The Dawn
Thoughts on the prejudices of morality.
(from 2d edition, pub. 1887)
Selected Text
Preface
1.
In this book we will
find a "subterranean" at work, one who tunnels, mines, and undermines. You will
see him-presupposing you have eyes capable of seeing this work in its
depths-going forward, slowly, cautiously, gently inexorable, without bearing
much of the distress which any protracted deprivation of light and air must
entail. You might even call him contented, working there in the dark. Does it
not seem as though some faith were leading him on, some consolation offering him
compensation? As though he perhaps desires this prolonged obscurity, desires to
be incomprehensible, concealed, enigmatic, because he knows what he will thereby
acquire: his own morning, his own redemption, his own rosy dawn? He
will return, that is certain: do not ask him what he is looking for down there,
he will tell you himself of his own accord, this seeming Trophonius and
subterranean, as soon as he has "become a man" again. Being silent is something
one completely unlearns if, like him, one has been for so long a solitary mole-
- -
2.
And indeed, my patient
friends, I shall now tell you what I was after down there-here in this late
preface, which could easily have become a funeral oration-for I have returned
and, believe it or not, returned safe and sound. Do not think for a moment that
I intend to invite you to the same hazardous enterprise! Or even only to the
same solitude! For he who proceeds on his own path in this fashion encounters no
one: this is inherent in "proceeding on one's own path." No one comes along to
help him: all the perils, accidents, malice, and bad weather which assail him he
has to tackle by himself. For his path is his alone-of course, the
bitterness and occasional ill-humor he feels at this "his alone": among which is
included, for instance, the knowledge that even his friends are able to divine
where he is or whither he is going, that they will sometimes ask themselves:
"What? is he going at all? does he still have-a path?" At that time I undertook
something not everyone may undertake: I descended into the depths, I tunneled
into the foundations, commenced an investigation and digging out of an ancient
faith, one upon which we philosophers have for a couple of millennia
been accustomed to build as if upon the firmest of all foundations-and have
continued to do so even though every building hitherto erected has fallen down:
I commenced to undermine our faith in morality. But you do not
understand me?
3.
Hitherto, it is Good
and Evil that we have reflected on least profoundly: this was too dangerous a
subject. Conscience, reputation, Hell, and at times even the police, have not
allowed and do not allow of impartiality; in the presence of morality, as before
all authority, we must not even think, much less speak: here we must
obey! Ever since the beginning of the world, no authority has permitted itself
to be made the subject of criticism; and to criticize morals-to look upon
morality as a problem, as problematic-what! was that not-is that not-immoral?
But morality has at its disposal not only every means of intimidation wherewith
to keep itself free from critical hands and instruments of torture: its security
lies rather in a certain art of enchantment, in which it is a past master-it
knows how to "enrapture." It can often paralyze the critical will with a single
look, or even seduce it to itself: yes, there are even cases where morality can
turn the critical will against itself; so that then, like the scorpion, it
thrusts the sting into its own body. Morality has for ages been an expert in all
kinds of devilry in the art of convincing: even at the present day there is no
orator who would not turn to it for assistance (only listen to our anarchists,
for instance: how morally they speak when they would fain convince! In the end
they even call themselves "the good and the just"). Morality has shown herself
to be the greatest mistress of seduction ever since men began to discourse and
persuade on earth-and, what concerns us philosophers even more, she is the
veritable Circe of philosophers. For, to what is it due that, from Plato
onwards, all the philosophic architects in Europe have built in vain? that
everything which they themselves honestly believed to be aere perennius
["More enduring than bronze."] threatens to subside or is already laid in ruins? Oh, how
wrong is the answer which, even in our own day, rolls glibly off the tongue when
this question is asked: "Because they have all neglected the prerequisite, the
examination of the foundation, a critique of all reason"-that fatal answer made
by Kant, who has certainly not thereby attracted us modern philosophers to
firmer and less treacherous ground! (and, one may ask apropos of this, was it
not rather strange to demand that an instrument should criticize its own value
and effectiveness? that the intellect itself should "recognize" its own worth,
power, and limits? was it not even just a little ridiculous?) The right answer
would rather have been, that all philosophers, including Kant himself, were
building under the seductive influence of morality-that they aimed at certainty
and "truth" only in appearance; but that in reality their attention was directed
towards "majestic moral edifices," to use once more Kant's innocent mode
of expression, who deems it his "less brilliant, but not undeserving" task and
work " to level the ground and prepare a solid foundation for the erection of
those majestic moral edifices" (Critique of Pure Reason, ii. 257). Alas!
He did not succeed in his aim, quite the contrary-as we must acknowledge today.
With this exalted aim, Kant was merely a true son of his century, which more
than any other may justly be called the century of exaltation: and this he
fortunately continued to be in respect to the more valuable side of this century
(with that solid piece of sensuality, for example, which he introduced into his
theory of knowledge). He, too, had been bitten by the moral tarantula, Rousseau;
he, too, felt weighing on his soul that moral fanaticism of which another
disciple of Rousseau's, Robespierre, felt and proclaimed himself to be the
executor: de fonder sur la terre l'empire de la sagesse, de la
justice, et de la vertu. (Speech of June 7th, 1794.) On the other
hand, with such a French fanaticism in his heart, no one could have cultivated
it in a less French, more deep, more thorough and more German manner-if the word
German is still permissible in this sense-than Kant did: in order to make room
for his "moral kingdom," he found himself compelled to add to it an
indemonstrable world, a logical "beyond"-that was why he required his critique
of pure reason! In other words, he would not have wanted it, if he had
not deemed one thing to be more important than all the others: to render his
moral kingdom unassailable by-or, better still, invisible to, reason-for he felt
too strongly the vulnerability of a moral order of things in the face of reason.
For, when confronted with nature and history, when confronted with the ingrained
immorality of nature and history, Kant was, like all good Germans from
the earliest times, a pessimist: he believed in morality, not because it is
demonstrated through nature and history, but despite its being steadily
contradicted by them. To understand this "despite," we should perhaps recall a
somewhat similar trait in Luther, that other great pessimist, who once urged it
upon his friends with true Lutheran audacity: "If we could conceive by reason
alone how that God who shows so much wrath and malignity could be merciful and
just what use should we have for faith?" For, from the earliest times, nothing
has ever made a deeper impression upon the German soul, nothing has ever
"tempted" it more, than that deduction, the most dangerous of all, which for
every true Latin is a sin against the intellect: credo quia absurdum est.
With it German logic enters for the first time into the history of Christian
dogma; but even today, a thousand years later, we Germans of the present, late
Germans in every way, catch the scent of truth, a possibility of truth,
at the back of the famous fundamental principle of dialectics with which Hegel
secured the victory of the German spirit over Europe-"contradiction moves the
world; all things contradict themselves." We are pessimists-even in
logic.
4.
But logical
evaluations are not the deepest or most fundamental to which our audacious
mistrust can descend: the faith in reason with which the validity of these
judgments must stand or fall, is, as confidence, a moral phenomenon . .
. perhaps German pessimism has yet to take its last step? Perhaps it has once
more to draw up its "credo" opposite its "absurdum" in a terrible manner? And if
this book is pessimistic even in regard to morals, even above the confidence in
morals-should it not be a German book for that very reason? For, in fact, it
represents a contradiction, and one which it does not fear: in it confidence in
morals is retracted-but why? Out of morality! Or how shall we
call that which takes place in it-in us? For our taste inclines to the
employment of more modest phrases. But there is no doubt that to us likewise
there speaks a "thou shalt"; we likewise obey a strict law which is set above
us-and this is the last cry of morals which is still audible to us, which we too
must live: here, if anywhere, we are still men of conscience,
because, to put the matter in plain words, we will not return to that which we
look upon as decayed, outlived, and superseded, we will not return to something
"unworthy of belief," whether it be called God, virtue, truth, justice, love of
one's neighbor, or what not; we will not permit ourselves to open up a lying
path to old ideals; we are thoroughly and unalterably opposed to anything that
would intercede and mingle with us; opposed to all forms of present-day faith
and Christianity; opposed to the lukewarmness of all romanticism and
fatherlandism; opposed also to the artistic sense of enjoyment and lack of
principle which would fain make us worship where we no longer believe-for we are
artists-opposed, in short, to all this European feminism (or idealism, if this
term be thought preferable) which everlastingly "draws upward," and which in
consequence everlastingly "lowers" and" degrades." Yet, being men of
this conscience, we feel that we are related to that German uprightness
and piety which dates back thousands of years, although we immoralists and
atheists may be the late and uncertain offspring of these virtues-yes, we even
consider ourselves, in a certain respect, as their heirs, the executors of their
inmost will: a pessimistic will, as I have already pointed out, which is not
afraid to deny itself, because it denies itself with joy! In us is consummated,
if you desire a formula-the autosuppression of morals.
5.
But, after all, why
must we proclaim so loudly and with such intensity what we are, what we want,
and what we do not want? Let us look at this more calmly and wisely; from a
higher and more distant point of view. Let us proclaim it, as if among
ourselves, in so low a tone that all the world fails to hear it and us!
Above all, however, let us say it slowly . . . This preface comes late,
but not too late: what, after all, do five or six years matter? Such a book, and
such a problem, are in no hurry; besides, we are friends of the lento,
I and my book. It is not for nothing that one has been a philologist, perhaps
one is a philologist still, that is to say, a teacher of slow reading:-in the
end one also writes slowly. Nowadays it is not only my habit, it is also to my
taste-a malicious taste, perhaps?-no longer to write anything which does not
reduce to despair every sort of man who is "in a hurry." For philology is that
venerable art which demands of its votaries one thing above all: to go aside, to
take time, to become still, to become slow-it is a goldsmith's art and
connoisseurship of the word which has nothing but delicate, cautious
work to do and achieves nothing if it does not achieve it lento. But
for precisely this reason it is more necessary than ever today, by precisely
this means does it entice and enchant us the most, in the midst of an age of
"work," that is to say, of hurry, of indecent and perspiring haste, which wants
to "get everything done" at once, including every old or new book:-this art does
not so easily get anything done, it teaches to read well, that is to
say, to read slowly, deeply, looking cautiously before and aft, with
reservations, with doors left open, with delicate eyes and fingers... My patient
friends, this book desires for itself only perfect readers and philologists:
learn to read me well!-
Ruta, near Genoa,
Autumn,
1886.
Book
One
1.
Rationality ex
post facto.- Whatever lives long is gradually so saturated with reason that
its irrational origins become improbable. Does not almost every accurate history
of the origin of something sound paradoxical and sacrilegious to our feelings?
Doesn't the good historian contradict all the time?
2.
Prejudice of the
learned.- The learned judge correctly that people of all ages have believed
they know what is good and evil, praise- and blameworthy. But it is a
prejudice of the learned that we now know better than any other
age.
3.
Everything has its
day.- When man gave all things a sex he thought, not that he was playing, but
that he had gained a profound insight:-it was only very late that he confessed
to himself what an enormous error this was, and perhaps even now he has not
confessed it completely.- In the same way man has ascribed to all that exists a
connection with morality and laid an ethical significance on the
world's back. One day this will have as much value, and no more, as the belief
in the masculinity or femininity of the sun has today.
9.
Concept of
morality of custom.- In comparison with the present mode of life of whole
millennia of mankind we present-day men live in a very immoral age: the power of
custom is astonishingly enfeebled and the moral sense so rarefied and lofty it
may be described as having more or less evaporated. That is why the fundamental
insights into the origin of morality are so difficult for us latecomers, and
even when we have acquired them we find it impossible to enunciate them, because
they sound so uncouth or because they seem to slander morality! This is, for
example, already the case with the chief proposition: morality is
nothing other (therefore no more!) than obedience to customs, of
whatever kind they may be; customs, however, are the traditional way of
behaving and evaluating. In things in which no tradition commands there is no
morality; and the less life is determined by tradition, the smaller the circle
of morality. The free human being is immoral because in all things he is
determined to depend upon himself and not upon a tradition: in all the
original conditions of mankind, "evil" signifies the same as "individual,"
"free," "capricious," "unusual," "unforeseen," "incalculable." Judged by the
standard of these conditions, if an action is performed not because
tradition commands it but for other motives (because of its usefulness to the
individual, for example) even indeed for precisely the motives which once
founded the tradition, it is called immoral and is felt to be so by him who
performed it: for it was not performed in obedience to tradition. What is
tradition? A higher authority which one obeys, not because it commands what is
useful to us, but because it commands.- What distinguishes
this feeling in the presence of tradition from the feeling of fear in general?
It is fear in the presence of a higher intellect which here commands, of an
incomprehensible, indefinite power, of something more than personal-there is
superstition in this fear.- Originally all education and care of
health, marriage, cure of sickness, agriculture, war, speech and silence,
traffic with one another and with the gods belonged within the domain of
morality: they demanded one observe prescriptions without thinking of
oneself as an individual. Originally, therefore, everything was custom, and
whoever wanted to elevate himself above it had to become a lawgiver and medicine
man and a kind of demi-god: that is to say, he had to make customs-a
dreadful, mortally dangerous thing! [...] Those moralists who, following in
the footsteps of Socrates, offer the individual a morality of
self-control and temperance as a means to his own advantage, as his
personal key to happiness, are the exceptions-and if it seems otherwise
to us that is because we have been brought up in their aftereffect: they all
take a new path under the highest disapprobation of all advocates of the
morality of custom-they cut themselves off from the community, as immoral men,
and are in the profoundest sense evil. Thus to a virtuous Roman of the old stamp
every Christian who "considered first of all his own
salvation" appeared-evil. [...] Every individual action, every
individual mode of thought arouses dread; it is impossible to compute what
precisely the rarer, choicer, more original spirits in the whole course of
history have had to suffer through being felt as evil and dangerous, indeed
through feeling themselves to be so. Under the dominion of the morality
of custom, originality of every kind has acquired a bad conscience; the sky
above the best men is for this reason to this very moment gloomier than it need
be.
16.
First proposition
of civilization.- Among barbarous peoples there exists a species of customs
whose purpose appears to be custom in general: minute and fundamentally
superfluous stipulations [...] which, however, keep continually in the consciousness the
constant proximity of custom, the perpetual compulsion to practice customs: so
as to strengthen the mighty proposition with which civilization begins: any
custom is better than no custom.
18.
The morality of
voluntary suffering.- What is the supreme enjoyment for men who live in the
state of war of those small, continually endangered communities which are
characterized by the strictest mores? In other words, for vigorous, vindictive,
vicious, suspicious souls who are prepared for what is most terrible and
hardened by deprivations and mores? The enjoyment of cruelty; and in
these circumstances it is even accounted among the virtues of such a
soul if it is inventive and insatiable in cruelty. The community feels refreshed
by cruel deeds, and casts off for once the gloom of continual anxiety and
caution. Cruelty belongs to the most ancient festive joys of mankind. Hence one
supposes that the gods, too, feel refreshed and festive when one offers
them the sight of cruelty; and so the idea creeps into the world that
voluntary suffering, torture one has chosen oneself, has value and
makes good sense.
Gradually, the mores
shape a communal practice in accordance with this idea: all extravagant
well-being henceforth arouses some mistrust, and all hard and painful states
more and more confidence. One supposes that the gods might look upon us
ungraciously because of our happiness, and graciously because of our
suffering-not by any means with pity. For pity is considered contemptible and
unworthy of a strong and terrible soul. Rather, graciously, because it delights
them and puts them into good spirits; for those who are cruel enjoy the supreme
titillation of the feeling of power.
Thus the concept of
the "most moral man" of the community comes to contain the virtue of frequent
suffering, deprivation, a hard way of life, and of cruel
self-mortification-not, to say this again and again, as a means of
self-discipline, self-control, and the desire for individual happiness, but as a
virtue that makes the community look good to the evil gods, steaming up to them
like a continual sacrifice of atonement upon some altar. All those spiritual
leaders of peoples who succeeded in stirring something in the inert but fertile
mud of their mores, had need not only of madness but also of voluntary torture
to engender faith-and most and first of all, as always, their faith in
themselves. The more their own spirit moved along novel paths and was therefore
tormented by pangs of conscience and anxieties, the more cruelly they raged
against their own flesh, their own desires, and their own health-as if they
wanted to offer the deity some substitute gratification in case it should
perhaps be embittered on account of customs one had neglected and fought against
and new goals one had championed.
Let us not believe too
quickly that now we have rid ourselves completely of such a logic of feeling.
Let the most heroic souls question themselves about this. Every smallest step on
the field of free thought and the individually formed life has always been
fought for with spiritual and physical torments: not only moving forward, no,
above all moving, motion, change have required innumerable martyrs, all through
the long path-seeking and basic millennia of which, to be sure, people don't
think when they talk, as usual, about "world history," that ridiculously small
segment of human existence. And even in this so-called world history, which is
at bottom much ado about the latest news, there is no really more important
theme than the primordial tragedy of the martyrs who wanted to move the
swamps.
Nothing has been
bought more dearly than that little bit of human reason and of a feeling of
freedom that now constitutes our pride. But it is this very pride that now makes
it almost impossible for us to feel with those vast spans of time characterized
by the "morality of mores" which antedate "world history" as the real and
decisive main history that determined the character of humanity-when
suffering was a virtue, cruelty a virtue, dissimulation a virtue, revenge a
virtue, the slander of reason a virtue, while well-being was a danger, the
craving for knowledge a danger, peace a danger, pity a danger, being pitied
ignominy, work ignominy, madness divine, change immoral and pregnant with
disaster.
You think that all
this has changed, and that humanity must thus have changed its character? You
who think you know men, learn to know yourselves better!
20.
Free-doers and
freethinkers.- Free-doers are at a disadvantage compared with freethinkers
because people suffer more obviously from the consequences of deeds than from
those of thoughts. If one considers, however, that both the one and the other
are in search of gratification, and that in the case of the freethinker the mere
thinking through and enunciation of forbidden things provides this
gratification, both are on an equal footing with regard to motive: and with
regard to consequences the decision will even go against the freethinker,
provided one does not judge-as all the world does-by what is most immediately
and crassly obvious. One has to take back much of the defamation which people
have cast upon all those who broke through the spell of a custom by means of a
deed-in general, they are called criminals. Whoever has overthrown an
existing law of custom has hitherto always first been accounted a bad
man: but when, as did happen, the law could not afterwards be reinstated
and this fact was accepted the predicate gradually changed;-history treats
almost exclusively of these bad men who subsequently became good
men!
26.
Animals and
morality.- The practices demanded in polite society: careful avoidance of
the ridiculous, the offensive, the presumptuous, the suppression of one's
virtues as well as of one's strongest inclinations, self-adaptation,
self-deprecation, submission to orders of rank-all this is to be found as social
morality in a crude form everywhere, even in the depths of the animal world-and
only at this depth do we see the purpose of all these amiable precautions: one
wishes to elude one's pursuers and be favored in the pursuit of one's prey. For
this reason the animals learn to master themselves and alter their form, so that
many, for example, adapt their colorings to the coloring of their surroundings
(by virtue of the so-called "chromatic function"), pretend to be dead or assume
the forms and colors of another animal or of sand, leaves, lichen, fungus (what
English researchers designate "mimicry"). Thus the individual hides himself in
the general concept "man," or in society, or adapts himself to princes, classes,
parties, opinions of his time or place: and all the subtle ways we have of
appearing fortunate, grateful, powerful, enamored have their easily discoverable
parallels in the animal world. [...] The beginnings of justice, as of
prudence, moderation, bravery-in short, of all we designate as the Socratic
virtues, are animal: a consequence of that drive which teaches us
to seek food and elude enemies. Now if we consider that even the highest human
being has only become more elevated and subtle in the nature of his food and in
his conception of what is inimical to him, it is not improper to describe the
entire phenomenon of morality as animal.
65.
Brahminism and
Christianity.- There are recipes for the feeling of power, firstly for
those who can control themselves and who are thereby accustomed to a feeling of
power; then for those in whom precisely this is lacking. Brahminism has catered
for men of the former sort, Christianity for men of the latter.
78.
Justice which
punishes.- Misfortune and guilt-Christianity has placed these two things on
a balance: so that, when misfortune consequent on guilt is great, even now the
greatness of the guilt is still involuntarily measured by it. But this is not
antique, and that is why the Greek tragedy, which speaks so much yet in
so different a sense of misfortune and guilt, is a great liberator of the spirit
in a way in which the ancients themselves could not feel it. They were still so
innocent as not to have established an "adequate relationship" between guilt and
misfortune. The guilt of their tragic heroes is, indeed, the little stone over
which they stumble and perhaps break an arm or put out an eye: antique
sensibility commented: "Yes, he should have gone his way a little more
cautiously and with less haughtiness!" But it was reserved for Christianity to
say: "Here is a great misfortune and behind it there must lie hidden a
great, equally great guilt, even though it may not be clearly visible!
If you, unfortunate man, do not feel this you are obdurate-you will
have to suffer worse things!"- Moreover, in antiquity there still existed actual
misfortune, pure innocent misfortune; only in Christendom did everything become
punishment, well-deserved punishment [...]
89.
Doubt as
sin.- Christianity has done its utmost to close the circle and declared
even doubt to be a sin. One is supposed to be cast into belief without reason,
by a miracle, and from then on to swim in it as in the brightest and least
ambiguous of elements: even a glance towards land, even the thought that one
perhaps exists for something else as well as swimming, even the slightest
impulse of our amphibious nature-is sin! And notice that all this means that the
foundation of belief and all reflection on its origin is likewise excluded as
sinful. What is wanted are blindness and intoxication and an eternal song over
the waves in which reason has drowned!
Book
Two
97.
One becomes
moral-not because one is moral.- Submission to morality can be
slavish or vain or selfish or resigned or obtusely enthusiastic or thoughtless
or an act of desperation, like submission to a prince: in itself it is nothing
moral.
98.
Mutation of
morality.- There is a continual moiling and toiling going on in
morality-the effect of successful crimes (among which, for example, are
included all innovations in moral thinking).
101.
Doubtful.- To
accept a faith just because it is customary, means to be dishonest, to be
cowardly, to be lazy. And do dishonesty, cowardice, and laziness then appear as
the presupposition of morality?
102.
The oldest moral
judgments.- What really are our reactions to the behavior of someone in our
presence?- First of all, we see what there is in it for us-we regard it
only from this point of view. We take this effect as the intention
behind the behavior-and finally we ascribe the harboring of such intentions
as a permanent quality of the person whose behavior we are observing
and thenceforth call him for instance "a harmful person." Threefold error!
Threefold primeval blunder! Perhaps inherited from the animals and their power
of judgment! Is the origin of all morality not to be sought in the
detestable petty conclusions: "what harms me is something evil
(harmful in itself); what is useful to me is something good
(beneficent and advantageous in itself); what harms me once or several
times is the inimical as such and in itself; what is useful to me once
or several times is the friendly as such and in itself." O pudenda
origo! [...]
112.
On the natural
history of duty and right.- [...] Where right rules, a
state and degree of power is preserved, and a diminution and increase are
resisted. The right of others is the concession of our feeling of power to the
feeling of power among these others. When our power is proved to have been
profoundly shaken and broken, our rights cease; on the other hand, when we have
become a great deal more powerful, the rights of others cease for us, at least
in the form in which we have so far conceded them.
The "fair person"
constantly needs the fine tact of a scale for the degrees of power and right
which, in view of the transitory nature of human affairs, will always be
balanced only for a short time, while for the most part they either sink or
rise: to be fair is therefore difficult and requires much practice, good will,
and a great deal of good spirit.-
123.
Reason.- How
did reason come into the world? As is fitting, in an irrational manner, by
accident. One will have to guess at it as at a riddle.
131.
Fashions in
morality.- How the overall moral judgments have shifted! The great men of
antique morality, Epictetus for instance, knew nothing of the now normal
glorification of thinking of others, of living for others; in the light of our
moral fashion they would have to be called downright immoral, for they strove
with all their might for their ego and against
feeling with others (that is to say, with the sufferings and moral
frailties of others). Perhaps they would reply to us: "If you are so boring or
ugly an object to yourself, by all means think of others more than of yourself!
It is right you should!"
140.
Praise and
blame.- If a war proves unsuccessful one asks who was to "blame" for the
war; if it ends in victory one praises its instigator. Guilt is always sought
wherever there is failure; for failure brings with it a depression of spirits
against which the sole remedy is instinctively applied: a new excitation of the
feeling of power-and this is to be discovered in the
condemnation of the "guilty" [...] To condemn oneself can also be a
means of restoring the feeling of power after a defeat. [...]
148.
Distant
prospect.- If only those actions are moral which are performed for the sake
of another and only for his sake, as one definition has it, then there are no
moral actions! If only those actions are moral which are performed out of
freedom of will, as another definition says, then there are likewise no moral
actions!- What is it then which is so named and which in any event
exists and wants explaining? It is the effects of certain intellectual
mistakes.- And supposing one freed oneself from these errors, what would become
of "moral actions"?- By virtue of these errors we have hitherto accorded certain
actions a higher value than they possess: we have segregated them from the
"egoistic" and "unfree" actions. If we now realign them with the latter, as we
shall have to do, we shall certainly reduce their value (the value we
feel they possess), and indeed shall do so to an unfair degree, because the
"egoistic" and "unfree" actions were hitherto evaluated too low on account of
their supposed profound and intrinsic difference.- Will they from then on be
performed less often because they are now valued less highly?-Inevitably! At
least for a good length of time, as long as the balance of value-feelings
continues to be affected by the reaction of former errors! But our
counter-reckoning is that we shall restore to men their goodwill towards the
actions decried as egoistic and restore to these actions their value-we
shall deprive them of their bad conscience! And since they have hitherto
been by far the most frequent actions, and will continue to be so for all future
time, we thus remove from the entire aspect of action and life its evil
appearance! This is a very significant result! When man no longer regards
himself as evil he ceases to be so!
Book
Three
173.
Those who commend
work.- In the glorification of "work," in the unwearied talk of the
"blessings of work," I see the same covert ideas as in the praise of useful
impersonal actions: that of fear of everything individual. Fundamentally, one
now feels at the sight of work-one always means by work that hard
industriousness from early till late-that such work is the best policeman, that
it keeps everyone in bounds and can mightily hinder the development of reason,
covetousness, desire for independence. For it uses up an extraordinary amount of
nervous energy, which is thus denied to reflection, brooding, dreaming,
worrying, loving, hating; it sets a small goal always in sight and guarantees
easy and regular satisfactions. Thus a society in which there is continual hard
work will have more security: and security is now worshipped as the supreme
divinity.- And now! Horror! Precisely the "worker" has become
dangerous! The place is swarming with "dangerous individuals"! And
behind them the danger of dangers-the individual!
174.
Moral fashion of a
commercial society.- Behind the basic principle of the current moral
fashion: "moral actions are actions performed out of sympathy for others," I see
the social effect of timidity hiding behind an intellectual mask: it desires,
first and foremost, that all the dangers which life once held should be
removed from it, and that everyone should assist in this with all his
might: hence only those actions which tend towards the common security and
society's sense of security are to be accorded the predicate "good"!
[...]
179.
As little state as
possible.- All political and economic arrangements are not worth it, that
precisely the most gifted spirits should not be permitted, or even obliged, to
manage them: such a waste of spirit is really worse than an extremity. These are
and remain fields of work for the lesser heads, and other than lesser heads
should not be at the service of this workshop: it were better to let the machine
go to pieces again. . . . At such a price, one pays far too dearly for the
"general security"; and what is most insane, one also produces the very opposite
of the general security, as our dear century is undertaking to prove-as if it
had never been proved before. To make society secure against thieves and
fireproof and infinitely comfortable for every trade and activity, and to
transform the state into Providence in the good and bad sense-these are low,
mediocre, and not at all indispensable goals, for which one should not strive
with the highest means and instruments anywhere in existence, the means one
ought to reserve for the highest and rarest ends. Our time, however much it
talks of economy, is a squanderer: it squanders what is most precious, the
spirit.
187.
From a possible
future.- Is a state of affairs unthinkable in which the malefactor calls
himself to account and publicly dictates his own punishment, in the proud
feeling that he is thus honoring the law which he himself has made, that by
punishing himself he is exercising his power, the power of the lawgiver?
[...] Such
would be the criminal of a possible future, who, to be sure, also presupposes a
future lawgiving-one founded on the idea "I submit only to the law which I
myself have given, in great things and in small."
189.
On grand
politics.- However much utility and vanity, those of individuals as of
peoples, may play a part in grand politics: the strongest tide which
carries them forward is the need for the feeling of power, which from
time to time streams up out of inexhaustible wells not only in the souls of
princes and the powerful but not least in the lower orders of the people. There
comes again and again the hour when the masses are ready to stake their
life, their goods, their conscience, their virtue so as to acquire that higher
enjoyment and as a victorious, capriciously tyrannical nation to rule over other
nations (or to think it rules). [...] The great conquerors have always
mouthed the pathetic language of virtue: they have had around them masses in a
condition of elevation who wanted to hear only the most elevated language.
Strange madness of moral judgments! When man possesses the feeling of power he
feels and calls himself good: and it is precisely then that the others
upon whom he has to discharge his power feel and call him
evil! [...]
202.
For the promotion
of health.- One has hardly begun to reflect on the physiology of the
criminal, and yet one already stands before the irrefutable insight that there
exists no essential difference between criminals and the insane: presupposing
one believes that the usual mode of moral thinking is the mode
of thinking of spiritual health. But no belief is still so firmly
believed as this is, and so one should not hesitate to accept the consequence
and treat the criminal as a mental patient [...] At present, to be sure, he who
has been injured [by the criminal], irrespective of how this injury is to be made good, will
still desire his revenge and will turn for it to the courts-and for the
time being the courts continue to maintain our detestable criminal codes, with
their shopkeeper's scales and the desire to counterbalance guilt with
punishment: but can we not get beyond this? [...] Let us do away with the concept
sin-and let us quickly send after it the concept punishment!
[...]
204.
Dane and god in
gold.- [...] The means employed by the lust for power have changed, but the same
volcano continues to glow, the impatience and the immoderate love demand their
sacrifice: and what one formerly did "for the sake of God" one now does for the
sake of money, that is to say, for the sake of that which now gives the
highest feeling of power and good conscience.
206.
The impossible
class.- [...] Are you accomplices in the current folly of nations? The folly of
wanting above all to produce as much as possible and to become as rich as
possible? [...]
Book
Four
231.
Of German
virtue.- How degenerate in taste, how slavish before offices, classes,
robes, pomp, and splendor must a people have been when it evaluated the simple
[schlicht] as the bad [schlecht], the simple man as
the bad man! One should counter the moral arrogance of the Germans with this one
little word, schlecht, and nothing more.
232.
From a
disputation.- A: My friend, you have talked yourself hoarse. B: Then I
stand refuted. Let us not discuss the matter any further.
236.
Punishment.-
A strange thing, our punishment! It does not cleanse the criminal, it is no
atonement; on the contrary, it pollutes worse than the crime does.
240.
On the morality of
the stage.- Whoever thinks that Shakespeare's theater has a moral effect,
and that the sight of Macbeth irresistibly repels one from the evil of ambition,
is in error: and he is again in error if he thinks Shakespeare himself felt as
he feels. He who is really possessed by raging ambition beholds this its image
with joy; and if the hero perishes by his passion this precisely is the
sharpest spice in the hot draught of this joy. Can the poet have felt otherwise?
How royally, and not at all like a rogue, does his ambitious man pursue his
course from the moment of his great crime! Only from then on does he exercise
"demonic" attraction and excite similar natures to emulation-demonic means here:
in defiance against life and advantage for the sake of a drive and
idea. Do you suppose that Tristan and Isolde are preaching against
adultery when they both perish by it? This would be to stand the poets on
their head: they, and especially Shakespeare, are enamored of the passions as
such and not least of their death-welcoming moods-those moods in which
the heart adheres to life no more firmly than does a drop of water to a glass.
It is not the guilt and its evil outcome they have at heart, Shakespeare as
little as Sophocles (in Ajax, Philoctetes, Oedipus): as easy as it would have
been in these instances to make guilt the lever of the drama, just as surely has
this been avoided. The tragic poet has just as little desire to take sides
against life with his image of life! He cries rather: "it is the
stimulant of stimulants, this exciting, changing, dangerous, gloomy and often
sun-drenched existence! It is an adventure to live-espouse what party
in it you will, it will always retain this character!"- He speaks thus out of a
restless, vigorous age which is half-drunk and stupefied by its excess of blood
and energy-out of a wickeder age than ours is: which is why we need first to
adjust and justify the goal of a Shakespearean drama, that is
to say, not to understand it.
250.
Night and
music.- The ear, the organ of fear, could have evolved as greatly as it has
only in the night and twilight of obscure caves and woods, in accordance with
the mode of life of the age of timidity, that is to say the longest human age
there has ever been: in bright daylight the ear is less necessary. That is how
music acquired the character of an art of night and twilight.
262.
The demon of
power.- Not necessity, not desire-no, the love of power is the demon of
men. Let them have everything-health, food, a place to live, entertainment-they
are and remain unhappy and low-spirited: for the demon waits and waits and will
be satisfied. Take everything from them and satisfy this, and they are almost
happy-as happy as men and demons can be. But why do I repeat this? Luther has
said it already, and better than I, in the verses: "Let them take from us our
body, goods, honor, children, wife: let it all go-the kingdom [Reich] must yet
remain to us!" Yes! Yes! The "Reich"!
297.
Corruption.-
The surest way to corrupt a youth is to instruct him to hold in higher esteem
those who think alike than those who think differently.
327.
A fable.- The
Don Juan of knowledge: no philosopher or poet has yet discovered him. He does
not love the things he knows, but has spirit and appetite for an enjoyment of
the chase and intrigues of knowledge-up to the highest and remotest stars of
knowledge!-until at last there remains to him nothing of knowledge left to hunt
down except the absolutely detrimental; he is like the drunkard who
ends by drinking absinthe and aqua fortis. Thus in the end he lusts
after Hell-it is the last knowledge that seduces him. Perhaps it too
proves a disillusionment, like all knowledge! And then he would have to stand to
all eternity transfixed to disillusionment and himself become a stone guest,
with a longing for a supper of knowledge which he will never get!-for the whole
universe has not a single morsel left to give to this hungry man.
333.
"Humanity".-
We do not regard the animals as moral beings. But do you suppose the animals
regard us as moral beings?- An animal which could speak said: "Humanity is a
prejudice of which we animals at least are free."
356.
Effect of
happiness.- The first effect of happiness is the feeling of power:
this wants to express itself, either to us ourselves, or to other men,
or to ideas or imaginary beings. The most common modes of expression are: to
bestow, to mock, to destroy-all three out of a common basic drive.
360.
No
utilitarians.- "Power against which much ill is done and meditated is worth
more than impotence which encounters only good"-thus the Greeks felt. That is to
say: they valued the feeling of power more highly than any sort of utility or
good reputation.
370.
To what extent the
thinker loves his enemy.- Never keep silent or hold back what may be
thought against your thoughts! Praise it! It is part of the fundamental probity
of thought. Every day you must conduct your campaign also against yourself. A
victory and a conquered stronghold are no longer your concern, but truth
is-however, your defeat is no longer your concern, either!
Book
Five
547.
The tyrants of the
spirit.- The march of science is now no longer crossed by the accidental
fact that men live for about seventy years, as was for all too long the case.
Formerly, a man wanted to reach the far end of knowledge during this period of
time and the methods of acquiring knowledge were evaluated in accordance with
this universal longing. The small single questions and experiments were counted
contemptible: one wanted the shortest route; one believed that, because
everything in the world seemed to be accommodated to man, the
knowability of things was also accommodated to a human time-span. To solve
everything at a stroke, with a single word-that was the secret desire.
[...] "There
is a riddle to be solved": thus did the goal of life appear to the eye
of the philosopher; the first thing to do was to find the riddle and to compress
the problem of the world into the simplest riddle-form. The boundless ambition
and exultation of being the "unriddler of the world" constituted the thinker's
dreams: nothing seemed worthwhile if it was not the means of bringing everything
to a conclusion for him! Philosophy was thus a kind of supreme struggle
to possess the tyrannical rule of the spirit-that some such very fortunate,
subtle, inventive, bold and mighty man was in reserve-one only!-was doubted by
none, and several, most recently Schopenhauer, fancied themselves to be that
one.- From this it follows that by and large the sciences have hitherto been
kept back by the moral narrowness of their disciples and that
henceforth they must be carried on with a higher and more magnanimous
basic feeling. "What do I matter!"-stands over the door of the thinker of
the future.
556.
The good
four.- Honest with ourselves and whoever else is our
friend; courageous with the enemy; magnanimous with the
vanquished; courteous-always: thus the four cardinal virtues want
us.
557.
Against an
enemy.- How good bad music and bad reasons sound when one marches against
an enemy!
560.
What we are at
liberty to do.- One can dispose of one's drives like a gardener and, though
few know it, cultivate the shoots of anger, pity, curiosity, vanity as
productively and profitably as a beautiful fruit tree on a trellis; one can do
it with the good or bad taste of a gardener and, as it were, in the French or
English or Dutch or Chinese fashion; one can also let nature rule and only
attend to a little embellishment and tidying-up here and there; one can,
finally, without paying attention to them at all, let the plants grow up and
fight their fight out among themselves-indeed, one can take delight in such a
wilderness, and desire precisely this delight, thought it gives one some
trouble, too. All this we are at liberty to do: but how many know we are at
liberty to do it? Do the majority not believe in themselves as
in complete fully-developed facts? Have the great philosophers not put
their seal on this prejudice with the doctrine of the unchangeability of
character?
571.
Field-dispensary
of the soul.- What is the strongest remedy?- Victory.
573.
Shedding one's
skin.- The snake that cannot shed its skin perishes. So do the spirits who
are prevented from changing their opinions; they cease to be a
spirit.
575.
We aeronauts of
the spirit!- All those brave birds which fly out into the distance, into
the farthest distance-it is certain! somewhere or other they will be unable to
go on and will perch down on a mast or a bare cliff-face-and they will even be
thankful for this miserable accommodation! But who could venture to infer from
that, that there was not an immense open space before them, that they
had flown as far as one could fly! All our great teachers and
predecessors have at last come to a stop [...] it will be the same with you and
me! Other birds will fly farther! This insight and faith of ours vies
with them in flying up and away; it rises above our heads and above our
impotence into the heights and from there surveys the distance and sees before
it the flocks of birds which, far stronger than we, still strive whither we have
striven, and where everything is sea, sea, sea!- And whither then would we go?
Would we cross the sea? Whither does this mighty longing draw us, this
longing that is worth more to us than any pleasure? Why just in this direction,
thither where all the sums of humanity have hitherto gone down? Will it
perhaps be said of us one day that we too, steering westward, hoped
to reach an India-but that it was our fate to be wrecked against infinity?
Or, my brothers. Or?-
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