Beyond Good and Evil
Prelude to a Philosophy of the Future
Preface
I On The Prejudices Of Philosophers
II The Free Spirit
III The Religious Nature
IV Maxims & Interludes
V On the Natural History of Morals
VI We Scholars
VII Our Virtues
VIII Peoples and Fatherlands
IX What is Noble
X Epode
Back To Main Index
Part Two : The Free Spirit
24
O sancta simplicitas! In what strange simplification and
falsification man lives! One can never cease wondering once one has acquired
eyes for 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 divine desire for wanton leaps and wrong
inferences! how from the beginning we have contrived to retain our ignorance in
order to enjoy an almost inconceivable freedom, lack of scruple and caution,
heartiness, and gaiety of life - in order to enjoy life! And only on this now
solid, granite foundation of ignorance could knowledge rise so far - 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!
Even if language, here as elsewhere, will not get over its awkwardness, and will
continue to talk of opposites where there are only degrees and many subtleties
of gradation; even if the inveterate Tartuffery of morals, which now belongs to
our unconquerable "flesh and blood," infects the words even of those of us who
know better - here and there we understand it and laugh at the way in which
precisely science at its best seeks most to keep us in this simplified,
thoroughly artificial, suitably constructed and suitably falsified world - at
the way in which, willy-nilly, it loves error, because, being alive, it loves
life.
25
After such a cheerful commencement, a serious word would
like to be heard; it appeals to the most serious. Take care, philosophers and
friends, of knowledge, and beware of martyrdom! Of suffering "for the truth's
sake"! Even of defending yourselves! spoils all the innocence and fine
neutrality of your conscience; 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 hostility, you
have to pose as protectors of truth upon earth - as though "the truth" were such
an innocuous and incompetent creature as to require protectors! and you of all
people, you knights of the most sorrowful countenances dear loafers and
cobweb-spinners of the spirit! After all, you know well enough that it cannot be
of any con. sequence if you of all people are proved right; you know that no
philosopher so far has been proved right, and that there might be a more
laudable truthfulness in every little question mark that you place after your
special words and favorite doctrines (and occasionally after yourselves) than in
all the solemn gestures and trumps before accusers and law courts. Rather, go
away. Flee into concealment. And have your masks and subtlety, that you ma
mistaken for what you are not, or feared a little. And don't the garden, the
garden with golden trelliswork. And have around you who are as a garden - or as
music on the waters evening, when the day is turning into memories. Choose the
solitude, the free, playful, light solitude that gives you, too, the right, to
remain good in some sense. How poisonous, how crafty, hot bad, does every long
war make one, that cannot be waged open] by means of force! How personal does a
long fear make one, long watching of enemies, of possible enemies! These
outcasts society, these long-pursued, wickedly persecuted ones - also compulsory
recluses, the Spinozas or Giordano Brunos always come in the end, even under the
most spiritual masquerade, perhaps without being themselves aware of it,
sophisticated vengeance-seekers and poison-brewers (let someone 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 his
philosophical sense of humor 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 so far 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 degeneration (degenerated
into a "martyr," into a stage- and platform-bawler). Only, that it is necessary
with such a desire to be clear what spectacle one will see in any case - merely
a satyr play, merely an epilogue farce, merely the continued proof that the
long, real tragedy is at an end, assuming that every philosophy was in its
genesis a long tragedy.
26
Every choice human being strives instinctively for a citadel and a secrecy
where he is saved from the crowd, the many, the great majority - where he may
forget "men who are the rule," being their exception - excepting only the one
case in which he is pushed straight to such men by a still stronger instinct,
as a seeker after knowledge in the great and exceptional sense. Anyone who,
in intercourse with men, does not occasionally glisten in all the colors of
distress, green and gray with disgust, satiety, sympathy, gloominess, and loneliness,
is certainly not a man of elevated tastes; supposing, however, that he does
not take all this burden and disgust upon himself voluntarily, that he persistently
avoids it, and remains, as I said, quietly and proudly hidden in his citadel,
one thing is certain: he was not made, he was not predestined, for knowledge.
If he were, 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 be 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 contact (all contact is bad contact except with one's equals)
- this 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 favorite child of knowledge should be, he will encounter suitable
shortcuts and helps for 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 still have that degree of spirituality and that itch which makes
them talk of themselves and their likes before witnesses - sometimes they even
wallow in books, as on their own dung. Cynicism is the only form in which base
souls approach honesty; and the higher man must listen closely to every coarse
or subtle cynicism, and congratulate himself when a clown without shame or a
scientific satyr speaks out precisely in front of him. There are even cases
where enchantment mixes with the disgust - namely, where by a freak of nature
genius is tied to some such indiscreet billygoat and ape, as in the case of
the Abbé Galiani, the profoundest, most clear-sighted, and perhaps also
filthiest man of his century - he was far profounder than Voltaire and consequently
also a good deal more taciturn. It happens more frequently, as has been hinted,
that a scientific head is placed on an ape's body, a subtle exceptional understanding
in a base soul, an occurrence by no means rare, especially among doctors and
physiologists of morality. And whenever anyone speaks without bitterness, quite
innocently, of man as a belly with two requirements, and a head with one; whenever
anyone sees, seeks, and wants to see only hunger, sexual lust, and vanity as
the real and only motives of human actions; in short, when anyone speaks "badly"
and not even "wickedly" of man, the lover of knowledge should listen subtly
land diligently; he should altogether have an open ear wherever people talk
without indignation. For the indignant and Whoever perpetually tears and lacerates
with his own teeth himself (or as a substitute, the world, or God, or society)
may indeed, morally speaking, stand higher than the laughing and self-satisfied
satyr, but in every other sense they are a more ordinary, more indifferent,
and less instructive case. And no one lies as much as the indignant do.
27
It is hard to be understood, especially when one thinks and lives gangasrotogati
among men who think and live differently namely, kurmagati, or at best "the
way frogs walk," mandeikagati (I obviously do everything to be "hard
to understand" myself!) - and one should be cordially grateful for the good
will to some subtlety of interpretation. As regards "the good friends," however,
who are always too lazy and think that as friends they have a right to relax,
one does well to grant them from the outset some leeway and romping place for
misunderstanding: then on can even laugh - or get rid of them altogether, these
good friends - and also laugh.
28
What is most difficult to render from one language into an other is the tempo
of its style, which has its basis in the character of the race, or to speak
more physiologically, in the average temp of its metabolism. There are honestly
meant translations that, a involuntary vulgarizations, are almost falsifications
of the original merely because its bold and merry tempo (which leaps over an
obviates all dangers in things and words) could not be translates A German is
almost incapable of presto in his language; thus also as may be reasonably inferred,
of 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 solemnly clumsy, all long-winded and boring types of style are
developed in profuse variety among German - forgive me the fact that even Goethe's
prose, in its mixture o stiffness and elegance, is no exception, being a reflection
of the "good old time" to which it belongs, and a reflection of German taste
at a time when there still was a "German taste" - a rococo taste in moribus
et artibus. Lessing is an exception, owing to his histrionic nature which understood
much and understood how to do many things. He was not the translator of Bayle
for nothing and liked to flee to the neighborhood of Diderot and Voltaire, and
better yet - that of the Roman comedy writers. In tempo, too, Lessing loved
free thinking and escape from Germany. But how could the German language, even
in the prose of a Lessing, imitate the tempo of Machiavelli, who in his Principe
[The Prince] lets us breathe the dry, refined air of Florence and cannot help
presenting the most serious matters in a boisterous allegrissimo, perhaps not
without a malicious artistic sense of the contrast he risks - long, difficult,
hard, dangerous thoughts and the tempo of the gallop and the very best, most
capricious humor? Who, finally, could venture on a German translation of Petronius,
who, more than any great musician so far, was a master of presto in invention,
ideas, and words? What do the swamps of the sick, wicked world, even the "ancient
world," matter in the end, when one has the feet of a wind as he did, the rush,
the breath, the liberating scorn of a wind that makes everything healthy by
making everything run! And as for Aristophanes - that transfiguring, complementary
spirit for whose sake one forgives everything Hellenic for having existed, provided
one has understood in its full profundity all that needs to be forgiven and
transfigured here - there is nothing that has caused me to meditate more on
Plato's secrecy and sphinx nature than the happily preserved petit fait
that under the pillow of his deathbed there was found no "Bible," nor anything
Egyptian, Pythagorean, or Platonic - but a volume of Aristophanes. How could
even Plato have endured life - a Greek life he repudiated - without an Aristophanes?
29
Independence is for the very few; it is a privilege of the
strong. And whoever attempts it even with the best right but without inner
constraint proves that he is probably not only strong, but also daring to the
point of recklessness. He enters into a labyrinth, he multiplies a thousandfold
the dangers which life brings with it in any case, not the least of which is
that no one can see how and where he loses his way, becomes lonely, and is torn
piecemeal by some minotaur of conscience. Supposing one like that comes to
grief, this happens so far from the comprehension of men that they neither feel
it nor sympathize. And he cannot go back any longer. Nor can he go back to the
pity of men.
30
Our highest insights must - and should - sound like follies and sometimes like
crimes when they are heard without permission by those who are not predisposed
and predestined for them. The difference between the exoteric and the esoteric,
formerly known to philosophers - among the Indians as among the Greeks, Persians,
and Muslims, in short, wherever one believed in an order of rank and not in
equality and equal rights - does not so much consist in this, that the exoteric
approach comes from outside and sees, estimates, measures, and judges from the
outside, not the inside: what is much more essential is that the exoteric approach
sees things from below, the esoteric looks down from above. There are heights
of the soul from which even tragedy ceases to look tragic; and rolling together
all the woe of the world - who could dare to decide whether its sight would
necessarily seduce us and compel us to feel pity and thus double this woe? What
serves the higher type of men as nourishment or delectation must almost be poison
for a very different and inferior type. The virtues of the common man might
perhaps signify vices and weaknesses in a philosopher. It could be possible
that a man of a high type, when degenerating and perishing, might only at that
point acquire qualities that would require those in the lower sphere into which
he had sunk to begin to venerate him like a saint. There are books that have
opposite values for soul and health, depending on whether the lower soul, the
lower vitality, or the higher and more vigorous ones turn to them: in the former
case, these books are dangerous and lead to crumbling and disintegration; in
the latter, heralds' cries that call the bravest to their courage. Books for
all the world are always foul-smelling books: the smell of small people clings
to them. Where the people eat and drink, even where they venerate, it usually
stinks. One should not go to church if one wants to breathe pure air.
31
When one is young, one venerates and - despises without that
art of nuances which constitutes the best gain of life, and it is only fair that
one has to pay dearly for having assaulted men and things in this manner with
Yes and No. Everything is arranged so that the worst of tastes, the taste for
the unconditional, should be cruelly fooled and abused until a man learns to put
a little art into his feelings and rather to risk trying even what is artificial
- as the real artists of life do. The wrathful and reverent attitudes
characteristic of youth do not seem to permit themselves any rest until they
have forged men and things in such a way that these attitudes may be vented on
them - after all, youth in itself has something of forgery and deception. Later,
when the young soul, tortured by all kinds of disappointments', finally turns
suspiciously against itself, still hot and wild, even in its suspicion and pangs
of conscience - how wroth it is with itself now! how it tears itself to pieces,
impatiently! how it takes revenge for its long self-delusion, just as if it had
been a deliberate blindness! In this transition one punishes oneself with
mistrust against one's own feelings; one tortures one's own enthusiasm with
doubts; indeed, one experiences even a good conscience as a danger, as if it
were a way of wrapping oneself in veils and the exhaustion of subtler honesty -
and above all one takes sides, takes sides on principle, against "youth." Ten
years later one comprehends that all this, too - was still youth.
32
During the longest part of human history - so-called
prehistorical times - the value or disvalue of an action was derived from its
consequences. The action itself was considered as little as its origin. It was
rather the way a distinction or disgrace still reaches back today from a child
to its parents, in China: it was the retroactive force of success or failure
that led men to think well or ill of an action. Let us call this period the
pre-moral period of mankind: the imperative "know thyself!" was as yet unknown.
In the last ten thousand years, however, one has reached the point, step by
step, in a few large regions on the earth, where it is no longer the
consequences but the origin of an action that one allows to decide its value. On
the whole this is a great event which involves a considerable refinement of
vision and standards; it is the unconscious aftereffect of the rule of
aristocratic values and the faith in "descent" - the sign of a period that one
may call moral in the narrower sense. It involves the first attempt at
self-knowledge. Instead of the consequences, the origin: indeed a reversal of
perspective! Surely, a reversal achieved only after long struggles and
vacillations. To be sure, a calamitous new superstition, an odd narrowness of
interpretation, thus become dominant: the origin of an action was interpreted in
the most definite sense as origin in an intention; one came to agree that the
value of an action lay in the value of the intention. The intention as the whole
origin and prehistory of an action - almost to the present day this prejudice
dominated moral praise, blame, judgment, and philosophy on earth. But today -
shouldn't we have reached the necessity of once more resolving on a reversal and
fundamental shift in values, owing to another self-examination of man, another
growth in profundity? Don't we stand at the threshold of a period which should
be designated negatively, to begin with, as extra-moral? After all, today at
least we immoralists have the suspicion that the decisive value of an action
lies precisely in what is unintentional in it, while everything about it that is
intentional, everything about it that can be seen, known, "conscious," still
belongs to its surface and skin - which, like every skin, betrays something but
conceals even more. In short, we believe that the intention is merely a sign and
symptom that still requires interpretation - moreover, a sign that means too
much and therefore, taken by itself alone, almost nothing. We believe that
morality in the traditional sense, the morality of intentions, was a prejudice,
precipitate and perhaps provisional - something on the order of astrology and
alchemy - but in any case something that must be overcome. The overcoming of
morality, in a certain sense even the self-overcoming of morality - let this be
the name for that long secret work which has been saved up for the finest and
most honest, also the most malicious, consciences of today, as living
touchstones of the soul.
33
There is no other way: the feelings of devotion,
self-sacrifice for one's neighbor, the whole morality of self-denial must be
questioned mercilessly and taken to court - no less than the aesthetics of
"contemplation devoid of all interest" which is used today as a seductive guise
for the emasculation of art, to give it a good conscience. There is too much
charm and sugar in these feelings of "for others," "not for myself," for us not
to need to become doubly suspicious at this point and to ask: "are these not
perhaps - seductions?" That they please those who have them and those who enjoy
their fruits, and also the mere spectator - this does not yet constitute an
argument in their favor but rather invites caution. So let us be cautious.
34
Whatever philosophical standpoint one may adopt today, from
every point of view the erroneousness of the world in which we think we live is
the surest and firmest fact that we can lay eyes on: we find reasons upon
reasons for it which would like to lure us to hypotheses concerning a deceptive
principle in "the essence of things." But whoever holds our thinking itself,
"the spirit," in other words, responsible for the falseness of the world - an
honorable way out which is chosen by every conscious or unconscious advocatus
dei - whoever takes this world, along with space, time, form, movement, to be
falsely inferred - anyone like that would at least have ample reason to learn to
be suspicious at long last of all thinking. Wouldn't thinking have put over on
us the biggest hoax yet? And what warrant would there be that it would not
continue to do what it has always done? In all seriousness: the innocence of our
thinkers is somehow touching and evokes reverence, when today they still step
before consciousness with the request that it should please give them honest
answers; for example, whether it is "real," and why it so resolutely keeps the
external world at a distance, and other questions of that kind. The faith in
"immediate certainties" is a moral naivet6 that reflects honor on us
philosophers; but - after all we should not be "merely moral" men. Apart from
morality, this faith is a stupidity that reflects little honor on us. In
bourgeois life ever-present suspicion may be considered a sign of "bad
character" and hence belong among things imprudent; here, among us, beyond the
bourgeois world and its Yes and No - what should prevent us from being imprudent
and saying: a philosopher has nothing less than a right to "bad character," as
the being who has so far always been fooled best on earth; he has a duty to
suspicion today, to squint maliciously out of every abyss of suspicion. Forgive
me the joke of this gloomy grimace and trope; for I myself have learned long ago
to think differently, to estimate differently with regard to deceiving and being
deceived, and I keep in reserve at least a couple of jostles for the blind rage
with which the philosophers resist being deceived. Why not? It is no more than a
moral prejudice that truth is worth more than mere appearance; it is even the
worst proved assumption there is in the world. Let at least this much be
admitted: there would be no life at all if not on the basis of perspective
estimates and appearances; and if, with the virtuous enthusiasm and clumsiness
of some philosophers, one wanted to abolish the "apparent world" altogether -
well, supposing you could do that, at least nothing would be left of your
"truth" either. Indeed, what forces us at all to suppose that there is an
essential opposition of "true" and "false"? Is it not sufficient to assume
degrees of apparentness and, as it were, lighter and darker shadows and shades
of appearance - different "values," to use the language of painters? Why
couldn't the world that concerns us be a fiction? And if somebody asked, "but to
a fiction there surely belongs an author?" - couldn't one answer simply: why?
Doesn't this "belongs" perhaps belong to the fiction, too? Is it not permitted
to be a bit ironical about the subject no less than the predicate and object?
Shouldn't philosophers be permitted to rise above faith in grammar? All due
respect for governesses - but hasn't the time come for philosophy to renounce
the faith of governesses?
35
O Voltaire! O humaneness! O nonsense! There is something
about "truth," about the search for truth; and when a human being is too human
about it - "il ne cherche le vrai que pour faire le bien" - I bet he finds
nothing.
36
Suppose nothing else were "given" as real except our world
of desires and passions, and we could not get down, or up, to any other
"reality" besides the reality of our drives - for thinking is merely a relations
of these drives to each other; is it not permitted to make the experiment and to
ask the question whether this "given" would not be sufficient for also
understanding on the basis of this kind of thing the so-called mechanistic (or
"material") world? 1, mean, not as a deception, as "mere appearance," an "idea"
(in the sense of Berkeley and Schopenhauer) but as holding the same rank of
reality as our affect - as a more primitive form of the world of affects in
which everything still lies contained in a powerful unity before it undergoes
ramifications and developments in the organic process (and, as is only fair,
also becomes tenderer and weaker) - as a kind of instinctive life in which all
organic functions are still synthetically intertwined along with
self-regulation, assimilation, nourishment, excretion, and metabolism - as a
pre-form of life. In the end not only is it permitted to make this experiment;
the conscience of method demands it. Not to assume several kinds of causality
until the experiment of making do with a single one has been pushed to its
utmost limit (to the point of nonsense, if I may say so) - that is a moral of
method which one may not shirk today - it follows "from its definition," as a
mathematician would say. The question is in the end whether we really recognize
the will as efficient, whether we believe in the causality of the will: if we do
- and at bottom our faith in this is nothing less than our faith in causality
itself - then we have to make the experiment of positing the causality of the
will hypothetically as the only one. "Will," of course, can affect only "will" -
and not "matter" (not "nerves," for example). In short, one has to risk the
hypothesis whether will does not affect will wherever "effects" are recognized -
and whether all mechanical occurrences are not, insofar as a force is active in
them, will force, effects of will. Suppose, finally, we succeeded in explaining
our entire instinctive life as the development and ramification of one basic
form of the will - namely, of the will to power, as my proposition has it;
suppose all organic functions could be traced back to this will to power and one
could also find in it the solution of the problem of procreation and nourishment
- it is one problem - then one would have gained the right to determine all
efficient force univocally as - will to power. The world viewed from inside, the
world defined and determined according to its "intelligible character" - it
would be "will to power" and nothing else.
37
"What? Doesn't this mean, to speak with the vulgar: God is
refuted, but the devil is not?" On the contrary! On the contrary, my friends.
And, the devil - who forces you to speak with the vulgar?
38
What happened most recently in the broad daylight of modern times in the case
of the French Revolution - that gruesome farce which, considered closely, was
quite superfluous, though noble and enthusiastic spectators from all over Europe
contemplated it from a distance and interpreted it according to their own indignations
and enthusiasms for so long, and so passionately, that the text finally disappeared
- under the interpretation - could happen once more as a noble posterity might
misunderstand the whole past and in that way alone make it tolerable to look
at. Or rather: isn't this what has happened even now? haven't we ourselves been
this "noble posterity"? And isn't now precisely the moment when, insofar as
we comprehend this, it is all over?
39
Nobody is very likely to consider a doctrine true merely because it makes people
happy or virtuous - except perhaps the lovely "idealists" who become effusive
about the good, the true, and the beautiful and allow all kinds of motley, clumsy,
and benevolent desiderata to swim around in utter confusion in their pond. Happiness
and virtue are no arguments. But people like to forget - even sober spirits
- that making unhappy and evil are no counterarguments. Something might be true
while being harmful and dangerous in the highest degree. Indeed, it might be
a basic characteristic of existence that those who would know it completely
would perish, in which case the strength of a spirit should be measured according
to how much of the "truth" one could still barely endure or to put it more clearly,
to what degree one would require it to be thinned down, shrouded, sweetened,
blunted, falsified."' But there is no doubt at all that the evil and unhappy
are more favored when it comes to the discovery of certain parts of truth, and
that the probability of their success here is greater - not to speak of the
evil who are happy, a species the moralists bury in silence. Perhaps hardness
and cunning furnish more favorable conditions for the origin of the strong,
independent spirit and philosopher than that gentle, fine, conciliatory good-naturedness
and art of taking things lightly which people prize, and prize rightly, in a
scholar. Assuming first of all that the concept "philosopher" is not restricted
to the philosopher who writes books - or makes books of his philosophy. A final
trait for the image of the free-spirited philosopher is contributed by Stendhal
whom, considering German taste, I do not want to fail to stress - for he goes
against the German taste. "Pour être bon philosopher" says this last great
psychologist, "il faut être sec, clair, sans illusion. Un banquier, qui
a fait fortune, a une partie du caractère requis pour faire des découvertes
en philosophie, c'est-à-dire pour voir clair dans ce qui est."
40
Whatever is profound loves masks; what is most profound even
hates image and parable. Might not nothing less than the opposite be the proper
disguise for the shame of a god? 2 1 A questionable question: it would be odd if
some mystic had not risked something to that effect in his mind. There are
occurrences of such a delicate nature that one does well to cover them up with
some rudeness to conceal them; there are actions of love and extravagant
generosity after which nothing is more advisable than to take a stick and give
any eyewitness a sound thrashing: that would muddle his memory. Some know how to
muddle and abuse their own memory in order to have their revenge at least
against this only witness: shame is inventive. It is not the worst things that
cause the worst shame: there is not only guile behind a mask - there is so much
graciousness in cunning. I could imagine that a human being who had to guard
something precious and vulnerable might roll through life, rude and round as an
old green wine cask with heavy hoops: the refinement of his shame would want it
that way. A man whose sense of shame has some profundity encounters his
destinies and delicate decisions, too, on paths which few ever reach and of
whose mere existence his closest intimates must not know: his mortal danger is
concealed from their eyes, and so is his regained sureness of life. Such a
concealed man who instinctively needs speech for silence and for burial in
silence and who is inexhaustible in his evasion of communication, wants and sees
to it that a mask of him roams in his place through the hearts and heads of his
friends. And supposing he did not want it, he would still realize some day that
in spite of that a mask of him is there - and that this is well. Every profound
spirit needs a mask: even more, around every profound spirit a mask is growing
continually, owing to the constantly false, namely shallow, interpretation of
every word, every step, every sign of life he gives.
41
One has to test oneself to see that one is destined for
independence and command - and do it at the right time. One should not dodge
one's tests, though they may be the most dangerous game one could play and are
tests that are taken in the end before no witness or judge but ourselves. Not to
remain stuck to a person - not even the most loved - every person is a prison,
also a nook. Not to remain stuck to a fatherland - not even if it suffers most
and needs help most - it is less difficult to sever one's heart from a
victorious fatherland. Not to remain stuck to some pity - not even for higher
men into whose rare torture and helplessness some accident allowed us to look.
Not to remain stuck to a science - even if it should lure us with the most
precious finds that seem to have been saved up precisely for us. Not to remain
stuck to one's own detachment, to that voluptuous remoteness and strangeness of
the bird who flees ever higher to see ever more below him - the danger of the
flier. Not to remain stuck to our own virtues and become as a whole the victim
of some detail in us, such as our hospitality, which is the danger of dangers
for superior and rich souls who spend themselves lavishly, almost indifferently,
and exaggerate the virtue of generosity into a vice. One must know how to
conserve oneself: the hardest test of independence.
42
A new species of philosophers is coming up: I venture to
baptize them with a name that is not free of danger. As I unriddle them, insofar
as they allow themselves to be unriddled - for it belongs to their nature to
want to remain riddles at some point these philosophers of the future may have a
right - it might also be a wrong - to be called attempters. This name itself is
in the end a mere attempt and, if you will, a temptation.
43
Are these coming philosophers new friends of "truth"? That
is probable enough, for all philosophers so far have loved their truths. But
they will certainly not be dogmatists. It must offend their pride, also their
taste, if their truth is supposed to be a truth for every man - which has so far
been the secret wish and hidden meaning of all dogmatic aspirations. "My
judgment is my judgment": no one else is easily entitled to it - that is what
such a philosopher of the future may perhaps say of himself. One must shed the
bad taste of wanting to agree with many. "Good" is no longer good when one's
neighbor mouths it. And how should there be a "common good"! The term
contradicts itself: whatever can be common always has little value. In the end
it must be as it is and always has been: great things remain for the great,
abysses for the profound, nuances and shudders for the refined, and, in brief,
all that is rare for the rare.
44
Need I still say expressly after all this that they, too, will be free, very
free spirits, these philosophers of the future - though just as certainly they
will not be merely free spirits but something more, higher, greater, and thoroughly
different that does not want to be misunderstood and mistaken for something
else. But saying this I feel an obligation - almost as much to them as to ourselves
who are their heralds and precursors, we free spirits - to sweep away a stupid
old prejudice and misunderstanding about the lot of us: all too long it has
clouded the concept "free spirit" like a fog. In all the countries of Europe,
and in America, too, there now is something that abuses this name: a very narrow,
imprisoned, chained type of spirits who want just about the opposite of what
accords with our intentions and instincts - not to speak of the fact that regarding
the new philosophers who are coming up they must assuredly be closed windows
and bolted doors. They belong, briefly and sadly, among the levelers - these
falsely so-called "free spirits" - being eloquent and prolifically scribbling
slaves of the democratic taste and its "modern ideas"; they are all human beings
without solitude, without their own solitude, clumsy good fellows whom one should
not deny either courage or respectable decency - only they are unfree and ridiculously
superficial, above all in their basic inclination to find in the forms of the
old society as it has existed so far just about the cause of all human misery
and failure - which is a way of standing truth happily upon her head! What they
would like to strive for with all their powers is the universal green-pasture
happiness of the herd, with security, lack danger, comfort, and an easier life
for everyone; the two songs and doctrines which they repeat most often "equality
of rights" and , "sympathy for all that suffers" - and suffering itself
they take for something that must be abolished. We opposite men, having opened
our eyes and conscience to the question where and how the plant "man" has so
far grown most vigorously to a height - we think that this has happened every
time under the opposite conditions, that to this end the dangerousness of his
situation must first grow to the point of enormity, his power of invention and
simulation (his "spirit") had to develop under prolonged pressure and constraint
into refinement and audacity, his life - will had to be enhanced into an unconditional
power will. We think that hardness, forcefulness, slavery, danger in the alley
and the heart, life in hiding, stoicism, the art of experiment and devilry of
every kind, that everything evil, terrible, tyrannical in man, everything in
him that is kin to beasts of prey and serpents, serves the enhancement of the
species "man" as much as its opposite does. Indeed, we do not even say enough
when we say only that much; and at any rate we are at this point, in what we
say and keep silent about, at the other end from all modem ideology and herd
desiderata - as their antipodes perhaps? Is it any wonder that we "free spirits"
are not exactly the most communicative spirits? that we do not want to betray
in every particular from what a spirit can liberate himself and to what he may
then be driven? And as for the meaning of the dangerous formula "beyond good
and evil," with which we at least guard against being mistaken for others: we
are something different from "libres-penseurs," "liberi pensatori," "Freidenker",
and whatever else all these goodly advocates of "modern ideas" like to call
themselves. At home, or at least having been guests, in many countries of the
spirit; having escaped again and again from the musty agreeable nooks into which
preference and prejudice, youth, origin, the accidents of people and books or
even exhaustion from wandering seemed to have banished us; full of malice against
the lures of dependence that lie hidden in honors, or money, or offices, or
enthusiasms of the senses; grateful even to need and vacillating sickness because
they always rid us from some rule and its "prejudice," grateful to god, devil,
sheep, and worm in us; curious to a vice, investigators to the point of cruelty,
with uninhibited fingers for the unfathomable, with teeth and stomachs for the
most indigestible, ready for every feat that requires a sense of acuteness and
acute senses, ready for every venture, thanks to an excess of "free will," with
fore- and back-souls into whose ultimate intentions nobody can look so easily,
with fore- and backgrounds which no foot is likely to explore to the end; concealed
under cloaks of light, conquerors even if we look like heirs and prodigals,
arrangers and collectors from morning till late, misers of our riches and our
crammed drawers, economical in learning and forgetting, inventive in schemas,
occasionally proud of tables of categories, occasionally pedants, occasionally
night owls of work even in broad daylight; yes, when it is necessary even scarecrows
- and today it is necessary; namely, insofar as we are born, sworn, jealous
friends of solitude, of our own most profound, most midnightly, most middaily
solitude: that is the type of man we are, we free spirits! And perhaps you have
something of this, too, you that are coming? you new philosophers?
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