Human, All-Too-Human
The Signs of Higher and Lower Culture
by Friedrich Nietzsche
Published 1878
Translation by Helen Zimmern
Published 1909-191
224.
ENNOBLEMENT THROUGH DEGENERATION. -- History teaches that a race
of people is best preserved where the greater number hold one common
spirit in consequence of the similarity of their accustomed and
indisputable principles: in consequence, therefore, of their common
faith. Thus strength is afforded by good and thorough customs, thus
is learnt the subjection of the individual, and strenuousness of
character becomes a birth gift and afterwards is fostered as a habit.
The danger to these communities founded on individuals of strong
and similar character is that gradually increasing stupidity through
transmission, which follows all stability like its shadow. It is
on the more unrestricted, more uncertain and morally weaker individuals
that depends the intelIectual progress of such communities, it is
they who attempt all that is new and manifold. Numbers of these
perish on account of their weakness, without having achieved any
specially visible effect; but generally, particularly when they
have descendants, they flare up and from time to time inflict a
wound on the stable element of the community. Precisely in this
sore and weakened place the community is inoculated with something
new; but its general strength must be great enough to absorb and
assimilate this new thing into its blood. Deviating natures are
of the utmost importance wherever there is to be progress. Every
wholesale progress must be preceded by a partial weakening. The
strongest natures retain the type, the weaker ones help it to develop.
Something similar happens in the case of individuals; a deterioration,
a mutilation, even a vice and, above all, a physical or moral loss
is seldom without its advantage. For instance, a sickly man in the
midst of a warlike and restless race will perhaps have more chance
of being alone and thereby growing quieter and wiser, the one-eyed
man will possess a stronger eye, the blind man will have a deeper
inward sight and will certainly have a keener sense of hearing.
In so far it appears to me that the famous Struggle for Existence
is not the only point of view from which an explanation can be given
of the progress or strengthening of an individual or a race. Rather
must two different things converge: firstly, the multiplying of
stable strength through mental binding in faith and common feeling;
secondly, the possibility of attaining to higher aims, through the
fact that there are deviating natures and, in consequence, partial
weakening and wounding of the stable strength; it is precisely the
weaker nature, as the more delicate and free, that makes all progress
at all possible. A people that is crumbling and weak in any one
part, but as a whole still strong and healthy, is able to absorb
the infection of what is new and incorporate it to its advantage.
The task of education in a single individual is this: to plant him
so firmly and surely that, as a whole, he can no longer be diverted
from his path. Then, however, the educator must wound him, or else
make use of the wounds which fate inflicts, and when pain and need
have thus arisen, something new and noble can be inoculated into
the wounded places. With regard to the State, Machiavelli says that,
"the form of Government is of very small importance, although
half-educated people think otherwise. The great aim of State-craft
should be duration, which outweighs all else, inasmuch as it is
more valuable than liberty." It is only with securely founded
and guaranteed duration that continual development and ennobling
inoculation are at all possible. As a rule, however, authority,
the dangerous companion of all duration, will rise in opposition
to this.
225.
FREE-THINKER A RELATIVE TERM. -- We call that man a free-thinker
who thinks otherwise than is expected of him in consideration of
his origin, surroundings, position, and office, or by reason of
the prevailing contemporary views. He is the exception, fettered
minds are the rule; these latter reproach him, saying that his free
principles either have their origin in a desire to be remarkable
or else cause free actions to be inferred, -- that is to say, actions
which are not compatible with fettered morality. Sometimes it is
also said that the cause of such and such free principles may be
traced to mental perversity and extravagance; but only malice speaks
thus, nor does it believe what it says, but wishes thereby to do
an injury, for the free-thinker usually bears the proof of his greater
goodness and keenness of intellect written in his face so plainly
that the fettered spirits understand it well enough. But the two
other derivations of free-thought are honestly intended; as a matter
of fact, many free-thinkers are created in one or other of these
ways. For this reason, however, the tenets to which they attain
in this manner might be truer and more reliable than those of the
fettered spirits. In the knowledge of truth, what really matters
is the possession of it, not the impulse under which it was sought,
the way in which it was found. If the free-thinkers are right then
the fettered spirits are wrong, and it is a matter of indifference
whether the former have reached truth through immorality or the
latter hitherto retained hold of untruths through morality. Moreover,
it is not essential to the free-thinker that he should hold more
correct views, but that he should have liberated himself from what
was customary, be it successfully or disastrously. As a rule, however,
he will have truth, or at least the spirit of truth-investigation,
on his side; he demands reasons, the others demand faith.
226.
THE ORIGIN OF FAITH. -- The fettered spirit does not take up his
position from conviction, but from habit; he is a Christian, for
instance, not because he had a comprehension of different creeds
and could take his choice; he is an Englishman, not because he decided
for England, but he found Christianity and England ready-made and
accepted them without any reason, just as one who is born in a wine-country
becomes a wine-drinker. Later on, perhaps, as he was a Christian
and an Englishman, he discovered a few reasons in favour of his
habit; these reasons may be upset, but he is not therefore upset
in his whole position. For instance, let a fettered spirit be obliged
to bring forward his reasons against bigamy and then it will be
seen whether his holy zeal in favour of monogamy is based upon reason
or upon custom. The adoption of guiding principles without reasons
is called faith.
227.
CONCLUSIONS DRAWN FROM THE CONSEQUENCES AND TRACED BACK TO REASON
AND UN-REASON. -- All states and orders of society, professions,
matrimony, education, law : all these find strength and duration
only in the faith which the fettered spirits repose in them, --
that is, in the absence of reasons, or at least in the averting
of inquiries as to reasons. The restricted spirits do not willingly
acknowledge this, and feel that it is a pudendum. Christianity,
however, which was very simple in its intellectual ideas, remarked
nothing of this pudendum, required faith and nothing but faith,
and passionately repulsed the demand for reasons; it pointed to
the success of faith: "You will soon feel the advantages of
faith," it suggested, "and through faith shall ye be saved."
As an actual fact, the State pursues the same course, and every
father brings up his son in the same way: "Only believe this,"
he says, "and you will soon feel the good it does." This
implies, however, that the truth of an opinion is proved by its
personal usefulness; the wholesomeness of a doctrine must be a guarantee
for its intellectual surety and solidity. It is exactly as if an
accused person in a court of law were to say, "My counsel speaks
the whole truth, for only see what is the result of his speech:
I shall be acquitted." Because the fettered spirits retain
their principles on account of their usefulness, they suppose that
the free spirit also seeks his own advantage in his views and only
holds that to be true which is profitable to him. But as he appears
to find profitable just the contrary of that which his compatriots
or equals find profitable, these latter assume that his principles
are dangerous to them; they say or feel, "He must not be right,
for he is injurious to us."
228.
THE STRONG, GOOD CHARACTER. -- The restriction of views, which
habit has made instinct, leads to what is called strength of character.
When any one acts from few but always from the same motives, his
actions acquire great energy; if these actions accord with the principles
of the fettered spirits they are recognised, and they produce, moreover,
in those who perform them the sensation of a good conscience. Few
motives, energetic action, and a good conscience compose what is
called strength of character. The man of strong character lacks
a knowledge of the many possibilities and directions of action;
his intellect is fettered and restricted, because in a given case
it shows him, perhaps, only two possibilities; between these two
he must now of necessity choose, in accordance with his whole nature,
and he does this easily and quickly because he has not to choose
between fifty possibilities. The educating surroundings aim at fettering
every individual, by always placing before him the smallest number
of possibilities. The individual is always treated by his educators
as if he were, indeed, something new, but should become a duplicate.
If he makes his first appearance as something unknown, unprecedented,
he must be turned into something known and precedented. In a child,
the familiar manifestation of restriction is called a good character;
in placing itself on the side of the fettered spirits the child
first discloses its awakening common feeling; with this foundation
of common sentiment, he will eventually become useful to his State
or rank.
229.
THE STANDARDS AND VALUES OF THE FETTERED SPIRITS. -- There are
four species of things concerning which the restricted spirits say
they are in the right. Firstly: all things that last are right;
secondly: all things that are not burdens to us are right; thirdly:
all things that are advantageous for us are right; fourthly: all
things for which we have made sacrifices are right. The last sentence,
for instance, explains why a war that was begun in opposition to
popular feeling is carried on with enthusiasm directly after a sacrifice
has been made for it. The free spirits, who bring their case before
the forum of the fettered spirits, must prove that free spirits
always existed, that free-spiritism is therefore enduring, that
it will not become a burden, and, finally, that on the whole they
are an advantage to the fettered spirits. It is because they cannot
convince the restricted spirits on this last point that they profit
nothing by having proved the first and second propositions.
230.
ESPRIT FORT. -- Compared with him who has tradition on his side
and requires no reasons for his actions, the free spirit is always
weak, especially in action; for he is acquainted with too many motives
and points of view, and has, therefore, an uncertain and unpractised
hand. What means exist of making him strong in spite of this, so
that he will, at least, manage to survive, and will not perish ineffectually?
What is the source of the strong spirit (esprit fort)? This is especially
the question as to the production of genius. Whence comes the energy,
the unbending strength, the endurance with which the one, in opposition
to accepted ideas, endeavours to obtain an entirely individual knowledge
of the world?
231.
THE RISE OF GENIUS. -- The ingenuity with which a prisoner seeks
the means of freedom, the most cold-blooded and patient employment
of every smallest advantage, can teach us of what tools Nature sometimes
makes use in order to produce Genius, -- a word which I beg will
be understood without any mythological and religious flavour; she,
Nature, begins it in a dungeon and excites to the utmost its desire
to free itself. Or to give another picture: some one who has completely
lost his way in a wood, but who with unusual energy strives to reach
the open in one direction or another, will sometimes discover a
new path which nobody knew previously, -- thus arise geniuses, who
are credited with originality. It has already been said that mutilation,
crippling, or the loss of some important organ, is frequently the
cause of the unusual development of another organ, because this
one has to fulfil its own and also another function. This explains
the source of many a brilliant talent. These general remarks on
the origin of genius may be applied to the special case, the origin
of the perfect free spirit.
232.
CONJECTURE AS TO THE ORIGIN OF FREE SPIRITISM. -- Just as the glaciers
increase when in equatorial regions the sun shines upon the seas
with greater force than hitherto, so may a very strong and spreading
free-spiritism be a proof that somewhere or other the force of feeling
has grown extraordinarily.
233.
THE VOICE OF HISTORY. -- In general, history appears to teach the
following about the production of genius: it ill-treats and torments
mankind -- calls to the passions of envy, hatred, and rivalry --
drives them to desperation, people against people, throughout whole
centuries! Then, perhaps, like a stray spark from the terrible energy
thereby aroused, there flames up suddenly the light of genius; the
will, like a horse maddened by the rider's spur, thereupon breaks
out and leaps over into another domain. He who could attain to a
comprehension of the production of genius, and desires to carry
out practically the manner in which Nature usually goes to work,
would have to be just as evil and regardless as Nature itself. But
perhaps we have not heard rightly.
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