Nietzsche was very interested in how language works. One of his critiques is that language gives us an unexamined metaphysics. In fact, not only does language cause us to conjure up entities that are then presumed to exist in certain ways, but even our very “common sense” is contaminated by this metaphysics.
Consider the way that language insists on there being a subject and an object in every sentence. But in fact our experience of reality is more of a single cloth. When we look back over our own experiences, we are forced to divide the subject from the object in order to “make sense” of what occurred. In other words we reflexively import a “doer”(somebody who “does” something), even in cases where it is not automatically clear that there was a “doer”.
To illustrate this point, Nietzsche suggested we consider the sentence, “Lightning strikes.” In this case the “doer” is lightning and its implied action is that “it strikes”. But, hold on a second. It is enough for us to realize “There is lightning”. The idea that lightning does something in order to strike is redundant.
In the case of human beings, the artificiality of this division into subject and object is not so obvious. But for this very reason, the metaphysics embedded in our use of grammar could be causing us more problems than we know.
For instance, we have very much trained ourselves, perhaps on the basis of the lure of this pattern of grammar, to seek out “doers” in every instance where something dramatic takes place. It is as if, in the case of a lightning strike that damages our roof,, we set up a police crack team to find a certain “Mr lightning”, who can be held responsible. Actually what I am getting at is we seek certain culpable individuals, whom we can blame, in instances where things go wrong. We are on the look out for those who can be held responsible — the alleged “doers”.
No doubt, in life, there really are some actual “doers” in a lot of cases, and in real police work, an action or a crime can be traced back to them. But it is amazing how often we seek to nail the presumed perpetrators when the situation isn’t really like that: for instance there is no particular person who did a particular thing, that brought about a particular outcome. Often our minds don’t stop to realize this, because we in hot pursuit for the responsible “doer”, spurred on by our inurement to grammar.
Just to give you one example of how far this tendency can go, I will relate something from my own experience, as unbelievable as it can be. As I have said, it is unbelievable enough, but the fact that I was born in Africa during the time that a colonial regime had some power, is deemed by some to have been an extraordinary crime that I was atone for. Actually, the event of colonialism is much, much bigger than me. But he idea that there should be someone, somewhere, who atones for an event that one disapproves of would seem to be strongly inbuilt into our human mode of reasoning. By contrast, it is much more difficult, it seems, to say, “these sorts of things just happen!”
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