PHILOSOPHY - Nietzsche

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The challenge begins with how to pronounce his name.

The first bit should sound likeKnee’, the second likecha

Kneecha.

Then we need to get past some of his extraordinary and provocative statements:

What doesn’t kill me makes me stronger

God is dead! And we have killed him.'

And his large moustache.

But when we do, well discover a thinker who is intermittently enchanting, wise and

very helpful.

Friedrich Nietzsche was born in 1844 in a quiet village in the eastern part of Germany

where his father was the priest.

He did exceptionally well at school and university and so excelled at

ancient Greek that he was made a professor

at the University of Basel

when still only in his mid-twenties.

But his official career didn’t work out. He got fed up with his fellow academics, gave

up his job and moved to Sils Maria in the Swiss alps

where he lived quietly, working on his masterpieces,

among them:

The Birth of Tragedy, Human, All Too Human,

The Gay Science, Thus Spoke Zarathustra,

Beyond Good and Evil, On the Genealogy of Morals,

He had lots of problems: - he didn’t get on with his family:

'I don’t like my mother and it’s painful even for me to hear my sister’s voice.’

- women kept rejecting him. - his books didn’t sell

- And when he was only forty-four, he had a mental breakdown, precipitated when he saw

a horse in a Turin street being beaten by its driver

and ran over to embrace him shouting 'I understand you'. He never recovered and

died eleven sad years later.

But his philosophy was full of heroism and grandeur.

He was a prophet of what he called: SELBSTÜBERWINDUNG

or SELF-OVERCOMING, the process by which a great-souled

person - what he called an ÜBERMENSCH

rises above their circumstances and difficulties to embrace

whatever life throws at them.

He wanted his work to teach us, as he put it, ‘how to become who we really are’.

His thought centers around 4 main recommendations:

Own up to envy

Envy isNietzsche recogniseda big part of life. Yet the lingering effects of

Christianity generally teaches to be feel ashamed

of our envious feelings. They seem an

indication of evil. So we hide them from ourselves and others

Yet there is nothing wrong with envy, maintained Nietzsche, so long as we use it as a guide

to what we really want. Every person who makes us envious should be seen as an indication

of what we could one day become. The envy-inducing writer, tycoon

or chef is hinting at who you are capable of one day being.

It's not that Nietzsche believed we always end up getting what we want. His own life

had taught him this well enough). He simply insisted that we must face up to our true

desires, put up a heroic fight to honour them, and only then mourn failure with solemn dignity.

That is what it means to be an ÜBERMENSCH

2. Don’t be a Christian

Nietzsche had some extreme things to say about Christianity

In the entire New Testament, there

is only person worth respecting: Pilate, the Roman governor.’

It was knockabout stuff, but his true target was more subtle and more interesting: he resented

Christianity for protecting people from their envy.

Christianity had in Nietzsche’s account emerged in the late Roman Empire

in the minds of timid slaves, who had lacked the stomach

to get hold of what they really wanted

and so had clung to a philosophy that made a virtue of their cowardice.

He called this SKLAVENMORAL

Christians - whom he rather rudely termed DIE HEERDE, the herd - had wished to

enjoy the real ingredients of fulfilment (a position in the world, sex,

intellectual mastery, creativity)

but had been too inept to get them.

They had therefore fashioned a hypocritical creed denouncing what

they wanted but were too weak to fight for

while praising what they did not want but happened

to have. So, in the Christian value system, sexlessness

turned into purity [show text changing] weakness became goodness, submission-to-people-one-hates

became obedience and, in Nietzsche’s phrase, “not-being-able-to-take-revengeturned

intoforgiveness.”

Christianity amounted to a giant machine for bitter denial.

3. Never drink alcohol

Nietzsche himself drank only waterand as a special treat, milk. And he thought we

should do likewise. He wasn’t making a small,

eccentric dietary point. The idea went to the heart of his philosophy, as contained

in his declaration: ‘There have been two great narcotics in European civilisation:

Christianity and alcohol.’

He hated alcohol for the very same reasons that he scorned Christianity: because both

numb pain, and both reassure us that things are just fine as they are, sapping us of the

will to change our lives for the better. A few drinks usher in a transient feeling of

satisfaction that can get fatally in the way of taking the steps necessary to improve our

lives.

Nietzsche was obsessed with the awkward truth that getting really valuable things done hurts.

How little you know of human happiness - you comfortable peoplehe wrote

The secret of a fulfilled life is: live

dangerously! Build your cities on the slopes of Mount Vesuvius!”

4. “God is Dead

Nietzsche’s dramatic assertion that God is dead is not, as it’s often taken to be,

some kind of a celebratory statement.

Despite his reservations about Christianity, Nietzsche did not think that the end of belief

was anything to cheer about.

Religious beliefs were false, he knew; but he observed that they were very beneficial

in the sense of helping us cope with the problems of life.

Nietzsche felt that the gap left by religion should ideally be filled by Culture (he meant:

philosophy, art, music, literature): Culture should replace Scripture.

However, Nietzsche was deeply suspicious of the way his own era was handling culture.

He believed the universities were killing the humanities,

turning them into dry academic exercises,

rather than using them for what they were always meant to be:

guides to life. He admired

the way the Greeks had used tragic drama in a practical, therapeutic way,

as an occasion for catharsis and moral educationand wished his own age to be comparably

ambitious.

He called for a reformation, in which peoplenewly conscious of the crisis brought

on by the end of faithwould fill the gaps created by the disappearance of religion

with philosophy and art.

Every era faces particular psychological challenges, thought Nietzsche, and it is the task of the

philosopher to identify, and help solve, these.

For Nietzsche, the 19th century was reeling under the impact

of two developments: Mass Democracy

and Atheism. The first

threatened to unleash torrents of undigested envy; the second to

leave humans without guidance or morality.

In relation to both challenges, Nietzsche remains our endearing, fascinating often loveable

and moustachioed guide.