profile pic
⌘ '
raccourcis clavier

1844-1900

Theology, acquainted with Greek philosophy

Twilight of the Idols, 1889

Problem of Socrates.

Decadent: in decline, decay. “Doing a bad thing carefully.”

An unexamined life is not worth living. Only Knowledge alone makes life worth living

Importance things in life: goodness, happiness, depends on reasons, arguments bizarre equations.

Maybe something wrong with this? What drives Socrates from this demands with reasons and knowledge? What are the motives?

Hume: Common life

Plato: Turns away from appearance, material life to know the true being

Artist: playful presentation, loving life for the work

Philosophers: Not joy, serious, engaged in serious business, striving to know the truth. Invent nothing, contemplate what is, what is true, “being qua being”

One must be all means stretch out one’s fingers and make the attempt to grasp this amazing finesse, that the value of life cannot be estimated. (269)

Life is not a closed books, but evolving still.

God is Dead

God of the philosophers

Atheism

Denis Diderot: “It is … very important not to mistake hemlock for parsley; but to believe or not to believe in god, is not important at all”

Nietzsche: “God is dead”. Means optimism, faith in science, the redemptive power of knowledge is “dead”, that is, unconvicing, hard to take seriously.

Nihilism: The highest values are devaluing themselves

How do we have duty on truth?

Doesn’t need reasons to be atheism?

For N, believing god is passing into the past, and have no feature. Science has devitalise god.

So to die the superior value of truth. Value of Truth is problematic.

From Thus Spoke Zarathustra

Contrast between Nobility and goodness noble spirits vs. good nobility > good noble people: maintain nobility, might considered by other as setback not become “a churl” (churlish, misanthropic, a hater of humanity)

Morality as Anti-Nature

Critiques in Christianity,

  • Anti-nature because anti-difference, when nature is all difference
  • Anti-nature because it values people all the same, when in nature, by nature, we are amazingly different.

Security with “herd mentality”

Regards as sign of decline, docile (democracy, or John Stuart Mill’s instution)

Obstacles that are good for us: Becomes who we are

Herd = human society

  • like sheep: unhappy on our own. Watch each other carefully, follow into our line
  • all herd: All animals all nervously watch each others

Peace is overrated, as defeats kind of challenges to grow for leaders

herd = security (survival values, of Europe at this time?)

Everything modern people thinks good is bad, things judges to be evil could turn out to be good in the future.

Decadent: arts and philosophy

artists wants to play with empiricists, doesn’t care about the truth (philosophers’ motive)

Arguments against morality: One rule for everything

Judge everything by one rules: Morality reduces human to singularity

Object to Kant’s Morals, but not John Stuart Mill’s Utilitarianism

Respect for others is imposed on us refused to embrace

Morals compromise creativity, and value more creativity more than morals (beyond good and evil)

What I Owe the Ancients

The Birth of Tragedy, 1872

Greek tragic drama

  • Aeschylus, Oresteia
  • Sophocles, Oedipus the King
  • Euripides, Bacchae

Why do we enjoy tragedies? Why do we enjoy watching people suffer?

“All becoming and growing - all that guarantees a future - involves pain.” (282)

“Art is worth more than truth.”

Shares’ Plato’s view of democracy. Values life of creativity, to invent new values.

Acknowledges death, suffering, tragedy. Not defects, or overcome by science.

Knowledge can demoralise people (Knowledge is good)

Knowledge is a very thing that it is good. Knowledge is not the path to virtue and happiness

Science tells us no good in itself, no purposes in itself. Values are selected by us, not stumbled upon.

Life has no values, since we cannot see all that life has to offer. It is a place for adventure.

Creating values is science not do, but art can art is more important than truth.