Is Nietzsche's Superman not a guardian, a guardian of a tradition? Is ego the only thing? Must he not pass it on? Must he not let go?
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Is Nietzsche's Superman not a guardian, a guardian of a tradition? Is ego the only thing? Must he not pass it on? Must he not let go?
I thought that Nietzsche believed that we were all potentially the Übermensch, unfortunately, he forgot to tell us how to achieve it.
What d'you mean "future Superman" - I am the Superman!! :ihih:
N wrote: "Man is the bridge between ape and Superman" (something like that).
Imagine a world full of Supermen. A world full of wannabe Supermen. It's a nightmare vision really. Who would decide who is a Superman. How would these so-called Supermen treat those who don't fit the bill. What about women. Is there a Superwoman.
I haven't bothered including question marks in the above because these questions are not worth answering. Nietzsche was a fascinating character, and the history of his thought processes shine a light on many crucial comprehensions. But in the end he was just another quasi-religious philosopher who fell into the trap of trying to envision the perfect human being. In other words: his own originality became more important to him than truth. You can't dismantle one system of idealism (Christiandom) and then go halfway to replacing it with another idealistic vision, can you?
Having said that, I do think his "the will to power" is a good formula that helps us understand (psychologically) the ins-and-outs of human motivation.
That's because he thought we were still evolving physiologically & psychologically. He thought we could eventually rise above the duality of good & evil, but in a non-transcendent way. Unfortunately, this has been misinterpreted.
If the world was full of supermen, wouldn't everyone be equally super?
Irrelevant in a world where everybody is super.
I believe Übermensch is not gender specific in German. Just as the noun 'man' wasn't in English at one time.
Ah, so that's the reason.
No, you've made the classic (& often it seems) mistake of confusing Nietzsche with Hitler. It's easy to do I suppose, from a distance (of around a thousand kilometres I should imagine) they do sound almost identical.
Have you actually read any Nietzsche?
*Hint; Nietzsche didn't write Mein Kampfe*
He didn't like Christianity, but who does? He was a bit of a dionysiac on the side.
As I see it, Wille zur Macht was not about motivation but Nietzsche's belief that we could one day overcome moral duality. It needed an act of will, but a non-transcendent one. As I said earlier, unfortunately Nietzsche didn't know or explain how we could realistically achieve this.
How pessimism could be mistaken for idealism beats me. Nietzsche was not deluded.
So why did you post?:
"Imagine a world full of Supermen. A world full of wannabe Supermen. It's a nightmare vision really. Who would decide who is a Superman. How would these so-called Supermen treat those who don't fit the bill. What about women. Is there a Superwoman."
This has nothing to do with Nietzsche.
Nietzsche re-inverted the traditional value scheme. Perhaps there are subtleties to his thought that I don't fully grasp, but to me his morality is in essence a Homeric morality. Its an anti-christian morality - against meekness, humility, pity, ect. That does not make it beyond good and evil. It makes it evil, if evil is taken in its traditional Christian context.
He called Caesar the most "beautiful type," and as a classicist he knew who Caesar was. That to me says a lot about where Nietzsche stood. He also loved Machiavelli.
I don't see the superman concept as in any way mysterious or esoteric. Odysseus was a superman. The superman is Homeric, he's pre/post-christian.
Granted there's more to it than that, but at bottom Nietzsche was all about getting beyond Christian morality. You read Genealogy of Morals and its obvious which type Nietzsche sides with - the master.
There's also an aesthetic dimension. The Superman could be called a Homeric artist.
To me its all balderdash now. Lose the essence of "slave morality" and you lose your humanity. Nietzsche's pride was monstrous. And when you dispense almost entirely with tradition, that's all you're really left with - pride.
Nietzsche tended to contradict himself a lot & over time certain concepts eventually emerged that were more constant. It is not so much that he was 'against' meekness & humility but the understanding of who or what invented the slave morality & what its purpose was. He understood that Christianity is the epitome of the slave morality. The real evil, according to Nietszche is the essence of what the aristocratic mentality originally termed 'good' which is used to subdue the will of the ordinary people (the Herd) by their own misunderstanding of what the concepts of good & evil actually entail. He was almost certainly right about this as all organised religions subdue the masses with their own peculiar subjective views of dualistic morality.
Neither did Nietzsche.
No he wasn't, he was just a crafty mortal, if he ever existed.
I am not so sure the superman can be both Homeric & post-Christian.
Of course it is. Christianity is the slave morality in action. Liberation is near.
No, lose the the slave morality & rise above the duality. That is the essence of the superman.
According to him, so was god's. God is dead, long live the superman!
... and the slave morality.
Nietzsche didn't believe reading his philosophy could bring about the coming of the superman. He believed that the superman would come from atavism. The most recent person Nietsche cited as having been a sort of superman was Napoleon Bonaparte, but Nietzsche stipulated that Napoleon was a synthesis of both super-human and inhuman and so he was not a complete superman. The atavism in Napoleon's case was that of the noble classical Roman ideal made flesh. Nietzsche in a truly 19th century eugenical mode of thinking believed the superman will be the result of fortunate breeding.
[QUOTE=Red-Headed;1061229]Nietzsche tended to contradict himself a lot & over time certain concepts eventually emerged that were more constant. It is not so much that he was 'against' meekness & humility but the understanding of who or what invented the slave morality & what its purpose was. He understood that Christianity is the epitome of the slave morality. The real evil, according to Nietszche is the essence of what the aristocratic mentality originally termed 'good' which is used to subdue the will of the ordinary people (the Herd) by their own misunderstanding of what the concepts of good & evil actually entail. He was almost certainly right about this as all organised religions subdue the masses with their own peculiar subjective views of dualistic morality.
You think that the wills of Buddha and Christ and other such figures were subdued? Will is such a silly term in this context. Certain of their appetites were perhaps subdued. And they also drew limits. They had principles. Love, compassion, humility, ect.
And Nietzsche was against meekness and pity and humility. He mocked them, disdained them. The texts clearly show this.
And contrary to what you say here - Nietzsche didn't give a damn about the herd. The evil to him was not that slave morality would subdue the wills of the herd. Rather, he worried that slave morality would tame exceptional people. In some points I think he actually lauds the effects of slave morality, crediting it with making the herd more tolerable.
His worry is especially hilarious when you consider that a large proportion of history's most exceptional persons were those who came closest to embodying slave morality.
Neither did Nietzsche.
No he wasn't, he was just a crafty mortal, if he ever existed.
In the same way that thinkers refer to fictional characters quite often in order to illustrate a point, that's how I was referring to Odysseus.
I am not so sure the superman can be both Homeric & post-Christian.
I was clearly using the phrase "Homeric" in a loosely descriptive sense, not confined to any specific time. An Achilles-like individual could be born tomorrow. Such a man would be both post-christian and Homeric. To me Homeric and Master are inter-changeable, they mean the same thing to me. Perhaps this is a simplification, I don't know.
Of course it is. Christianity is the slave morality in action. Liberation is near.
What does liberation from slave morality look like exactly? I'm curious. Enlighten me. If it goes beyond slave morality, if it goes beyond humility and meekness and pity, then what you have is a grotesque and inhuman specimen, to my mind at least.
No, lose the the slave morality & rise above the duality. That is the essence of the superman.
Ok there Raskolnikov.
According to him, so was god's. God is dead, long live the superman!
God is dead and so the moral burden falls on us alone. It is not lightened, not removed.
There is no such thing. We are not Gods. Sometimes we can be free. Sometimes. If you are free all the time you slip into a state of madness or criminality or sheer idiocy.
We are human beings. Nietzsche forgot this.
Try living free. Shed every skin, dispense with "slave morality," live for aesthetics and power and truth - yes I include truth - and see what you become.
Its like looking at the sun. You cannot stare. I'm sure someone out there must know what I'm talking about.
Rimbaud figured this out.
Don't dodge the point I'm trying to make. Tell me about your idea of freedom. Give me something specific and substantial. You said that liberation from slave morality = freedom. What does that even mean? The freedom to commit murder? The freedom to watch as others commit murder?
If you take Nietzsche's freedom outside the realm of solitude, carry it with you down the mountain-slope, back amongst the people, then you're lost, then you're a madman or a monster or an idiot.
To live is to submit to a rule. What is Nietzsche's rule? The individual. PRIDE.
Nietzsche took the elevated, frenzied state/experience of art and revelation and wanted to make it a permanent way of life. That's the superman. He really wanted to be Dionysius. He wanted to be divine. But we are merely human, all-too human, each and every one of us - however exceptional.
Nietzsche actually existed & was an actual person. Buddha may have been an actual Indian prince, however there is no evidence for Christ, historical or otherwise. The gospel accounts were written hundreds of years later than the alleged 'events' & would only be considered hearsay in a court of law. It seems to me that you are more interested in the imaginary & the mythological than the actual.
That's your interpretation of the 'pity' in Nietzsche, not an original one either. It depends on translation & interpretation. The Nazis had their interpretations as well, like you, they cherry-picked what they wanted to believe. Nietzsche was quite right to mock the 'meekness' & 'humility' of the slave morality though. Meekness & humility are forced on the herd BY the slave morality of organised religion, especially Christianity. Nietzsche had pity for the human condition.
He wasn't wrong though was he? The slave morality of Christianity has tamed exceptional people throughout history. Besides, if he didn't care for the herd, why did he write anything?
Like who?
Apparently not clear enough.
You realise that Achilles was a mythological character right?
Well, if I meet any Achaian mythological characters descended from a union between a nymph & royalty, you'll be the first to know.
No, you have a species that has potential. This idea that Nietzsche was proposing a form of humanity that had no empathy or wished to develop a race of 'masters' to rule as overlords is Nazi ideology, not Nietzsche. He wasn't even anti-Semitic or nationalistic.
Another character from literature. Raskolnikov is a character in a Dostoyevsky novel, no more real than mythological Greeks. Plus, Dostoyevsky deliberately used the character of Raskolnikov in 'Crime & Punishment' as an example of misunderstood (particularly by the Russian zapadnik westernisers) western nihilism. Nietzsche was a real person. You can distinguish between reality & fantasy can't you? One of the definitions of schizophrenia is not being able to distinguish between the real & the imaginary. Nietzsche seemed to believe that was a problem that humanity as a whole was suffering from.
Yes, we can be better than god. Because we can rise above the duality god imposed on us as a species.
[QUOTE=Red-Headed;1061645]Nietzsche actually existed & was an actual person. Buddha may have been an actual Indian prince, however there is no evidence for Christ, historical or otherwise. The gospel accounts were written hundreds of years later than the alleged 'events' & would only be considered hearsay in a court of law. It seems to me that you are more interested in the imaginary & the mythological than the actual."
And Nietzsche was not interested in the mythological? Thinkers don't frequently refer to imaginary characters in order to explore philosophical ideas?
And Jesus did not exist? That's ridiculous. Scholars, non-chrisitian scholars, would disagree with you.
And the imaginary and the mythological are the actual. They are, they exist, therefore they are actual. You seem to give slight value to the fruits of human imagination. Such a view is a little out of place on a literature forum, no?
"That's your interpretation of the 'pity' in Nietzsche, not an original one either. It depends on translation & interpretation. The Nazis had their interpretations as well, like you, they cherry-picked what they wanted to believe. Nietzsche was quite right to mock the 'meekness' & 'humility' of the slave morality though. Meekness & humility are forced on the herd BY the slave morality of organised religion, especially Christianity. Nietzsche had pity for the human condition."
Your interpretation is funny to me. You think the herd should not be meek and humble? You sound like some kind of egalitarian Nietzschean - a contradiction in terms.
Your interpretation of Nietzsche is off. Slave morality did not make the herd the way it is. The herd already existed, a weak, lowly mass. Then some shepherds, some "holy men" came along and organized them. Took the qualities they already possessed and told them that those qualities were not bad but instead good, were virtues as opposed to deficiencies. If you take away slave morality all you do is deprive the herd of its source of pride. Slave morality reflects the state of the herd, not the other way around. According to Nietzsche at least.
Lose the meekness and humility. Then what do you have? Vanity and aggression. An untamed herd running rampant. I doubt Nietzsche would have endorsed that. And he didn't. The herd did not concern him. All he truly cared about were the great men, the artists and men of thought or action who turn the wheel of history.
"He wasn't wrong though was he? The slave morality of Christianity has tamed exceptional people throughout history. Besides, if he didn't care for the herd, why did he write anything?"
He wrote for the exceptions, for the few. He often despised the overwhelming majority of mankind. He considered them small and unclean. Read your Nietzsche. You pose as an expert and yet it seems you barely grasp the man's thought at all. Read what his thoughts were on slavery.
And we have to be tame. Its called civilization. In solitude you can be free. Amongst people - not so much. If we lost "slave morality" the world would tear itself to shreds.
"Like who?"
Martin Luther King. Gandhi. Lao Tse. Buddha. Nelson Mandela. W.H Auden. Socrates. But I suppose such individuals are merely enervated, subdued specimens in your eyes. Weak. Hahaha. I love that.
"Apparently not clear enough."
"You realise that Achilles was a mythological character right?"
Yes I do. Do you deny the relevance and profundity, do you deny the very TRUTH, of literature? Nietzsche learned a lot from books.
"Well, if I meet any Achaian mythological characters descended from a union between a nymph & royalty, you'll be the first to know."
You just lost the right to ever use the adjective "faustian."
"No, you have a species that has potential. This idea that Nietzsche was proposing a form of humanity that had no empathy or wished to develop a race of 'masters' to rule as overlords is Nazi ideology, not Nietzsche. He wasn't even anti-Semitic or nationalistic."
The species as a whole does not have potential, according to Nietzsche. Only a few superior individuals do.
"Another character from literature. Raskolnikov is a character in a Dostoyevsky novel, no more real than mythological Greeks. Plus, Dostoyevsky deliberately used the character of Raskolnikov in 'Crime & Punishment' as an example of misunderstood (particularly by the Russian zapadnik westernisers) western nihilism. Nietzsche was a real person. You can distinguish between reality & fantasy can't you? One of the definitions of schizophrenia is not being able to distinguish between the real & the imaginary. Nietzsche seemed to believe that was a problem that humanity as a whole was suffering from."
Again. You are on a literature forum. You deny that literary characters are real? They are not real in the flesh and blood, occupying physical space, sense of real. But they are real. Indeed, it could be argued that such characters are more real. Art is not real?! Art is the realest of the real.
"Yes, we can be better than god. Because we can rise above the duality god imposed on us as a species."
"Better than God." All right. Good luck with that.
Indeed. He wanted nothing "fake." But only a god could live with nothing "fake." And calling traditional morality "fake" is silly. There's nothing fake about compassion.
We are human, we have limitations. Nietzsche was conscious enough and courageous enough to recognize and then endeavour to overcome those limitations. He tried. He did not succeed. To be alive is to define and limit oneself. Humility is essential.
You still won't explain what freedom means to you.
Living like that destroys the self, even if one is exceptional. One will never be happy this way, because the searching for IT will never end and the beast will never be satiated. Forget Christianity, it's one more box to pigeon hole. Look inward and see that there is hope there and the need to be superman will subside. This kind of soul is uneasy, a fundamental flaw of those that need to seek power, and find greed and corruption instead. Be free, but be at peace with how you choose to live. This is the secret that no one understands. When your soul is at conflict you war with the world and yourself.
I still need to read Nietzsche, so that's all I'm going to say for now.
[QUOTE=Red-Headed;1061861]If that's not an admission of capitulation I don't know what is. Congratulations. You've assured me of what I suspected when I read your first response - I was wasting my time.
You think I'm high or insane because I allude to fictional characters in order to prove a point on a literature forum.
Do you have any idea how immersed Nietzsche was in the world of myth, the world of imagination? Clearly not. I wonder how much Nietzsche you've actually read.
How about actually tackling any one of my several assertions? You won't. You evade. I bring up slave morality and you question the existence of Jesus - beside the point. Same with your criticism of my use of the word homeric - beside the point. Evasion is hardly in the spirit of Nietzsche.
We are all potentially the ubermensch? We can all be equally super?
Read your Nietzsche. Read him the way he deserves to be read - honestly.
I would agree. I doubt Nietzsche would though. Caesar was his "most beautiful type." Caesar, one of the least humane individuals ever spawned.
[QUOTE=Darcy88;1061868]Capitulation? You are just repeating yourself.
Jesus Christ is a fictional character. Prove it otherwise.
He may have often utilised the language of myth but this is irrelevant to his concept of the superman. You are the one who has misunderstood it. You are letting your own belief system dictate your understanding or interpretation of Nietzsche.
Hardly. You are the one who is re-interpreting Nietzsche because of your own belief agenda.
You have either misunderstood what Nietzsche believed the slave morality actually was or are re-interpreting it because of your own religious belief system.
You cannot deny that you are hermeneutically interpreting Nietzsche from a Christian veiwpoint. Jesus Christ is just as mythological as any of the mythology you have quoted earlier.
Your 'interpretation' & mine are going to differ. Why bother beleaguering the point?
Again, Jesus is just as much a myth as the Homeric, you are the one evading the point. I just don't believe that humanity needs the meekness & humility of the slave morality.
Freedom from organised religion is the only hope for humanity. The superman does not have to be an abomination, that is the argument of the priest caste, & as Nietzsche pointed out, the priest caste is the most useless in society. They have no other skill, they are not warriors, artisans or even a labouring class.
The slave morality is their invention. Remove them & you remove it.
The superman is a state of mind. I have read Nietzsche, you are deliberately interpreting Nietzsche in a way that justifies your own religious beliefs.
You are still confusing Nietzsche with the Nazi interpretation of the Third Reich.
You think Nietzsche was egalitarian. Ludicrous. You think he was concerned about the welfare of the herd. Ludicrous again. You keep bringing up Jesus for some reason. Irrelevant.
And now the superman is a state of mind. Before it was a physiological and psychological development, a further evolutionary enhancement.
Jesus represents an actual historical type of man. The ascetic, prophet, holy man. Homer's heroes represent an actual historical culture. But again, this is totally beside the point. You won't argue about Nietzsche because you don't really know much Nietzsche.
"Freedom from organized religion is the only hope for humanity?" Wow, that's a beaut. You gotta explain that one to me. Organized religion is behind humanity's ills? Some of them perhaps. At a time when the churches have been devastated, when godlessness has gone mainstream, you lament our culture's degree of religiosity? But again, this is beside the point.
And Nietzsche was in favour of humility too. Among the small. He called it the pathos of distance. Google it.
Without slave morality you still have slaves. Slaves without dignity. I have to say it again - read your Nietzsche.
And I have no religious beliefs. Maybe I have some quasi-religious convictions, but I'd say that's better than your blind groping after the ideal set by some misanthropic elitist hermit who read the Iliad too many times.
Yes, cutting off the arms of thousands of prisoners of war was done in order to further some humane end down the road. Killing perhaps millions, your own countrymen included, in the name of personal glory and enrichment. Humane indeed.
Nietzsche was a product of his time. You have to read Nietzsche taking that into account. I never stated or believed that Nietzsche himself was an egalitarian. You were the one who brought up Jesus. I think that you need to drink less coffee. Try decaff.
I never believed or stated it to be physiological, neither did Nietzsche. It could very well be evolutionary though. You are the one obsessed with the physiological.
I am not sure you are actually arguing about Nietzsche anyway. You seem to have your own viewpoint & are consistently stating it.
Oh, I'm sorry, I have a different belief to you. What a shame. It's interesting that you assume we come from the same culture. You assume & presume quite a lot.
The phrase was not invented by Nietzsche anyway.
I think that you are misinterpreting a lot of Nietzsche & taking much of what he wrote too literally. You aren't the first to do this.
Again, you are the one who kept bringing up religion & mythology. Odd for someone with no real religious beliefs.
I am not even that much of a fan of Nietzsche, again, you do seem to project a lot of your own presumptions on to others. Something I think you have done with Nietzsche.
Again, Jesus is just as much a myth as the Homeric, you are the one evading the point. I just don't believe that humanity needs the meekness & humility of the slave morality.
Freedom from organised religion is the only hope for humanity. The superman does not have to be an abomination, that is the argument of the priest caste, & as Nietzsche pointed out, the priest caste is the most useless in society. They have no other skill, they are not warriors, artisans or even a labouring class.
The slave morality is their invention. Remove them & you remove it.[/QUOTE]
You talk in terms of "hope for humanity." The word "humanity" is one you use often. Nietzsche was not concerned with humanity. He was concerned with the elite exceptional few. This fact cannot be ignored. Humanity was a means towards achieving the end of a few lucky hits, a few "bulls-eyes."
The acceptance of injustice and inequality, social as well as spiritual/intellectual, is required if one is to accept Nietzsche. There is no world of supermen. There are some superman and a lot, a whole lot of inferior-types, de facto slaves.
Edit*
I just read your last response. Getting tired of me by now lol. I don't blame you.
You did present an egalitarian interpretation of Nietzsche. You said that according to him we could all potentially be superman.
The Nazis distorted Nietzsche in a grotesque, tragic way. Nietzsche and Hitler were antithetical in so many ways. Nietzsche would have despised him to no end. But a philosophy which attacks pity and apotheosizes power - its not hard to see how such views could easily be distorted.
Nietzsche praised Napoleon and Caesar. In certain moods I understand where he's coming from. I'm growing weary of explaining myself. In the end for me it comes down to love > power. Nietzsche would criticize my kind of love. Yes I love the weak, the lowly, the dispossessed - the herd as he called it. I'm on the side of the lambs, he was on the side of the wolves. Call me high or crazy or buzzed or whatever you want, the texts support my interpretation.
A/ You really need to learn to use the quote function properly, or try to use some basic HTML.
B/ I think that this interpretation of Nietzsche was very fashionable once. However, it is not the only one & as he contradicted himself much it is open to others.
C/ I also use the term dingo's kidneys a lot. Is that relevant too?
So you keep stating. Maybe you are reading too much literalness into it.
Again, I think that this is a popular interpretation of Nietzsche. It has served many people & justified their own agendas.
Believe what you will, you have not convinced me to re-interpret what I have read of Nietzsche.
It doesn't matter how much you repeat it.
This is an understatement.
No, you believe that I presented an 'egalitarian' interpretation of Nietzsche. Your interpretation of Nietzsche is not new, I have heard it before. I think that Nietzsche thought that it wasn't beyond humanity to reach the superman. I also believe he didn't really know what he actually meant by the superman. Unlike you of course. You remind me of socialists who consistently refer to Nietzsche as a nihilist. Which is an oversimplification & pedantic.
Learn how to edit.
I'll learn how to edit when you learn how to think critically. Deal?
I am a socialist. Its what prevented me from fully accepting Nietzsche. He was anti-socialist, anti-egalitarian. This is not just another interpretation alongside many arguable ones. You read Nietzsche and you cannot dispute this fact.
He didn't know what he meant by the superman? And neither do you? Then why are we even talking about it?
I belief that your statement that "we can all potentially be superman" reflects a pretty egalitarian interpretation yes. If I'm wrong then show me how I'm wrong. Seems plain to me.
The fact that my interpretation is not new bears no weight on its veracity. Nietzsche was aristocratic, elitist. Injustice and inequality were brute facts of life to him. I am tired of repeating myself. Saying that Nietzsche is open to interpretation is a weak position to take. Yes, there are many interpretations. However, some are supported better than others by the actual texts.
You believe that Nietzsche believed that humanity as a whole could attain to the level of the superman? Is that what you're saying? I don't know what to say to that. Does not sound like Nietzsche. Not at all.
You mentioned 'Genealogy of Morals'. Thinking critically (Nietzsche himself discusses his interest in the origin of morality in its preface) the overall critical assessment is (according to Nietzsche) that human nature is essentially unknown to us. The origins of the concepts of good & evil are essentially suspect & may actually have no intrinsic value in themselves. The un-egoistic instincts (& similar terms which are often translated badly from the German as 'pity') may be a danger to mankind as they may produce nihilism. This, according to Nietzsche, is when certain forms, which can be labelled 'goodness' could actually be a halt to human potentiality. The question of whether moral goodness could be a danger to mankind is a constant theme in this work.
Critically, the work wonders whether we are unknown to ourselves, whether we have ever really searched for ourselves & whether we care to bring back more than a hive mentality to the hive itself.
Critically it also asks:
1/ What is the ultimate origin of good & evil?
2/ Questions the relevance of Kant's Categorical Imperative.
3/ Are the origins of evil supernatural, & if not, what is its origin?
4/ What conditions arose for mankind to create the notions of good & evil?
5/ What intrinsic value do good & evil (or the notions of) have in themselves?
6/ Have these notions hindered or advanced mankind?
7/ What is the ultimate value of morality?
Is that critical enough?
You need not explain any further. This is why you are paradigmatically locked into your materialistic view of reality. It's easy to reduce everything down to a Marxist dialectical materialist perspective. Any Tom, Dick or Harriet can do that.
Why not?
Of course it does, you're a socialist. Socialism has failed humanity. You need someone to be a scapegoat. Nietzsche is the poster boy for socialist whipping boys.
Only weak if you are interpreting it in a one-dimensional materialist socialist way. Open your eyes.
I honestly think he thought it could be possible. You have been prejudiced in your interpretation of Nietzsche by your own socialist bigotry. The great failing of socialist thought is its literalness. This can be observed in the writings of Marx, but to be honest, it is a mindset that is foremost in all socialist thought. You need to escape from the dualistic paradigm of Marxist dialectics.
My belief that Nietzsche did not think the superman attainable by society as a whole is not biased, not connected to any view-point of my own. Throughout all of his books a staunchly aristocratic, elitist sentiment is recurrently expressed. The fact that you seem determined on ignoring this makes me doubt your objectivity in the matter.
Socialism failed humanity? Socialism never got a chance. Capitalism knocked its block off, first round knock out. You're statements are ludicrous. Weak. Hilarious.
Nietzsche is not my scapegoat. Little of what you say makes any sense. If I have a scapegoat its corporatism, capitalism, nay, even human nature, fate - not a mere thinker.
I barely feel behooved to even defend myself against you. The ludicrousness of your attacks undermines them already.
Well, that's your interpretation. It's not new. My objectivity is not the issue. There is far more to Nietzsche than this viewpoint. To ignore that complexity & focus on Nietzsche's 'elitism' is one-dimensional.
No, my statement is true. Socialism became corrupted as human nature is relatively predictable. Capitalism didn't destroy it, it destroyed itself.
"From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs."
And you view Nietzsche as an elitist. There is more elitism in the words above (often falsely attributed to Marx) from Louis Blanc than in whole chapters of Nietzsche.
I (very briefly) critically analysed Nietzsche's Zur Genealogie der Moral though didn't I? No mean feat for someone who doesn't know anything about Nietzsche.
Translation: It appears you have read a bit of Nietzsche after all, & understand many of his questions about the origins of the dualistic concept of human morality. I cannot debate with you about this as my knowledge of Nietzsche is one-dimensional & is perceived through the medium of social realism.
You won't debate me. You retreat into baseless attacks, calling me high, schizophrenic, Christian, Marxist. I offered you my understanding of Nietzsche's origin of slave morality and you did not even comment on it. All you said was "are you on drugs?"
I am not a Marxist.
I focused on his elitism in order to disprove your contention that according to him all of us have superhuman potential. Sorry for getting specific, I know that's not exactly your thing.
Of course there is more to Nietzsche than his elitism. But he is elitist and, therefore, your particular assertion was wrong.
I have not read some Nietzsche. I've read everything of his that's ever been translated into english, much of it multiple times. I still don't think that makes me an expert, but it certainly does give me some familiarity on which to base my conclusions.
What I want, what I've asked for repeatedly, is your or anyone else's conception of what the superman is. I want to know what you get when you denounce slave morality. That's what I want. I think you get Caesar and Napoleon-type characters, the kind Nietzsche admired.
I know how diverse and profound the man's writings are. I think he was an uber-genius perhaps without peer. But I hold on to slave morality. I am a slave moralist. And he was ok with injustice. At some point you have to quit marveling at the man's inimitably astute insight and ask the simple question - what do I make of all this?
I've tried to debate you. You said Nietzsche cared about the herd. You offered a pretty sanitized interpretation of Nietzsche. You said the herd was victimized by the slave moralists. Go back and read what I said about that.
Your view on the downfall of socialism is pretty typical. You need to go study the history of the worker's movements in America in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. America had to go socialist, it didn't, due to the intense, hard-driven campaign waged against it. When America failed to go socialist, socialism itself was doomed.
There is no point in debating the slave morality with you. You have your opinion already formed.
Neither am I.
I wasn't talking about superhuman potential, & neither was Nietzsche. The superman is above the duality of good & evil. I know what your interpretation of superseding moral dualism is as well, & I know what you will say.
I think you are over-focused on his elitism.
Frankly, that surprises me. You seem to have a very narrow view of many of the concepts Nietzsche was obsessed with.
Whatever the superman is, it isn't an elitist jack-boot wearing master race that thinks that there is no morality & can therefore proceed to enslave the universe.
I think that this is a matter of interpretation.
No, I said if he didn't care why did he write anything at all? He probably despised the herd, I do.
I think you have misunderstood what I actually said, or maybe I didn't make it clear. I'm ceasing to care.
Why? I'm not an American. I do like Arthur Miller's plays though.
You still offer nothing in the way of a refutation of my remarks.
I know you are not a Marxist. You assumed I was.
You don't even know what the superman is and yet you go on about it as though its the be all end all. I know the Nazis were not supermen, of course they weren't. But the superman does not share our moral sentiments, either. There is a darker, harder to accept side to Nietzsche's philosophy that few of his admirers dare to acknowledge. I'll say it a million freaking times - what does the absence of slave morality look like? You could say it looks like Ancient Greece, which is why I brought up Homer - not the product of my undiagnosed schizophrenia nor my drug use (I haven't even smoked a joint in 5 years).
You said something to the effect that the slave moralists made the herd meek and humble. That's laughable. Nietzsche did not believe that.
You also said something to the effect that liberation from slave morality is humanity's greatest hope. Something to that effect. Once again - laughable.
You think that Nietzsche being ok with injustice is a matter for interpretation? Nietzsche did not even believe in the modern sense of justice. He did not believe in a fundamental equality amongst men. He thought it was a fiction rooted in the soul superstition.
I'm actually interested in hearing your take on "super-ceding moral dualism." That is the superman. I want to hear about the superman.
You say you're ceasing to care. I don't think you ever did. You get kicks out of playing a pretentious expert. You took my original post, carved it up and splattered it with facetious wannabe-witty remarks. Forget substance - let's nitpick. Jesus wasn't real so my opinion on Nietzsche must be wrong. Same with Achilles. Can't use the word Achilles-like, oh no.
Discussing a particular part of a philosophy does not amount to limiting that philosophy to that particular part.
There's no point in debating the slave morality with me because my opinion is already formed? This is what you say? Then why debate anything with anyone who has an opinion pertaining to the topic that's up for debate?
Good question, although I thought the OT was entitled 'Future Superman'? I know what your views on the superman are, you have told me. I just don't believe that it necessarily has to do with the abandoning of all morality. I think it could be something above the duality of morality. What that is exactly, is probably the $64, 000 question.
The real question is that if you think that I am so stupid, why answer my posts at all? You win, you are better than me, I'm just a pretentious git.
Nietzsche was not such an elitist that he couldn't be kind: judge him by his life and works, not just his works.