Nietzsche was a psychologist, above all. Not in the modern sense, but what interested him the most was how we humans tend to make cocoons around ourselves, in the name of morality. These limit us in various ways, for instance in terms of perspective, in terms of action and also in the sense that we ourselves start to apply the same limitations to others.
In Will to Power, Nietzsche constantly pursues as strategy to “break everything open”. This is the entire underlying logic that can be found in this book. The problem he finds is twofold, however:
- To break open human experience to other kinds of interpretations, apart from that of morality leads to a kind of explosive destruction of what exists. This is akin to splitting the atom.
- Breaking things open in this way does not allow human structures to remain, or to develop, in such a way that one could exert one’s “will to power” over them.
One might look at it in this way: in the first instance, individual humans are released from the constraints of morality, and can pursue their own “will to power”.
BUT! Human society is made of a collective. It is not per se “individualistic”. Therefore, one needs to maintain the existing moral structures, if one is to stand above them. One is not to criticize them, but to conserve them. So here we encounter an extreme philosophical inconsistency, which no doubt Nietzsche tried to resolve for the rest of his life (like the proverbial skydiver who couldn’t find his rip cord and spent the rest of his life looking for it).
Be that as it may, at the level of a psychological analysis of the limitations imposed by moral reasoning, Nietzsche did not put a foot wrong. It’s just that he couldn’t make a philosophy out of it, at least not one that is coherent. Perhaps this is as it needs to be. His insights, taken independently from each other are still extremely liberating.
The two opposing aims that caused Nietzsche so much trouble are, however, liberating in different ways. On the one side (point 1) it can become very clear (at least it is to me) that moral reasoning can stop us from seeing how deeply we are all entrenched in political circumstances. These two forms or reasoning — moral and political — tend to take us in very opposite directions in terms of how we think about the world, and those who are too invested in the moral style of reasoning will generally be blinded as to how much politics enfolds us. (They will claim otherwise, but the evidence points to the contrary.)
Regarding the strategy entailed in point two, the desire is to create a sense of theodicy, of all being well, and of everything having its place. Once again, this sense of being at peace with “how things are” is absolutely necessary, psychologically, if one is to have one’s own peace of mind.
-In all the difficulties Nietzsche had, in creating a philosophy, can be understood in the light of trying to do the best thing possible for a human being to do, but not having the tools already at his disposal. (These had to be invented or “come up with”.)
I can understand, deeply, Nietzsche’s struggle, because in many ways it has been like my own. I’ve also had political mechanisms used against me, whilst being blindsided by them because I was in my own moral cocoon. I’ve also taken immense efforts to break out (and each time been rewarded by that, with better health, and greater creativity). Every instance of backsliding on my part, toward a moral paradigm has led to a severe decline in my health.
I also understand Nietzsche’s benev
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