is also always in a state of
growth: for men strive after, imitate, and reproduce with their
own sacrifices that which is highly esteemed, and it grows because
its worth is increased by the worth of the effort and exertion made
by each individual.
How slight the morality of the world would seem without forgetfulness!
A poet could say that God had stationed forgetfulness as a guardian
at the door to the temple of human dignity.
93
The right of the weaker. If one party, a city under siege, for
example, submits under certain conditions to a greater power, its
reciprocal condition is that this first party can destroy itself,
burn the city, and thus make the power suffer a great loss. Thus
there is a kind of equalization, on the basis of which rights can
be established. Preservation is to the enemy's advantage.
Rights exist between slaves and masters to the same extent, exactly
insofar as the possession of his slave is profitable and important
to the master. The right originally extends as far as the one appears
to the other to be valuable, essential, permanent, invincible, and
the like. In this regard even the weaker of the two has rights,
though they are more modest. Thus the famous dictum: "unusquisque
tantum juris habet, quantum potentia valet"31 (or, more exactly,
"quantum potentia valere creditur").32
94
The three phases of morality until now. The first sign that an
animal has become human is that his behavior is no longer directed
to his momentary comfort, but rather to his enduring comfort, that
is, when man becomes useful, expedient: then for the first time
the free rule of reason bursts forth. A still higher state is reached
when man acts according to the principle of honor, by means of which
he finds his place in society, submitting to commonly held feelings;
that raises him high above the phase in which he is guided only
by personal usefulness. Now he showsand wants to be shown-respect;
that is, he understands his advantage as dependent on his opinion
of others and their opinion of him. Finally, at the highest stage
of morality until now, he acts according to his standard of things
and men; he himself determines for himself and others what is honorable,
what is profitable. He has become the lawgiver of opinions, in accordance
with the ever more refined concept of usefulness and honor. Knowledge
enables him to prefer what is most useful, that is, general usefulness
to personal usefulness, and the respectful recognition of what has
common, enduring value to things of momentary value. He lives and
acts as a collective-individual.
95
Morality of the mature individual. Until now man has taken the
true sign of a moral act to be its impersonal nature; and it has
been shown that in the beginning all impersonal acts were praised
and distinguished in respect to the common good. Might not a significant
transformation of these views be at hand, now when we see with ever
greater clarity that precisely in the most personal respect the
common good is also greatest; so that now it is precisely the strictly
personal action which corresponds to the current concept of morality
(as a common profit)? To make a whole person of oneself and keep
in mind that person's greatest good in everything one does-this
takes us further than any pitying impulses and actions for the sake
of others. To be sure, we all still suffer from too slight a regard
for our own personal needs; it has been poorly developed. Let us
admit that our mind has instead been forcibly diverted from it and
offered in sacrifice to the state, to science, to the needy, as
if it were something bad which had to be sacrificed. Now too we
wish to work for our fellow men, but only insofar as we find our
own highest advantage in this work; no more, no less. It depends
only on what ones understands by his advantage. The immature, undeveloped,
crude individual will also understand it most crudely.
96
Mores and morality.33 To be moral, correct, ethical means to obey
an age-old law or tradition. Whether one submits to it gladly or
with difficulty makes no difference; enough that one submits. We
call "good" the man who does the moral thing as if by
nature, after a long history of inheritance-that is, easily, and
gladly, whatever it is (he will, for example, practice revenge when
that is considered moral, as in the older Greek culture). He is
called good because he is good "for" something. But because,
as mores changed, goodwill, pity, and the like were always felt
to be "good for" something, useful, it is primarily the
man of goodwill, the helpful man, who is called "good."
To be evil is to be "not moral" (immoral), to practice
bad habits, go against tradition, however reasonable or stupid it
may be. To harm one's fellow, however, has been felt primarily as
injurious in all moral codes of different times, so that when we
hear the word "bad" now, we think particularly of voluntary
injury to one's fellow. When men determine between moral and immoral,
good and evil, the basic opposition is not "egoism" and
"selflessness," but rather adherence to a tradition or
law, and release from it. The origin of the tradition makes no difference,
at least concerning good and evil, or an immanent categorical imperative;.34
but is rather above all for the purpose of maintaining a community,
a people. Every superstitious custom, originating in a coincidence
that is interpreted falsely, forces a tradition that it is moral
to follow. To release oneself from it is dangerous, even more injurious
for the community than for the individual (because the divinity
punishes the whole community for sacrilege and violation of its
rights, and the individual only as a part of that community). Now,
each tradition grows more venerable the farther its origin lies
in the past, the more it is forgotten; the respect paid to the tradition
accumulates from generation to generation; finally the origin becomes
sacred and awakens awe; and thus the morality of piety is in any
case much older than that morality which requires selfless acts.
97
Pleasure in custom. An important type of pleasure, and thus an
important source of morality, grows out of habit. One does habitual
things more easily, skillfully, gladly; one feels a pleasure at
them, knowing from experience that the habit has stood the test
and is useful. A morality one can live with has been proved salutary,
effective, in contrast to all the as yet unproven new experiments.
Accordingly, custom is the union of the pleasant and the useful;
in addition, it requires no thought. As soon as man can exercise
force, he exercises it to introduce and enforce his mores, for to
him they represent proven wisdom. Likewise, a community will force
each individual in it to the same mores. Here is the error: because
one feels good with one custom, or at least because he lives his
life by means of it, this custom is necessary, for he holds it to
be the only possibility by which one can feel good; the enjoyment
of life seems to grow out of it alone. This idea of habit as a condition
of existence is carried right into the smallest details of custom:
since lower peoples and cultures have only very slight insight into
the real causality, they make sure, with superstitious fear, that
everything take the same course; even where a custom is difficult,
harsh, burdensome, it is preserved because it seems to be highly
useful. They do not know that the same degree of comfort can also
exist with other customs and that even higher degrees of comfort
can be attained. But they do perceive that all customs, even the
harshest, become more pleasant and mild with time, and that even
the severest way of life can become a habit and thus a pleasure.
98
Pleasure and social instinct. From his relationship to other men,
man gains a new kind of pleasure, in addition to those pleasurable
feelings which he gets from himself. In this way he widens significantly
the scope of his pleasurable feelings. Perhaps some of these feelings
have come down to him from the animals, who visibly feel pleasure
when playing with each other, particularly mothers playing with
their young. Next one might think of sexual relations, which make
virtually every lass seem interesting to every lad (and vice versa)
in view of potential pleasure. Pleasurable feeling based on human
relations generally makes man better; shared joy, pleasure taken
together, heightens this feeling; it gives the individual security,
makes him better-natured, dissolves distrust and envy: one feels
good oneself and can see the other man feel good in the same way.
Analogous expressions of pleasure awaken the fantasy of empathy,
the feeling of being alike. Shared sorrows do it, too: the same
storms, dangers, enemies. Upon this basis man has built the oldest
covenant, whose purpose is to eliminate and resist communally any
threatening unpleasure, for the good of each individual. And thus
social instinct grows out of pleasure.
99
Innocence of so-called evil actions. All "evil" actions
are motivated by the drive for preservation, or, more exactly, by
the individual's intention to gain pleasure and avoid unpleasure;
thus they
are motivated, but they are not evil. "Giving pain in and
of itself" does not exist, except in the brain of philosophers,
nor does "giving pleasure in and of itself" (pity, in
the Schopenhauerian sense). In conditions preceding organized states,
we kill any being, be it ape or man, that wants to take a fruit
off a tree before we do, just when we are hungry and running up
to the tree. We would treat the animal the same way today, if we
were hiking through inhospitable territory.
Those evil actions which outrage us most today are based on the
error that that man who harms us has free will, that is, that he
had the choice not to do this bad thing to us. This belief in his
choice arouses hatred, thirst for revenge, spite, the whole deterioration
of our imagination; whereas we get much less angry at an animal
because we consider it irresponsible. To do harm not out of a drive
for preservation, but for requital-that is the result of an erroneous
judgment, and is therefore likewise innocent. The individual can,
in conditions preceding the organized state, treat others harshly
and cruelly to intimidate them, to secure his existence through
such intimidating demonstrations of his power. This is how the brutal,
powerful man acts, the original founder of a state, who subjects
to himself those who are weaker. He has the right to do it, just
as the state now takes the right. Or rather, there is no right that
can prevent it. The ground for all morality can only be prepared
when a greater individual or collective-individual, as, for example,
society or the state, subjects the individuals in it, that is, when
it draws them out of their isolatedness and integrates them into
a union. Force precedes morality; indeed, for a time morality itself
is force, to which others acquiesce to avoid unpleasure. Later it
becomes custom, and still later free obedience, and finally almost
instinct: then it is coupled to pleasure, like all habitual and
natural things, and is now called virtue.
100
Shame. Shame exists wherever there is a "mysterium";
this is a religious concept that was widely prevalent in the older
period of human culture. Everywhere there were circumscribed areas,
to which divine right forbade entrance, except under certain conditions:
at first these were spatial areas, in that certain places were not
to be trodden upon by the foot of the unconsecrated, who would feel
horror and fear in their vicinity. This feeling was frequently carried
over to other relationships, to sexual relationships, for example,
which were to he removed from the eyes of youth (for its own good),
as a privilege and sacred mystery of the more mature. Many gods
were thought to be active in protecting and furthering the observance
of these relationships, watching over them as guardians in the nuptial
chamber. (This is why this chamber is called Harem, "sanctuary,"
in Turkish, which is the same word commonly used for the vestibules
of mosques.)35 Likewise kingship, as a center radiating power and
splendor, is to the humble subject a mysterium full of secrecy and
shame; it has many aftereffects, which can still be felt in peoples
who are otherwise in no way ashamed. In the same way, that whole
world of inner states, the so-called "soul," is still
a mysterium to all nonphilosophers since from time immemorial it
was thought worthy of divine origin, divine intercourse: thus it
is a sacred mystery and awakens shame.
101
Judge not."' When we consider earlier periods, we must be
careful not to fall into unjust abuse. The injustice of slavery,
the cruelty in subjugating persons and peoples, cannot be measured
by our standards. For the instinct for justice was not so widely
developed then. Who has the right to reproach Calvin of Geneva for
burning Dr. Servet?.37 His was a consistent act, fl owing out of
his convictions, and the Inquisition likewise had its 'reasons;
it is just that the views dominant then were wrong and resulted
in a consistency that we find harsh, because we now find those views
so alien. Besides, what is the burning of one man compared to the
eternal pains of hell for nearly everyone! And yet this much more
terrible idea used to dominate the whole world without doing any
essential damage to the idea of a god. In our own time, we, treat
political heretics harshly and cruelly, but because we have learned
to believe in the necessity of the state we are not as sensitive
to this cruelty as we are to that cruelty whose justification vie
reject. Cruelty to animals, by children and Italians, stems from
ignorance; namely, in the interests of its teachings, the church
has placed the animal too far beneath man.
Likewise, in history much that is frightful and inhuman, which
one would almost like not to believe, is mitigated by the observation
that the commander and the executor are different people: the former
does not witness his cruelty and therefore has no strong impression
of it in his imagination; the latter is obeying a superior and feels
no responsibility. Because of a lack of imagination, most princes
and military leaders can easily appear to be harsh and cruel, without
being so.
Egoism is not evil, for the idea of one's "neighbor"
(the word has a Christian origin38 and does not reflect the truth)
is very weak in us; and we feel toward him almost as free and irresponsible
as toward plants and stones. That the other suffers must be learned;
and it can never be learned completely.
102
"Man always acts for the good."39 We don't accuse nature
of immorality when it sends us a thunderstorm, and makes us wet:
why do we call the injurious man immoral? Because in the first case,
we assume necessity, and in the second a voluntarily governing free
will. But this distinction is in error. Furthermore, even intentional
injury is not called immoral in all circumstances: without hesitating,
we intentionally kill a gnat, for example, simply because we do
not like its buzz; we intentionally punish the criminal and do him
harm, to protect ourselves and society. In the first case it is
the individual who does harm intentionally, for self-preservation
or simply to avoid discomfort; in the second case the state does
the harm. All morality allows the intentional infliction of harm
for self-defense; that is, when it is a matter of self-preservation!
But these two points of view are sufficient to explain all evil
acts which men practice against other men; man wants to get pleasure
or resist unpleasure; in some sense it is always a matter of self-preservation.
Socrates and Plato are right: whatever man does, he always acts
for the good; that is, in a way that seems to him good (useful)
according to the degree of his intellect, the prevailing measure
of his rationality.
103
Harmlessness of malice. Malice does not aim at the suffering of
the other in and of itself, but rather at our own enjoyment, for
example, a feeling of revenge or a strong nervous excitement.
Every instance of teasing shows that it gives us pleasure to release
our power on the other person and experience an enjoyable feeling
of superiority. Is the immoral thing about it, then, to have pleasure
on the basis of other people's unpleasure? Is Schadenfreude40 devilish,
as Schopenhauer says? Now, in nature, we take pleasure in breaking
up twigs, loosening stones, fighting with wild animals, in order
to gain awareness of our own strength. Is the knowledge, then, that
another person is suffering because of us supposed to make immoral
the same thing about which we otherwise feel no responsibility?
But if one did not have this knowledge, one would not have that
pleasure in his own superiority, which can be discovered only in
the suffering of the other, in teasing, for example. All joy in
oneself is neither good nor bad; where should the determination
come from that to have pleasure in oneself one may not cause unpleasure
in others? Solely from the point of view of advantage, that is,
from consideration of the consequences, of possible unpleasure,
when the injured party or the state representing him leads us to
expect requital and revenge; this alone can have been the original
basis for denying oneself these actions.
Pity does not aim at the pleasure of others any more than malice
(as we said above) aims at the pain of others, per se. For in pity
at least two (maybe many more) elements of personal pleasure are
contained, and it is to that extent self-enjoyment: first of all,
it is the pleasure of the emotion (the kind of pity we find in tragedy)
and second, when it drives us to act, it is the pleasure of our
satisfaction in the exercise of power. If, in addition, a suffering
person is very close to us, we reduce our own suffering by our acts
of pity.
Aside from a few philosophers, men have always placed pity rather
low in the hierarchy of moral feelings-and rightly so.
104
Self-defense. If we accept self-defense as moral, then we must
also accept nearly all expressions of so-called immoral egoism;
we inflict harm, rob or kill, to preserve or protect ourselves,
to prevent personal disaster; where cunning and dissimulation are
the correct means of self-preservation, we lie. To do injury intentionally,
when it is a matter of our existence or security (preservation of
our well-being) is conceded to be moral; the state itself injures
from this point of view when it imposes punishment. Of course, there
can be no immorality in unintentional injury; there coincidence
governs. Can there be a kind of intentional injury where it is not
a matter of our existence, the preservation of our well-being? Can
there be an injury out of pure malice, in cruelty, for example?
If one does not know how painful an action is, it cannot be malicious;
thus the child is not malicious or evil to an animal: he examines
and destroys it like a toy. But do we ever completely know how painful
an action is to the other person? As far as our nervous system extends,
we protect ourselves from pain; if it extended further, right into
our fellow men, we would not do harm to anyone (except in such cases
where we do it to ourselves, that is, where we cut ourselves in
order to cure ourselves, exert and strain ourselves to be healthy).
We conclude by analogy that something hurts another, and through
our memory and power of imagination we ourselves can feel ill at
such a thought. But what difference remains between a toothache
and the ache (pity) evoked by the sight of a toothache? That is,
when we injure out of so-called malice, the degree of pain produced
is in any case unknown to us; but in that we feel pleasure in the
action (feeling of our own power, our own strong excitement) the
action takes place to preserve the well-being of the individual
and thus falls within a point of view similar to that of self-defense
or a white lie. No life without pleasure; the struggle for pleasure
is the struggle for life. Whether the individual fights this battle
in ways such that men call him good or such that they call him evil
is determined by the measure and makeup of his intellect.
105
A rewarding justice. The man who has fully understood the theory
of complete irresponsibility can no longer include the socalled
justice that punishes and rewards within the concept of justice,
if that consists in giving each his due. For the man who is punished
does not deserve the punishment: he is only being used as the means
to frighten others away from certain future actions; likewise, the
man who is rewarded does not deserve this reward; he could not act
other than as he did. Thus a reward means only an encouragement,
for him and others, to provide a motive for subsequent actions:
praise is shouted to the runner on the track not to the one who
has reached the finish line. Neither punishment nor reward are due
to anyone as his; they are given to him because it is useful, without
his justly having any claims on them. One must say, "The wise
man rewards not because men have acted rightly," just as it
was said, "The wise man punishes not because men have acted
badly, but so they will not act badly." If we were to dispense
with punishment and reward, we would lose the strongest motives
driving men away from certain actions and toward other actions;
the advantage of man requires that they continue; and in that punishment
and reward, blame and praise affect vanity most acutely, the same
advantage also requires that vanity continue.
106
At the waterfall. When we see a waterfall, we think we see freedom
of will and choice in the innumerable turnings, windings, breakings
of the waves; but everything is necessary; each movement can be
calculated mathematically. Thus it is with human actions; if one
were omniscient, one would be able to calculate each individual
action in advance, each step in the progress of knowledge, each
error, each act of malice. To be sure, the acting man is caught
in his illusion of volition; if the wheel of the world were to stand
still for a moment and an omniscient, calculating mind were there
to take advantage of this interruption, he would be able to tell
into the farthest future of each being and describe every rut that
wheel will roll upon. The acting man's delusion about himself, his
assumption that free will exists, is also part of the calculable
mechanism.
107
Irresponsibility and innocence. Man's complete lack of responsibility,
for his behavior and for his nature, is the bitterest drop which
the man of knowledge must swallow, if he had been in the habit of
seeing responsibility- and duty as humanity's claim to nobility.
All his judgments, distinctions, dislikes have thereby become worthless
and wrong: the deepest feeling he had offered a victim or a hero
was misdirected; he may no longer praise, no longer blame, for it
is nonsensical to praise and blame nature and necessity. Just as
he loves a good work of art, but does not praise it, because it
can do nothing about itself, just as he regards a plant, so he must
regard the actions of men and his own actions. He can admire their
strength, beauty, abundance, but he may not find any earned merit
in them: chemical processes, and the clash of elements, the agony
of the sick man who yearns for recovery, these have no more earned
merit than do those inner struggles and crises in which a man is
torn back and forth by various motives until he finally decides
for the most powerful-as is said (in truth until the most powerful
motive decides about us). But all these motives, whatever great
names we give them, have grown out of the same roots which are thought
to hold the evil poisons. Between good and evil actions there is
no difference in type; at most, a difference in degree. Good actions
are sublimated evil actions; evil actions are good actions become
coarse and stupid. The individual's only demand, for self-enjoyment
(along with the fear of losing it), is satisfied in all circumstances:
man may act as he can, that is, as he must, whether in deeds of
vanity, revenge, pleasure, usefulness, malice, cunning, or in deeds
of sacrifice, pity, knowledge. His powers of judgment determine
where a man will let this demand for self-enjoyment take him. In
each society, in each individual, a hierarchy of the good is always
present, by which man determines his own actions and judges other
people's actions. But this standard is continually in flux; many
actions are called evil, and are only stupid, because the degree
of intelligence which chose them was very low. Indeed, in a certain
sense all actions are stupid even now, for the highest degree of
human intelligence which can now be attained will surely be surpassed.
And then, in hindsight, all our behavior and judgments will appear
as inadequate and rash as the behavior and judgments of backward
savage tribes now seem to us inadequate and rash.
To understand all this can cause great pain, but afterwards there
is consolation. These pains are birth pangs. The butterfly wants
to break through his cocoon; he tears at it, he rends it: then he
is blinded and confused by the unknown light, the realm of freedom.
Men who are capable of that sorrow (how few they will be!) will
make the first attempt to see if mankind can transform itself from
a moral into a wise mankind. In those individuals, the sun of a
new gospel is casting its first ray onto the highest mountaintop
of the soul; the fog is condensing more thickly than ever, and the
brightest light and cloudiest dusk lie next to each other. Everything
is necessity: this is the new knowledge, and thisknowledge itself
is necessity. Everything is innocence: and knowledge is the way
to insight into this innocence. If pleasure, egoism, vanity are
necessary for the generation of moral phenomena and their greatest
flower, the sense for true and just knowledge; if error and confusion
of imagination were the only means by which mankind could raise
itself gradually to this degree of self-illumination and self-redemption-who
could scorn those means? Who could be sad when he perceives the
goal to which those paths lead? Everything in the sphere of morality
has evolved; changeable, fluctuating, everything is fluid, it is
true: but everything is also streaming onward-to one goal. Even
if the inherited habit of erroneous esteeming, loving, hating continues
to govern us, it will grow weaker under the influence of growing
knowledge: a new habit, that of understanding, non-loving, nonhating,
surveying is gradually being implanted in us on the same ground,
and in thousands of years will be powerful enough perhaps to give
mankind the strength to produce wise, innocent (conscious of their
innocence)41 men as regularly as it now produces unwise, unfair
men, conscious of their guilt42-these men are the necessary first
stage, but not the opposite of those to come.
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