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| SUPPOSING that Truth is a woman--what then? Is there not ground | |
| for suspecting that all philosophers, in so far as they have been | |
| dogmatists, have failed to understand women--that the terrible | |
| seriousness and clumsy importunity with which they have usually paid | |
| their addresses to Truth, have been unskilled and unseemly methods for | |
| winning a woman? Certainly she has never allowed herself to be won; and | |
| at present every kind of dogma stands with sad and discouraged mien--IF, | |
| indeed, it stands at all! For there are scoffers who maintain that it | |
| has fallen, that all dogma lies on the ground--nay more, that it is at | |
| its last gasp. But to speak seriously, there are good grounds for hoping | |
| that all dogmatizing in philosophy, whatever solemn, whatever conclusive | |
| and decided airs it has assumed, may have been only a noble puerilism | |
| and tyronism; and probably the time is at hand when it will be once | |
| and again understood WHAT has actually sufficed for the basis of such | |
| imposing and absolute philosophical edifices as the dogmatists have | |
| hitherto reared: perhaps some popular superstition of immemorial time | |
| (such as the soul-superstition, which, in the form of subject- and | |
| ego-superstition, has not yet ceased doing mischief): perhaps some | |
| play upon words, a deception on the part of grammar, or an | |
| audacious generalization of very restricted, very personal, very | |
| human--all-too-human facts. The philosophy of the dogmatists, it is to | |
| be hoped, was only a promise for thousands of years afterwards, as was | |
| astrology in still earlier times, in the service of which probably more | |
| labour, gold, acuteness, and patience have been spent than on any | |
| actual science hitherto: we owe to it, and to its "super-terrestrial" | |
| pretensions in Asia and Egypt, the grand style of architecture. It seems | |
| that in order to inscribe themselves upon the heart of humanity with | |
| everlasting claims, all great things have first to wander about the | |
| earth as enormous and awe-inspiring caricatures: dogmatic philosophy has | |
| been a caricature of this kind--for instance, the Vedanta doctrine in | |
| Asia, and Platonism in Europe. Let us not be ungrateful to it, although | |
| it must certainly be confessed that the worst, the most tiresome, | |
| and the most dangerous of errors hitherto has been a dogmatist | |
| error--namely, Plato's invention of Pure Spirit and the Good in Itself. | |
| But now when it has been surmounted, when Europe, rid of this nightmare, | |
| can again draw breath freely and at least enjoy a healthier--sleep, | |
| we, WHOSE DUTY IS WAKEFULNESS ITSELF, are the heirs of all the strength | |
| which the struggle against this error has fostered. It amounted to | |
| the very inversion of truth, and the denial of the PERSPECTIVE--the | |
| fundamental condition--of life, to speak of Spirit and the Good as Plato | |
| spoke of them; indeed one might ask, as a physician: "How did such a | |
| malady attack that finest product of antiquity, Plato? Had the wicked | |
| Socrates really corrupted him? Was Socrates after all a corrupter of | |
| youths, and deserved his hemlock?" But the struggle against Plato, | |
| or--to speak plainer, and for the "people"--the struggle against | |
| the ecclesiastical oppression of millenniums of Christianity (FOR | |
| CHRISTIANITY IS PLATONISM FOR THE "PEOPLE"), produced in Europe | |
| a magnificent tension of soul, such as had not existed anywhere | |
| previously; with such a tensely strained bow one can now aim at the | |
| furthest goals. As a matter of fact, the European feels this tension as | |
| a state of distress, and twice attempts have been made in grand style to | |
| unbend the bow: once by means of Jesuitism, and the second time by means | |
| of democratic enlightenment--which, with the aid of liberty of the press | |
| and newspaper-reading, might, in fact, bring it about that the spirit | |
| would not so easily find itself in "distress"! (The Germans invented | |
| gunpowder--all credit to them! but they again made things square--they | |
| invented printing.) But we, who are neither Jesuits, nor democrats, | |
| nor even sufficiently Germans, we GOOD EUROPEANS, and free, VERY free | |
| spirits--we have it still, all the distress of spirit and all the | |
| tension of its bow! And perhaps also the arrow, the duty, and, who | |
| knows? THE GOAL TO AIM AT.... | |
| Sils Maria Upper Engadine, JUNE, 1885. | |
| CHAPTER I. PREJUDICES OF PHILOSOPHERS | |
| 1. The Will to Truth, which is to tempt us to many a hazardous | |
| enterprise, the famous Truthfulness of which all philosophers have | |
| hitherto spoken with respect, what questions has this Will to Truth not | |
| laid before us! What strange, perplexing, questionable questions! It is | |
| already a long story; yet it seems as if it were hardly commenced. Is | |
| it any wonder if we at last grow distrustful, lose patience, and turn | |
| impatiently away? That this Sphinx teaches us at last to ask questions | |
| ourselves? WHO is it really that puts questions to us here? WHAT really | |
| is this "Will to Truth" in us? In fact we made a long halt at the | |
| question as to the origin of this Will--until at last we came to an | |
| absolute standstill before a yet more fundamental question. We inquired | |
| about the VALUE of this Will. Granted that we want the truth: WHY NOT | |
| RATHER untruth? And uncertainty? Even ignorance? The problem of the | |
| value of truth presented itself before us--or was it we who presented | |
| ourselves before the problem? Which of us is the Oedipus here? Which | |
| the Sphinx? It would seem to be a rendezvous of questions and notes of | |
| interrogation. And could it be believed that it at last seems to us as | |
| if the problem had never been propounded before, as if we were the first | |
| to discern it, get a sight of it, and RISK RAISING it? For there is risk | |
| in raising it, perhaps there is no greater risk. | |
| 2. "HOW COULD anything originate out of its opposite? For example, truth | |
| out of error? or the Will to Truth out of the will to deception? or the | |
| generous deed out of selfishness? or the pure sun-bright vision of the | |
| wise man out of covetousness? Such genesis is impossible; whoever dreams | |
| of it is a fool, nay, worse than a fool; things of the highest | |
| value must have a different origin, an origin of THEIR own--in this | |
| transitory, seductive, illusory, paltry world, in this turmoil of | |
| delusion and cupidity, they cannot have their source. But rather in | |
| the lap of Being, in the intransitory, in the concealed God, in the | |
| 'Thing-in-itself--THERE must be their source, and nowhere else!"--This | |
| mode of reasoning discloses the typical prejudice by which | |
| metaphysicians of all times can be recognized, this mode of valuation | |
| is at the back of all their logical procedure; through this "belief" of | |
| theirs, they exert themselves for their "knowledge," for something that | |
| is in the end solemnly christened "the Truth." The fundamental belief of | |
| metaphysicians is THE BELIEF IN ANTITHESES OF VALUES. It never occurred | |
| even to the wariest of them to doubt here on the very threshold (where | |
| doubt, however, was most necessary); though they had made a solemn | |
| vow, "DE OMNIBUS DUBITANDUM." For it may be doubted, firstly, whether | |
| antitheses exist at all; and secondly, whether the popular valuations | |
| and antitheses of value upon which metaphysicians have set their | |
| seal, are not perhaps merely superficial estimates, merely provisional | |
| perspectives, besides being probably made from some corner, perhaps from | |
| below--"frog perspectives," as it were, to borrow an expression current | |
| among painters. In spite of all the value which may belong to the true, | |
| the positive, and the unselfish, it might be possible that a higher | |
| and more fundamental value for life generally should be assigned to | |
| pretence, to the will to delusion, to selfishness, and cupidity. It | |
| might even be possible that WHAT constitutes the value of those good and | |
| respected things, consists precisely in their being insidiously | |
| related, knotted, and crocheted to these evil and apparently opposed | |
| things--perhaps even in being essentially identical with them. Perhaps! | |
| But who wishes to concern himself with such dangerous "Perhapses"! | |
| For that investigation one must await the advent of a new order of | |
| philosophers, such as will have other tastes and inclinations, the | |
| reverse of those hitherto prevalent--philosophers of the dangerous | |
| "Perhaps" in every sense of the term. And to speak in all seriousness, I | |
| see such new philosophers beginning to appear. | |
| 3. Having kept a sharp eye on philosophers, and having read between | |
| their lines long enough, I now say to myself that the greater part of | |
| conscious thinking must be counted among the instinctive functions, and | |
| it is so even in the case of philosophical thinking; one has here to | |
| learn anew, as one learned anew about heredity and "innateness." As | |
| little as the act of birth comes into consideration in the whole process | |
| and procedure of heredity, just as little is "being-conscious" OPPOSED | |
| to the instinctive in any decisive sense; the greater part of the | |
| conscious thinking of a philosopher is secretly influenced by his | |
| instincts, and forced into definite channels. And behind all logic and | |
| its seeming sovereignty of movement, there are valuations, or to speak | |
| more plainly, physiological demands, for the maintenance of a definite | |
| mode of life For example, that the certain is worth more than the | |
| uncertain, that illusion is less valuable than "truth" such valuations, | |
| in spite of their regulative importance for US, might notwithstanding be | |
| only superficial valuations, special kinds of _niaiserie_, such as may | |
| be necessary for the maintenance of beings such as ourselves. Supposing, | |
| in effect, that man is not just the "measure of things." | |
| 4. The falseness of an opinion is not for us any objection to it: it is | |
| here, perhaps, that our new language sounds most strangely. The | |
| question is, how far an opinion is life-furthering, life-preserving, | |
| species-preserving, perhaps species-rearing, and we are fundamentally | |
| inclined to maintain that the falsest opinions (to which the synthetic | |
| judgments a priori belong), are the most indispensable to us, that | |
| without a recognition of logical fictions, without a comparison of | |
| reality with the purely IMAGINED world of the absolute and immutable, | |
| without a constant counterfeiting of the world by means of numbers, | |
| man could not live--that the renunciation of false opinions would be | |
| a renunciation of life, a negation of life. TO RECOGNISE UNTRUTH AS A | |
| CONDITION OF LIFE; that is certainly to impugn the traditional ideas of | |
| value in a dangerous manner, and a philosophy which ventures to do so, | |
| has thereby alone placed itself beyond good and evil. | |
| 5. That which causes philosophers to be regarded half-distrustfully | |
| and half-mockingly, is not the oft-repeated discovery how innocent they | |
| are--how often and easily they make mistakes and lose their way, in | |
| short, how childish and childlike they are,--but that there is not | |
| enough honest dealing with them, whereas they all raise a loud and | |
| virtuous outcry when the problem of truthfulness is even hinted at in | |
| the remotest manner. They all pose as though their real opinions had | |
| been discovered and attained through the self-evolving of a cold, pure, | |
| divinely indifferent dialectic (in contrast to all sorts of mystics, | |
| who, fairer and foolisher, talk of "inspiration"), whereas, in fact, a | |
| prejudiced proposition, idea, or "suggestion," which is generally | |
| their heart's desire abstracted and refined, is defended by them with | |
| arguments sought out after the event. They are all advocates who do not | |
| wish to be regarded as such, generally astute defenders, also, of their | |
| prejudices, which they dub "truths,"--and VERY far from having the | |
| conscience which bravely admits this to itself, very far from having | |
| the good taste of the courage which goes so far as to let this be | |
| understood, perhaps to warn friend or foe, or in cheerful confidence | |
| and self-ridicule. The spectacle of the Tartuffery of old Kant, equally | |
| stiff and decent, with which he entices us into the dialectic | |
| by-ways that lead (more correctly mislead) to his "categorical | |
| imperative"--makes us fastidious ones smile, we who find no small | |
| amusement in spying out the subtle tricks of old moralists and ethical | |
| preachers. Or, still more so, the hocus-pocus in mathematical form, by | |
| means of which Spinoza has, as it were, clad his philosophy in mail and | |
| mask--in fact, the "love of HIS wisdom," to translate the term fairly | |
| and squarely--in order thereby to strike terror at once into the heart | |
| of the assailant who should dare to cast a glance on that invincible | |
| maiden, that Pallas Athene:--how much of personal timidity and | |
| vulnerability does this masquerade of a sickly recluse betray! | |
| 6. It has gradually become clear to me what every great philosophy up | |
| till now has consisted of--namely, the confession of its originator, and | |
| a species of involuntary and unconscious auto-biography; and moreover | |
| that the moral (or immoral) purpose in every philosophy has constituted | |
| the true vital germ out of which the entire plant has always grown. | |
| Indeed, to understand how the abstrusest metaphysical assertions of a | |
| philosopher have been arrived at, it is always well (and wise) to first | |
| ask oneself: "What morality do they (or does he) aim at?" Accordingly, | |
| I do not believe that an "impulse to knowledge" is the father of | |
| philosophy; but that another impulse, here as elsewhere, has only made | |
| use of knowledge (and mistaken knowledge!) as an instrument. But whoever | |
| considers the fundamental impulses of man with a view to determining | |
| how far they may have here acted as INSPIRING GENII (or as demons and | |
| cobolds), will find that they have all practiced philosophy at one time | |
| or another, and that each one of them would have been only too glad to | |
| look upon itself as the ultimate end of existence and the legitimate | |
| LORD over all the other impulses. For every impulse is imperious, and as | |
| SUCH, attempts to philosophize. To be sure, in the case of scholars, in | |
| the case of really scientific men, it may be otherwise--"better," if | |
| you will; there there may really be such a thing as an "impulse to | |
| knowledge," some kind of small, independent clock-work, which, when well | |
| wound up, works away industriously to that end, WITHOUT the rest of | |
| the scholarly impulses taking any material part therein. The actual | |
| "interests" of the scholar, therefore, are generally in quite another | |
| direction--in the family, perhaps, or in money-making, or in politics; | |
| it is, in fact, almost indifferent at what point of research his little | |
| machine is placed, and whether the hopeful young worker becomes a | |
| good philologist, a mushroom specialist, or a chemist; he is not | |
| CHARACTERISED by becoming this or that. In the philosopher, on the | |
| contrary, there is absolutely nothing impersonal; and above all, | |
| his morality furnishes a decided and decisive testimony as to WHO HE | |
| IS,--that is to say, in what order the deepest impulses of his nature | |
| stand to each other. | |
| 7. How malicious philosophers can be! I know of nothing more stinging | |
| than the joke Epicurus took the liberty of making on Plato and the | |
| Platonists; he called them Dionysiokolakes. In its original sense, | |
| and on the face of it, the word signifies "Flatterers of | |
| Dionysius"--consequently, tyrants' accessories and lick-spittles; | |
| besides this, however, it is as much as to say, "They are all ACTORS, | |
| there is nothing genuine about them" (for Dionysiokolax was a popular | |
| name for an actor). And the latter is really the malignant reproach that | |
| Epicurus cast upon Plato: he was annoyed by the grandiose manner, the | |
| mise en scene style of which Plato and his scholars were masters--of | |
| which Epicurus was not a master! He, the old school-teacher of Samos, | |
| who sat concealed in his little garden at Athens, and wrote three | |
| hundred books, perhaps out of rage and ambitious envy of Plato, who | |
| knows! Greece took a hundred years to find out who the garden-god | |
| Epicurus really was. Did she ever find out? | |
| 8. There is a point in every philosophy at which the "conviction" of | |
| the philosopher appears on the scene; or, to put it in the words of an | |
| ancient mystery: | |
| Adventavit asinus, Pulcher et fortissimus. | |
| 9. You desire to LIVE "according to Nature"? Oh, you noble Stoics, what | |
| fraud of words! Imagine to yourselves a being like Nature, boundlessly | |
| extravagant, boundlessly indifferent, without purpose or consideration, | |
| without pity or justice, at once fruitful and barren and uncertain: | |
| imagine to yourselves INDIFFERENCE as a power--how COULD you live | |
| in accordance with such indifference? To live--is not that just | |
| endeavouring to be otherwise than this Nature? Is not living valuing, | |
| preferring, being unjust, being limited, endeavouring to be different? | |
| And granted that your imperative, "living according to Nature," means | |
| actually the same as "living according to life"--how could you do | |
| DIFFERENTLY? Why should you make a principle out of what you yourselves | |
| are, and must be? In reality, however, it is quite otherwise with you: | |
| while you pretend to read with rapture the canon of your law in Nature, | |
| you want something quite the contrary, you extraordinary stage-players | |
| and self-deluders! In your pride you wish to dictate your morals and | |
| ideals to Nature, to Nature herself, and to incorporate them therein; | |
| you insist that it shall be Nature "according to the Stoa," and would | |
| like everything to be made after your own image, as a vast, eternal | |
| glorification and generalism of Stoicism! With all your love for truth, | |
| you have forced yourselves so long, so persistently, and with such | |
| hypnotic rigidity to see Nature FALSELY, that is to say, Stoically, | |
| that you are no longer able to see it otherwise--and to crown all, some | |
| unfathomable superciliousness gives you the Bedlamite hope that | |
| BECAUSE you are able to tyrannize over yourselves--Stoicism is | |
| self-tyranny--Nature will also allow herself to be tyrannized over: is | |
| not the Stoic a PART of Nature?... But this is an old and everlasting | |
| story: what happened in old times with the Stoics still happens today, | |
| as soon as ever a philosophy begins to believe in itself. It always | |
| creates the world in its own image; it cannot do otherwise; philosophy | |
| is this tyrannical impulse itself, the most spiritual Will to Power, the | |
| will to "creation of the world," the will to the causa prima. | |
| 10. The eagerness and subtlety, I should even say craftiness, with | |
| which the problem of "the real and the apparent world" is dealt with at | |
| present throughout Europe, furnishes food for thought and attention; and | |
| he who hears only a "Will to Truth" in the background, and nothing else, | |
| cannot certainly boast of the sharpest ears. In rare and isolated | |
| cases, it may really have happened that such a Will to Truth--a certain | |
| extravagant and adventurous pluck, a metaphysician's ambition of the | |
| forlorn hope--has participated therein: that which in the end always | |
| prefers a handful of "certainty" to a whole cartload of beautiful | |
| possibilities; there may even be puritanical fanatics of conscience, | |
| who prefer to put their last trust in a sure nothing, rather than in an | |
| uncertain something. But that is Nihilism, and the sign of a despairing, | |
| mortally wearied soul, notwithstanding the courageous bearing such a | |
| virtue may display. It seems, however, to be otherwise with stronger | |
| and livelier thinkers who are still eager for life. In that they side | |
| AGAINST appearance, and speak superciliously of "perspective," in | |
| that they rank the credibility of their own bodies about as low as the | |
| credibility of the ocular evidence that "the earth stands still," and | |
| thus, apparently, allowing with complacency their securest possession | |
| to escape (for what does one at present believe in more firmly than | |
| in one's body?),--who knows if they are not really trying to win back | |
| something which was formerly an even securer possession, something | |
| of the old domain of the faith of former times, perhaps the "immortal | |
| soul," perhaps "the old God," in short, ideas by which they could live | |
| better, that is to say, more vigorously and more joyously, than by | |
| "modern ideas"? There is DISTRUST of these modern ideas in this mode | |
| of looking at things, a disbelief in all that has been constructed | |
| yesterday and today; there is perhaps some slight admixture of satiety | |
| and scorn, which can no longer endure the BRIC-A-BRAC of ideas of the | |
| most varied origin, such as so-called Positivism at present throws on | |
| the market; a disgust of the more refined taste at the village-fair | |
| motleyness and patchiness of all these reality-philosophasters, in whom | |
| there is nothing either new or true, except this motleyness. Therein it | |
| seems to me that we should agree with those skeptical anti-realists and | |
| knowledge-microscopists of the present day; their instinct, which repels | |
| them from MODERN reality, is unrefuted... what do their retrograde | |
| by-paths concern us! The main thing about them is NOT that they wish | |
| to go "back," but that they wish to get AWAY therefrom. A little MORE | |
| strength, swing, courage, and artistic power, and they would be OFF--and | |
| not back! | |
| 11. It seems to me that there is everywhere an attempt at present to | |
| divert attention from the actual influence which Kant exercised on | |
| German philosophy, and especially to ignore prudently the value which | |
| he set upon himself. Kant was first and foremost proud of his Table of | |
| Categories; with it in his hand he said: "This is the most difficult | |
| thing that could ever be undertaken on behalf of metaphysics." Let us | |
| only understand this "could be"! He was proud of having DISCOVERED a | |
| new faculty in man, the faculty of synthetic judgment a priori. Granting | |
| that he deceived himself in this matter; the development and rapid | |
| flourishing of German philosophy depended nevertheless on his pride, and | |
| on the eager rivalry of the younger generation to discover if possible | |
| something--at all events "new faculties"--of which to be still | |
| prouder!--But let us reflect for a moment--it is high time to do so. | |
| "How are synthetic judgments a priori POSSIBLE?" Kant asks himself--and | |
| what is really his answer? "BY MEANS OF A MEANS (faculty)"--but | |
| unfortunately not in five words, but so circumstantially, imposingly, | |
| and with such display of German profundity and verbal flourishes, that | |
| one altogether loses sight of the comical niaiserie allemande involved | |
| in such an answer. People were beside themselves with delight over this | |
| new faculty, and the jubilation reached its climax when Kant further | |
| discovered a moral faculty in man--for at that time Germans were still | |
| moral, not yet dabbling in the "Politics of hard fact." Then came | |
| the honeymoon of German philosophy. All the young theologians of the | |
| Tubingen institution went immediately into the groves--all seeking for | |
| "faculties." And what did they not find--in that innocent, rich, and | |
| still youthful period of the German spirit, to which Romanticism, the | |
| malicious fairy, piped and sang, when one could not yet distinguish | |
| between "finding" and "inventing"! Above all a faculty for the | |
| "transcendental"; Schelling christened it, intellectual intuition, | |
| and thereby gratified the most earnest longings of the naturally | |
| pious-inclined Germans. One can do no greater wrong to the whole of | |
| this exuberant and eccentric movement (which was really youthfulness, | |
| notwithstanding that it disguised itself so boldly, in hoary and senile | |
| conceptions), than to take it seriously, or even treat it with moral | |
| indignation. Enough, however--the world grew older, and the dream | |
| vanished. A time came when people rubbed their foreheads, and they still | |
| rub them today. People had been dreaming, and first and foremost--old | |
| Kant. "By means of a means (faculty)"--he had said, or at least meant to | |
| say. But, is that--an answer? An explanation? Or is it not rather merely | |
| a repetition of the question? How does opium induce sleep? "By means of | |
| a means (faculty)," namely the virtus dormitiva, replies the doctor in | |
| Moliere, | |
| Quia est in eo virtus dormitiva, | |
| Cujus est natura sensus assoupire. | |
| But such replies belong to the realm of comedy, and it is high time | |
| to replace the Kantian question, "How are synthetic judgments a PRIORI | |
| possible?" by another question, "Why is belief in such judgments | |
| necessary?"--in effect, it is high time that we should understand | |
| that such judgments must be believed to be true, for the sake of the | |
| preservation of creatures like ourselves; though they still might | |
| naturally be false judgments! Or, more plainly spoken, and roughly and | |
| readily--synthetic judgments a priori should not "be possible" at all; | |
| we have no right to them; in our mouths they are nothing but false | |
| judgments. Only, of course, the belief in their truth is necessary, as | |
| plausible belief and ocular evidence belonging to the perspective view | |
| of life. And finally, to call to mind the enormous influence which | |
| "German philosophy"--I hope you understand its right to inverted commas | |
| (goosefeet)?--has exercised throughout the whole of Europe, there is | |
| no doubt that a certain VIRTUS DORMITIVA had a share in it; thanks to | |
| German philosophy, it was a delight to the noble idlers, the virtuous, | |
| the mystics, the artiste, the three-fourths Christians, and the | |
| political obscurantists of all nations, to find an antidote to the still | |
| overwhelming sensualism which overflowed from the last century into | |
| this, in short--"sensus assoupire."... | |
| 12. As regards materialistic atomism, it is one of the best-refuted | |
| theories that have been advanced, and in Europe there is now perhaps | |
| no one in the learned world so unscholarly as to attach serious | |
| signification to it, except for convenient everyday use (as an | |
| abbreviation of the means of expression)--thanks chiefly to the Pole | |
| Boscovich: he and the Pole Copernicus have hitherto been the greatest | |
| and most successful opponents of ocular evidence. For while Copernicus | |
| has persuaded us to believe, contrary to all the senses, that the earth | |
| does NOT stand fast, Boscovich has taught us to abjure the belief in the | |
| last thing that "stood fast" of the earth--the belief in "substance," in | |
| "matter," in the earth-residuum, and particle-atom: it is the greatest | |
| triumph over the senses that has hitherto been gained on earth. One | |
| must, however, go still further, and also declare war, relentless war | |
| to the knife, against the "atomistic requirements" which still lead a | |
| dangerous after-life in places where no one suspects them, like the more | |
| celebrated "metaphysical requirements": one must also above all give | |
| the finishing stroke to that other and more portentous atomism which | |
| Christianity has taught best and longest, the SOUL-ATOMISM. Let it be | |
| permitted to designate by this expression the belief which regards the | |
| soul as something indestructible, eternal, indivisible, as a monad, | |
| as an atomon: this belief ought to be expelled from science! Between | |
| ourselves, it is not at all necessary to get rid of "the soul" thereby, | |
| and thus renounce one of the oldest and most venerated hypotheses--as | |
| happens frequently to the clumsiness of naturalists, who can hardly | |
| touch on the soul without immediately losing it. But the way is open | |
| for new acceptations and refinements of the soul-hypothesis; and such | |
| conceptions as "mortal soul," and "soul of subjective multiplicity," | |
| and "soul as social structure of the instincts and passions," want | |
| henceforth to have legitimate rights in science. In that the NEW | |
| psychologist is about to put an end to the superstitions which have | |
| hitherto flourished with almost tropical luxuriance around the idea of | |
| the soul, he is really, as it were, thrusting himself into a new desert | |
| and a new distrust--it is possible that the older psychologists had a | |
| merrier and more comfortable time of it; eventually, however, he finds | |
| that precisely thereby he is also condemned to INVENT--and, who knows? | |
| perhaps to DISCOVER the new. | |
| 13. Psychologists should bethink themselves before putting down the | |
| instinct of self-preservation as the cardinal instinct of an organic | |
| being. A living thing seeks above all to DISCHARGE its strength--life | |
| itself is WILL TO POWER; self-preservation is only one of the indirect | |
| and most frequent RESULTS thereof. In short, here, as everywhere else, | |
| let us beware of SUPERFLUOUS teleological principles!--one of which | |
| is the instinct of self-preservation (we owe it to Spinoza's | |
| inconsistency). It is thus, in effect, that method ordains, which must | |
| be essentially economy of principles. | |
| 14. It is perhaps just dawning on five or six minds that natural | |
| philosophy is only a world-exposition and world-arrangement (according | |
| to us, if I may say so!) and NOT a world-explanation; but in so far as | |
| it is based on belief in the senses, it is regarded as more, and for a | |
| long time to come must be regarded as more--namely, as an explanation. | |
| It has eyes and fingers of its own, it has ocular evidence and | |
| palpableness of its own: this operates fascinatingly, persuasively, and | |
| CONVINCINGLY upon an age with fundamentally plebeian tastes--in fact, it | |
| follows instinctively the canon of truth of eternal popular sensualism. | |
| What is clear, what is "explained"? Only that which can be seen and | |
| felt--one must pursue every problem thus far. Obversely, however, the | |
| charm of the Platonic mode of thought, which was an ARISTOCRATIC mode, | |
| consisted precisely in RESISTANCE to obvious sense-evidence--perhaps | |
| among men who enjoyed even stronger and more fastidious senses than our | |
| contemporaries, but who knew how to find a higher triumph in remaining | |
| masters of them: and this by means of pale, cold, grey conceptional | |
| networks which they threw over the motley whirl of the senses--the | |
| mob of the senses, as Plato said. In this overcoming of the world, and | |
| interpreting of the world in the manner of Plato, there was an ENJOYMENT | |
| different from that which the physicists of today offer us--and likewise | |
| the Darwinists and anti-teleologists among the physiological workers, | |
| with their principle of the "smallest possible effort," and the greatest | |
| possible blunder. "Where there is nothing more to see or to grasp, there | |
| is also nothing more for men to do"--that is certainly an imperative | |
| different from the Platonic one, but it may notwithstanding be the right | |
| imperative for a hardy, laborious race of machinists and bridge-builders | |
| of the future, who have nothing but ROUGH work to perform. | |
| 15. To study physiology with a clear conscience, one must insist on | |
| the fact that the sense-organs are not phenomena in the sense of the | |
| idealistic philosophy; as such they certainly could not be causes! | |
| Sensualism, therefore, at least as regulative hypothesis, if not as | |
| heuristic principle. What? And others say even that the external world | |
| is the work of our organs? But then our body, as a part of this external | |
| world, would be the work of our organs! But then our organs themselves | |
| would be the work of our organs! It seems to me that this is a | |
| complete REDUCTIO AD ABSURDUM, if the conception CAUSA SUI is something | |
| fundamentally absurd. Consequently, the external world is NOT the work | |
| of our organs--? | |
| 16. There are still harmless self-observers who believe that there are | |
| "immediate certainties"; for instance, "I think," or as the superstition | |
| of Schopenhauer puts it, "I will"; as though cognition here got hold | |
| of its object purely and simply as "the thing in itself," without any | |
| falsification taking place either on the part of the subject or the | |
| object. I would repeat it, however, a hundred times, that "immediate | |
| certainty," as well as "absolute knowledge" and the "thing in itself," | |
| involve a CONTRADICTIO IN ADJECTO; we really ought to free ourselves | |
| from the misleading significance of words! The people on their part may | |
| think that cognition is knowing all about things, but the philosopher | |
| must say to himself: "When I analyze the process that is expressed in | |
| the sentence, 'I think,' I find a whole series of daring assertions, the | |
| argumentative proof of which would be difficult, perhaps impossible: | |
| for instance, that it is _I_ who think, that there must necessarily be | |
| something that thinks, that thinking is an activity and operation on the | |
| part of a being who is thought of as a cause, that there is an 'ego,' | |
| and finally, that it is already determined what is to be designated by | |
| thinking--that I KNOW what thinking is. For if I had not already decided | |
| within myself what it is, by what standard could I determine whether | |
| that which is just happening is not perhaps 'willing' or 'feeling'? In | |
| short, the assertion 'I think,' assumes that I COMPARE my state at the | |
| present moment with other states of myself which I know, in order to | |
| determine what it is; on account of this retrospective connection with | |
| further 'knowledge,' it has, at any rate, no immediate certainty for | |
| me."--In place of the "immediate certainty" in which the people may | |
| believe in the special case, the philosopher thus finds a series of | |
| metaphysical questions presented to him, veritable conscience questions | |
| of the intellect, to wit: "Whence did I get the notion of 'thinking'? | |
| Why do I believe in cause and effect? What gives me the right to speak | |
| of an 'ego,' and even of an 'ego' as cause, and finally of an 'ego' | |
| as cause of thought?" He who ventures to answer these metaphysical | |
| questions at once by an appeal to a sort of INTUITIVE perception, like | |
| the person who says, "I think, and know that this, at least, is | |
| true, actual, and certain"--will encounter a smile and two notes of | |
| interrogation in a philosopher nowadays. "Sir," the philosopher will | |
| perhaps give him to understand, "it is improbable that you are not | |
| mistaken, but why should it be the truth?" | |
| 17. With regard to the superstitions of logicians, I shall never tire | |
| of emphasizing a small, terse fact, which is unwillingly recognized by | |
| these credulous minds--namely, that a thought comes when "it" wishes, | |
| and not when "I" wish; so that it is a PERVERSION of the facts of the | |
| case to say that the subject "I" is the condition of the predicate | |
| "think." ONE thinks; but that this "one" is precisely the famous old | |
| "ego," is, to put it mildly, only a supposition, an assertion, and | |
| assuredly not an "immediate certainty." After all, one has even gone too | |
| far with this "one thinks"--even the "one" contains an INTERPRETATION of | |
| the process, and does not belong to the process itself. One infers here | |
| according to the usual grammatical formula--"To think is an activity; | |
| every activity requires an agency that is active; consequently"... It | |
| was pretty much on the same lines that the older atomism sought, besides | |
| the operating "power," the material particle wherein it resides and out | |
| of which it operates--the atom. More rigorous minds, however, learnt at | |
| last to get along without this "earth-residuum," and perhaps some day we | |
| shall accustom ourselves, even from the logician's point of view, to | |
| get along without the little "one" (to which the worthy old "ego" has | |
| refined itself). | |
| 18. It is certainly not the least charm of a theory that it is | |
| refutable; it is precisely thereby that it attracts the more subtle | |
| minds. It seems that the hundred-times-refuted theory of the "free will" | |
| owes its persistence to this charm alone; some one is always appearing | |
| who feels himself strong enough to refute it. | |
| 19. Philosophers are accustomed to speak of the will as though it were | |
| the best-known thing in the world; indeed, Schopenhauer has given us | |
| to understand that the will alone is really known to us, absolutely and | |
| completely known, without deduction or addition. But it again and | |
| again seems to me that in this case Schopenhauer also only did what | |
| philosophers are in the habit of doing--he seems to have adopted a | |
| POPULAR PREJUDICE and exaggerated it. Willing seems to me to be above | |
| all something COMPLICATED, something that is a unity only in name--and | |
| it is precisely in a name that popular prejudice lurks, which has got | |
| the mastery over the inadequate precautions of philosophers in all ages. | |
| So let us for once be more cautious, let us be "unphilosophical": let | |
| us say that in all willing there is firstly a plurality of sensations, | |
| namely, the sensation of the condition "AWAY FROM WHICH we go," the | |
| sensation of the condition "TOWARDS WHICH we go," the sensation of this | |
| "FROM" and "TOWARDS" itself, and then besides, an accompanying muscular | |
| sensation, which, even without our putting in motion "arms and legs," | |
| commences its action by force of habit, directly we "will" anything. | |
| Therefore, just as sensations (and indeed many kinds of sensations) are | |
| to be recognized as ingredients of the will, so, in the second place, | |
| thinking is also to be recognized; in every act of the will there is | |
| a ruling thought;--and let us not imagine it possible to sever this | |
| thought from the "willing," as if the will would then remain over! | |
| In the third place, the will is not only a complex of sensation and | |
| thinking, but it is above all an EMOTION, and in fact the emotion of the | |
| command. That which is termed "freedom of the will" is essentially the | |
| emotion of supremacy in respect to him who must obey: "I am free, 'he' | |
| must obey"--this consciousness is inherent in every will; and equally | |
| so the straining of the attention, the straight look which fixes itself | |
| exclusively on one thing, the unconditional judgment that "this and | |
| nothing else is necessary now," the inward certainty that obedience | |
| will be rendered--and whatever else pertains to the position of the | |
| commander. A man who WILLS commands something within himself which | |
| renders obedience, or which he believes renders obedience. But now let | |
| us notice what is the strangest thing about the will,--this affair so | |
| extremely complex, for which the people have only one name. Inasmuch as | |
| in the given circumstances we are at the same time the commanding AND | |
| the obeying parties, and as the obeying party we know the sensations of | |
| constraint, impulsion, pressure, resistance, and motion, which usually | |
| commence immediately after the act of will; inasmuch as, on the other | |
| hand, we are accustomed to disregard this duality, and to deceive | |
| ourselves about it by means of the synthetic term "I": a whole series | |
| of erroneous conclusions, and consequently of false judgments about the | |
| will itself, has become attached to the act of willing--to such a degree | |
| that he who wills believes firmly that willing SUFFICES for action. | |
| Since in the majority of cases there has only been exercise of will | |
| when the effect of the command--consequently obedience, and therefore | |
| action--was to be EXPECTED, the APPEARANCE has translated itself into | |
| the sentiment, as if there were a NECESSITY OF EFFECT; in a word, he who | |
| wills believes with a fair amount of certainty that will and action are | |
| somehow one; he ascribes the success, the carrying out of the willing, | |
| to the will itself, and thereby enjoys an increase of the sensation | |
| of power which accompanies all success. "Freedom of Will"--that is the | |
| expression for the complex state of delight of the person exercising | |
| volition, who commands and at the same time identifies himself with | |
| the executor of the order--who, as such, enjoys also the triumph over | |
| obstacles, but thinks within himself that it was really his own will | |
| that overcame them. In this way the person exercising volition adds the | |
| feelings of delight of his successful executive instruments, the useful | |
| "underwills" or under-souls--indeed, our body is but a social structure | |
| composed of many souls--to his feelings of delight as commander. L'EFFET | |
| C'EST MOI. what happens here is what happens in every well-constructed | |
| and happy commonwealth, namely, that the governing class identifies | |
| itself with the successes of the commonwealth. In all willing it is | |
| absolutely a question of commanding and obeying, on the basis, as | |
| already said, of a social structure composed of many "souls", on which | |
| account a philosopher should claim the right to include willing-as-such | |
| within the sphere of morals--regarded as the doctrine of the relations | |
| of supremacy under which the phenomenon of "life" manifests itself. | |
| 20. That the separate philosophical ideas are not anything optional or | |
| autonomously evolving, but grow up in connection and relationship with | |
| each other, that, however suddenly and arbitrarily they seem to appear | |
| in the history of thought, they nevertheless belong just as much to | |
| a system as the collective members of the fauna of a Continent--is | |
| betrayed in the end by the circumstance: how unfailingly the most | |
| diverse philosophers always fill in again a definite fundamental scheme | |
| of POSSIBLE philosophies. Under an invisible spell, they always revolve | |
| once more in the same orbit, however independent of each other they | |
| may feel themselves with their critical or systematic wills, something | |
| within them leads them, something impels them in definite order the | |
| one after the other--to wit, the innate methodology and relationship | |
| of their ideas. Their thinking is, in fact, far less a discovery than a | |
| re-recognizing, a remembering, a return and a home-coming to a far-off, | |
| ancient common-household of the soul, out of which those ideas formerly | |
| grew: philosophizing is so far a kind of atavism of the highest order. | |
| The wonderful family resemblance of all Indian, Greek, and German | |
| philosophizing is easily enough explained. In fact, where there is | |
| affinity of language, owing to the common philosophy of grammar--I mean | |
| owing to the unconscious domination and guidance of similar grammatical | |
| functions--it cannot but be that everything is prepared at the outset | |
| for a similar development and succession of philosophical systems, | |
| just as the way seems barred against certain other possibilities of | |
| world-interpretation. It is highly probable that philosophers within the | |
| domain of the Ural-Altaic languages (where the conception of the subject | |
| is least developed) look otherwise "into the world," and will be | |
| found on paths of thought different from those of the Indo-Germans and | |
| Mussulmans, the spell of certain grammatical functions is ultimately | |
| also the spell of PHYSIOLOGICAL valuations and racial conditions.--So | |
| much by way of rejecting Locke's superficiality with regard to the | |
| origin of ideas. | |
| 21. The CAUSA SUI is the best self-contradiction that has yet been | |
| conceived, it is a sort of logical violation and unnaturalness; but the | |
| extravagant pride of man has managed to entangle itself profoundly and | |
| frightfully with this very folly. The desire for "freedom of will" | |
| in the superlative, metaphysical sense, such as still holds sway, | |
| unfortunately, in the minds of the half-educated, the desire to bear | |
| the entire and ultimate responsibility for one's actions oneself, and | |
| to absolve God, the world, ancestors, chance, and society therefrom, | |
| involves nothing less than to be precisely this CAUSA SUI, and, with | |
| more than Munchausen daring, to pull oneself up into existence by the | |
| hair, out of the slough of nothingness. If any one should find out in | |
| this manner the crass stupidity of the celebrated conception of "free | |
| will" and put it out of his head altogether, I beg of him to carry | |
| his "enlightenment" a step further, and also put out of his head the | |
| contrary of this monstrous conception of "free will": I mean "non-free | |
| will," which is tantamount to a misuse of cause and effect. One | |
| should not wrongly MATERIALISE "cause" and "effect," as the natural | |
| philosophers do (and whoever like them naturalize in thinking at | |
| present), according to the prevailing mechanical doltishness which makes | |
| the cause press and push until it "effects" its end; one should use | |
| "cause" and "effect" only as pure CONCEPTIONS, that is to say, as | |
| conventional fictions for the purpose of designation and mutual | |
| understanding,--NOT for explanation. In "being-in-itself" there is | |
| nothing of "casual-connection," of "necessity," or of "psychological | |
| non-freedom"; there the effect does NOT follow the cause, there "law" | |
| does not obtain. It is WE alone who have devised cause, sequence, | |
| reciprocity, relativity, constraint, number, law, freedom, motive, | |
| and purpose; and when we interpret and intermix this symbol-world, | |
| as "being-in-itself," with things, we act once more as we have always | |
| acted--MYTHOLOGICALLY. The "non-free will" is mythology; in real life | |
| it is only a question of STRONG and WEAK wills.--It is almost always | |
| a symptom of what is lacking in himself, when a thinker, in every | |
| "causal-connection" and "psychological necessity," manifests something | |
| of compulsion, indigence, obsequiousness, oppression, and non-freedom; | |
| it is suspicious to have such feelings--the person betrays himself. And | |
| in general, if I have observed correctly, the "non-freedom of the will" | |
| is regarded as a problem from two entirely opposite standpoints, but | |
| always in a profoundly PERSONAL manner: some will not give up their | |
| "responsibility," their belief in THEMSELVES, the personal right to | |
| THEIR merits, at any price (the vain races belong to this class); others | |
| on the contrary, do not wish to be answerable for anything, or blamed | |
| for anything, and owing to an inward self-contempt, seek to GET OUT OF | |
| THE BUSINESS, no matter how. The latter, when they write books, are | |
| in the habit at present of taking the side of criminals; a sort of | |
| socialistic sympathy is their favourite disguise. And as a matter of | |
| fact, the fatalism of the weak-willed embellishes itself surprisingly | |
| when it can pose as "la religion de la souffrance humaine"; that is ITS | |
| "good taste." | |
| 22. Let me be pardoned, as an old philologist who cannot desist from | |
| the mischief of putting his finger on bad modes of interpretation, but | |
| "Nature's conformity to law," of which you physicists talk so proudly, | |
| as though--why, it exists only owing to your interpretation and bad | |
| "philology." It is no matter of fact, no "text," but rather just a | |
| naively humanitarian adjustment and perversion of meaning, with which | |
| you make abundant concessions to the democratic instincts of the modern | |
| soul! "Everywhere equality before the law--Nature is not different in | |
| that respect, nor better than we": a fine instance of secret motive, | |
| in which the vulgar antagonism to everything privileged and | |
| autocratic--likewise a second and more refined atheism--is once more | |
| disguised. "Ni dieu, ni maitre"--that, also, is what you want; and | |
| therefore "Cheers for natural law!"--is it not so? But, as has been | |
| said, that is interpretation, not text; and somebody might come along, | |
| who, with opposite intentions and modes of interpretation, could read | |
| out of the same "Nature," and with regard to the same phenomena, just | |
| the tyrannically inconsiderate and relentless enforcement of the claims | |
| of power--an interpreter who should so place the unexceptionalness and | |
| unconditionalness of all "Will to Power" before your eyes, that almost | |
| every word, and the word "tyranny" itself, would eventually seem | |
| unsuitable, or like a weakening and softening metaphor--as being too | |
| human; and who should, nevertheless, end by asserting the same about | |
| this world as you do, namely, that it has a "necessary" and "calculable" | |
| course, NOT, however, because laws obtain in it, but because they are | |
| absolutely LACKING, and every power effects its ultimate consequences | |
| every moment. Granted that this also is only interpretation--and you | |
| will be eager enough to make this objection?--well, so much the better. | |
| 23. All psychology hitherto has run aground on moral prejudices and | |
| timidities, it has not dared to launch out into the depths. In so far | |
| as it is allowable to recognize in that which has hitherto been written, | |
| evidence of that which has hitherto been kept silent, it seems as if | |
| nobody had yet harboured the notion of psychology as the Morphology | |
| and DEVELOPMENT-DOCTRINE OF THE WILL TO POWER, as I conceive of it. | |
| The power of moral prejudices has penetrated deeply into the most | |
| intellectual world, the world apparently most indifferent and | |
| unprejudiced, and has obviously operated in an injurious, obstructive, | |
| blinding, and distorting manner. A proper physio-psychology has to | |
| contend with unconscious antagonism in the heart of the investigator, | |
| it has "the heart" against it even a doctrine of the reciprocal | |
| conditionalness of the "good" and the "bad" impulses, causes (as | |
| refined immorality) distress and aversion in a still strong and manly | |
| conscience--still more so, a doctrine of the derivation of all good | |
| impulses from bad ones. If, however, a person should regard even | |
| the emotions of hatred, envy, covetousness, and imperiousness | |
| as life-conditioning emotions, as factors which must be present, | |
| fundamentally and essentially, in the general economy of life (which | |
| must, therefore, be further developed if life is to be further | |
| developed), he will suffer from such a view of things as from | |
| sea-sickness. And yet this hypothesis is far from being the strangest | |
| and most painful in this immense and almost new domain of dangerous | |
| knowledge, and there are in fact a hundred good reasons why every one | |
| should keep away from it who CAN do so! On the other hand, if one has | |
| once drifted hither with one's bark, well! very good! now let us set our | |
| teeth firmly! let us open our eyes and keep our hand fast on the helm! | |
| We sail away right OVER morality, we crush out, we destroy perhaps the | |
| remains of our own morality by daring to make our voyage thither--but | |
| what do WE matter. Never yet did a PROFOUNDER world of insight reveal | |
| itself to daring travelers and adventurers, and the psychologist who | |
| thus "makes a sacrifice"--it is not the sacrifizio dell' intelletto, | |
| on the contrary!--will at least be entitled to demand in return that | |
| psychology shall once more be recognized as the queen of the sciences, | |
| for whose service and equipment the other sciences exist. For psychology | |
| is once more the path to the fundamental problems. | |
| CHAPTER II. THE FREE SPIRIT | |
| 24. O sancta simplicitas! In what strange simplification and | |
| falsification man lives! One can never cease wondering when once one has | |
| got eyes for beholding this marvel! How we have made everything around | |
| us clear and free and easy and simple! how we have been able to give | |
| our senses a passport to everything superficial, our thoughts a godlike | |
| desire for wanton pranks and wrong inferences!--how from the beginning, | |
| we have contrived to retain our ignorance in order to enjoy an almost | |
| inconceivable freedom, thoughtlessness, imprudence, heartiness, | |
| and gaiety--in order to enjoy life! And only on this solidified, | |
| granite-like foundation of ignorance could knowledge rear itself | |
| hitherto, the will to knowledge on the foundation of a far more powerful | |
| will, the will to ignorance, to the uncertain, to the untrue! Not as | |
| its opposite, but--as its refinement! It is to be hoped, indeed, that | |
| LANGUAGE, here as elsewhere, will not get over its awkwardness, and that | |
| it will continue to talk of opposites where there are only degrees | |
| and many refinements of gradation; it is equally to be hoped that the | |
| incarnated Tartuffery of morals, which now belongs to our unconquerable | |
| "flesh and blood," will turn the words round in the mouths of us | |
| discerning ones. Here and there we understand it, and laugh at the way | |
| in which precisely the best knowledge seeks most to retain us in this | |
| SIMPLIFIED, thoroughly artificial, suitably imagined, and suitably | |
| falsified world: at the way in which, whether it will or not, it loves | |
| error, because, as living itself, it loves life! | |
| 25. After such a cheerful commencement, a serious word would fain be | |
| heard; it appeals to the most serious minds. Take care, ye philosophers | |
| and friends of knowledge, and beware of martyrdom! Of suffering "for the | |
| truth's sake"! even in your own defense! It spoils all the innocence | |
| and fine neutrality of your conscience; it makes you headstrong against | |
| objections and red rags; it stupefies, animalizes, and brutalizes, when | |
| in the struggle with danger, slander, suspicion, expulsion, and even | |
| worse consequences of enmity, ye have at last to play your last card | |
| as protectors of truth upon earth--as though "the Truth" were such an | |
| innocent and incompetent creature as to require protectors! and you of | |
| all people, ye knights of the sorrowful countenance, Messrs Loafers and | |
| Cobweb-spinners of the spirit! Finally, ye know sufficiently well that | |
| it cannot be of any consequence if YE just carry your point; ye know | |
| that hitherto no philosopher has carried his point, and that there might | |
| be a more laudable truthfulness in every little interrogative mark | |
| which you place after your special words and favourite doctrines (and | |
| occasionally after yourselves) than in all the solemn pantomime and | |
| trumping games before accusers and law-courts! Rather go out of the way! | |
| Flee into concealment! And have your masks and your ruses, that ye may | |
| be mistaken for what you are, or somewhat feared! And pray, don't forget | |
| the garden, the garden with golden trellis-work! And have people around | |
| you who are as a garden--or as music on the waters at eventide, when | |
| already the day becomes a memory. Choose the GOOD solitude, the free, | |
| wanton, lightsome solitude, which also gives you the right still to | |
| remain good in any sense whatsoever! How poisonous, how crafty, how bad, | |
| does every long war make one, which cannot be waged openly by means | |
| of force! How PERSONAL does a long fear make one, a long watching | |
| of enemies, of possible enemies! These pariahs of society, these | |
| long-pursued, badly-persecuted ones--also the compulsory recluses, the | |
| Spinozas or Giordano Brunos--always become in the end, even under the | |
| most intellectual masquerade, and perhaps without being themselves aware | |
| of it, refined vengeance-seekers and poison-Brewers (just lay bare | |
| the foundation of Spinoza's ethics and theology!), not to speak of | |
| the stupidity of moral indignation, which is the unfailing sign in a | |
| philosopher that the sense of philosophical humour has left him. The | |
| martyrdom of the philosopher, his "sacrifice for the sake of truth," | |
| forces into the light whatever of the agitator and actor lurks in him; | |
| and if one has hitherto contemplated him only with artistic curiosity, | |
| with regard to many a philosopher it is easy to understand the dangerous | |
| desire to see him also in his deterioration (deteriorated into a | |
| "martyr," into a stage-and-tribune-bawler). Only, that it is necessary | |
| with such a desire to be clear WHAT spectacle one will see in any | |
| case--merely a satyric play, merely an epilogue farce, merely the | |
| continued proof that the long, real tragedy IS AT AN END, supposing that | |
| every philosophy has been a long tragedy in its origin. | |
| 26. Every select man strives instinctively for a citadel and a privacy, | |
| where he is FREE from the crowd, the many, the majority--where he may | |
| forget "men who are the rule," as their exception;--exclusive only of | |
| the case in which he is pushed straight to such men by a still stronger | |
| instinct, as a discerner in the great and exceptional sense. Whoever, in | |
| intercourse with men, does not occasionally glisten in all the green | |
| and grey colours of distress, owing to disgust, satiety, sympathy, | |
| gloominess, and solitariness, is assuredly not a man of elevated tastes; | |
| supposing, however, that he does not voluntarily take all this burden | |
| and disgust upon himself, that he persistently avoids it, and remains, | |
| as I said, quietly and proudly hidden in his citadel, one thing is then | |
| certain: he was not made, he was not predestined for knowledge. For as | |
| such, he would one day have to say to himself: "The devil take my good | |
| taste! but 'the rule' is more interesting than the exception--than | |
| myself, the exception!" And he would go DOWN, and above all, he would | |
| go "inside." The long and serious study of the AVERAGE man--and | |
| consequently much disguise, self-overcoming, familiarity, and bad | |
| intercourse (all intercourse is bad intercourse except with one's | |
| equals):--that constitutes a necessary part of the life-history of every | |
| philosopher; perhaps the most disagreeable, odious, and disappointing | |
| part. If he is fortunate, however, as a favourite child of knowledge | |
| should be, he will meet with suitable auxiliaries who will shorten and | |
| lighten his task; I mean so-called cynics, those who simply recognize | |
| the animal, the commonplace and "the rule" in themselves, and at the | |
| same time have so much spirituality and ticklishness as to make them | |
| talk of themselves and their like BEFORE WITNESSES--sometimes they | |
| wallow, even in books, as on their own dung-hill. Cynicism is the only | |
| form in which base souls approach what is called honesty; and the | |
| higher man must open his ears to all the coarser or finer cynicism, and | |
| congratulate himself when the clown becomes shameless right before | |
| him, or the scientific satyr speaks out. There are even cases where | |
| enchantment mixes with the disgust--namely, where by a freak of nature, | |
| genius is bound to some such indiscreet billy-goat and ape, as in the | |
| case of the Abbe Galiani, the profoundest, acutest, and perhaps also | |
| filthiest man of his century--he was far profounder than Voltaire, and | |
| consequently also, a good deal more silent. It happens more frequently, | |
| as has been hinted, that a scientific head is placed on an ape's body, a | |
| fine exceptional understanding in a base soul, an occurrence by no means | |
| rare, especially among doctors and moral physiologists. And whenever | |
| anyone speaks without bitterness, or rather quite innocently, of man | |
| as a belly with two requirements, and a head with one; whenever any one | |
| sees, seeks, and WANTS to see only hunger, sexual instinct, and vanity | |
| as the real and only motives of human actions; in short, when any one | |
| speaks "badly"--and not even "ill"--of man, then ought the lover of | |
| knowledge to hearken attentively and diligently; he ought, in general, | |
| to have an open ear wherever there is talk without indignation. For the | |
| indignant man, and he who perpetually tears and lacerates himself with | |
| his own teeth (or, in place of himself, the world, God, or society), | |
| may indeed, morally speaking, stand higher than the laughing and | |
| self-satisfied satyr, but in every other sense he is the more ordinary, | |
| more indifferent, and less instructive case. And no one is such a LIAR | |
| as the indignant man. | |
| 27. It is difficult to be understood, especially when one thinks and | |
| lives gangasrotogati [Footnote: Like the river Ganges: presto.] among | |
| those only who think and live otherwise--namely, kurmagati [Footnote: | |
| Like the tortoise: lento.], or at best "froglike," mandeikagati | |
| [Footnote: Like the frog: staccato.] (I do everything to be "difficultly | |
| understood" myself!)--and one should be heartily grateful for the | |
| good will to some refinement of interpretation. As regards "the good | |
| friends," however, who are always too easy-going, and think that as | |
| friends they have a right to ease, one does well at the very first to | |
| grant them a play-ground and romping-place for misunderstanding--one can | |
| thus laugh still; or get rid of them altogether, these good friends--and | |
| laugh then also! | |
| 28. What is most difficult to render from one language into another | |
| is the TEMPO of its style, which has its basis in the character of the | |
| race, or to speak more physiologically, in the average TEMPO of the | |
| assimilation of its nutriment. There are honestly meant translations, | |
| which, as involuntary vulgarizations, are almost falsifications of the | |
| original, merely because its lively and merry TEMPO (which overleaps and | |
| obviates all dangers in word and expression) could not also be | |
| rendered. A German is almost incapacitated for PRESTO in his language; | |
| consequently also, as may be reasonably inferred, for many of the most | |
| delightful and daring NUANCES of free, free-spirited thought. And just | |
| as the buffoon and satyr are foreign to him in body and conscience, | |
| so Aristophanes and Petronius are untranslatable for him. Everything | |
| ponderous, viscous, and pompously clumsy, all long-winded and wearying | |
| species of style, are developed in profuse variety among Germans--pardon | |
| me for stating the fact that even Goethe's prose, in its mixture of | |
| stiffness and elegance, is no exception, as a reflection of the "good | |
| old time" to which it belongs, and as an expression of German taste at a | |
| time when there was still a "German taste," which was a rococo-taste | |
| in moribus et artibus. Lessing is an exception, owing to his histrionic | |
| nature, which understood much, and was versed in many things; he who was | |
| not the translator of Bayle to no purpose, who took refuge willingly in | |
| the shadow of Diderot and Voltaire, and still more willingly among the | |
| Roman comedy-writers--Lessing loved also free-spiritism in the TEMPO, | |
| and flight out of Germany. But how could the German language, even | |
| in the prose of Lessing, imitate the TEMPO of Machiavelli, who in his | |
| "Principe" makes us breathe the dry, fine air of Florence, and cannot | |
| help presenting the most serious events in a boisterous allegrissimo, | |
| perhaps not without a malicious artistic sense of the contrast he | |
| ventures to present--long, heavy, difficult, dangerous thoughts, and | |
| a TEMPO of the gallop, and of the best, wantonest humour? Finally, who | |
| would venture on a German translation of Petronius, who, more than any | |
| great musician hitherto, was a master of PRESTO in invention, ideas, and | |
| words? What matter in the end about the swamps of the sick, evil world, | |
| or of the "ancient world," when like him, one has the feet of a wind, | |
| the rush, the breath, the emancipating scorn of a wind, which makes | |
| everything healthy, by making everything RUN! And with regard to | |
| Aristophanes--that transfiguring, complementary genius, for whose | |
| sake one PARDONS all Hellenism for having existed, provided one has | |
| understood in its full profundity ALL that there requires pardon and | |
| transfiguration; there is nothing that has caused me to meditate more on | |
| PLATO'S secrecy and sphinx-like nature, than the happily preserved petit | |
| fait that under the pillow of his death-bed there was found no | |
| "Bible," nor anything Egyptian, Pythagorean, or Platonic--but a book of | |
| Aristophanes. How could even Plato have endured life--a Greek life which | |
| he repudiated--without an Aristophanes! |
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