terça-feira, fevereiro 21, 2006

Guilt...a good thing?


First of all i would like to say if i ever find myself capable of such facial hair i must have it. Secondly, read this excerpt of Nietsche's Seond Essay of The Genealogy of Morals with your 'purpose of life' in mind. Does bad conscience propel you? If so how? Also, realize that Nietzsche believes our current system of values to be incorrect, he is not arguing within the popular moral beliefs.


At this point I can no longer avoid giving a first, provisional statement of my own hypothesis concerning the origin of the "bad conscience": it may sound rather strange and needs to be pondered, lived with, and slept on for a long time. I regard the bad conscience as the serious illness that man was bound to contract under the stress of the most fundamental change he ever experienced—that change which occurred when he found himself finally enclosed within the walls of society and of peace. The situation that faced sea animals when they were compelled to become land animals or perish was the same as that which faced these semi-animals, well adapted to the wilderness, to war, to prowling, to adventure: suddenly all their instincts were disvalued and "suspended." From now on they had to walk on their feet and "bear themselves" whereas hitherto they had been borne by the water: a dreadful heaviness lay upon them. They felt unable to cope with the simplest undertakings; in this new world they no longer possessed their former guides, their regulating, unconscious and infallible drives: they were reduced to thinking, inferring, reckoning, coordinating cause and effect, these unfortunate creatures; they were reduced to their "consciousness," their weakest and most fallible organ! I believe there has never been such a feeling of misery on earth, such a leaden discomfort and at the same time the old instincts had not suddenly ceased to make their usual demands. Only it was hardly or rarely possible to humor them: as a rule they had to seek new and, as it were, subterranean gratifications.

All instincts that do not discharge themselves outwardly turn inward—this is what I call the internalization [Verinnerlichung] of man: thus it was that man first developed what was later called his "soul." The entire inner world, originally as thin as if it were stretched between two membranes, expanded and extended itself, acquired depth, breadth, and height, in the same measure as outward discharge was inhibited. Those fearful bulwarks with which the political organization protected itself against the old instincts of freedom—punishments belong among these bulwarks—brought about that all those instincts of wild, free, prowling man turned backward against man himself. Hostility, cruelty, joy in persecuting, in attacking, in change, in destruction—all this turned against the possessors of such instincts: that is the origin of the "bad conscience."

5 Comments:

Blogger E. Twist said...

Nietzsche has got some keen insights. I think the Christian community (evangelicals in particular) need to pay him more attention.

It's interesting, but in some of this I see the beginnings of Eldredge theology. I don't know if you've ever read any John Eldredge (Wild at Heart), but it echoes some of these sentiments. Now, I think Eldredge is a crazy lune and I think Nietzsche here misrepresents the means by which man becomes aware of his "soul." My sense is that internalization is not a product of socialization but part of the created order. Even the most untamed and undomesticated people groups have a (sometimes more so even that their "civilized" counterparts) strong sense of the inner "soul" and its in the make-up of man. Even Neanderthals buried their dead, believing that something lay within physicality.

2:47 AM  
Blogger Esteban said...

i think you are right. though i have never read Eldredge. it seems one of Nietzsche's weaknesses is the fact that time, for him, begins in ancient Greek and Roman times, he was a classics professor. yet i do think his analysis of guilt and the soul is interesting. although he speaks of bad conscience in such a negative way he later gives it credit for the complex and unique character of man, which he enjoys. and i ponder whether the soul was created in that moment of internal suffering or if it was merely expanded...Nietzsche writes

“this uncanny, dreadfully joyous labor of a soul voluntarily at odds with itself, that makes itself suffer out of joy in making suffer—eventually this entire active "bad conscience"—you will have guessed it—as the womb of all ideal and imaginative phenomena, also brought to light an abundance of strange new beauty and affirmation, and perhaps beauty itself.”

9:00 AM  
Anonymous Anônimo said...

if facial hair evidences a great male thinker, then the greatest President was Rutherford B. Hayes or James A. Garfield. Makes you wonder, has facial hair or great thinking gone out of style

6:43 PM  
Blogger Esteban said...

nicely put. perhaps both. i am trying to bring them back.

we cannot forget abraham lincoln...

9:58 PM  
Anonymous Anônimo said...

best to be remebered for the latter think I

7:53 AM  

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