1. Jennifer Armstrong's answer to What did Nietzsche think about meta-languages? - Quora


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    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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  2. (1) What are some ways people deal with ugly truths? - Quora


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    This is a wonderful elucidation of the new ideology, "I am just my biology". Excellent exposition, in fact.

    In chess you don’t complain about how the pieces move. You learn how to play the game. Yeah it sucks that bishops are stuck on one color, and knights move in that weird hopping fashion—but the rules of life are deep in our DNA, you’ll gain much more from learning to play the game than focusing on the tragedy of the unfairness of it. At least chess is symmetrical.

    One of the hard truths of life is that many interactions are not symmetrical. One of the keys to success is having a lot of money in the bank so you can fail repeatedly. If you are poor, many times you have one shot. If you are wealthy you can try several businesses and succeed on your third or fourth try (the average successful business is started by someone over 40 and is their third attempt).

    The biggest ugly truth we all must face is that we are not as great or talented as we were told by all the adults trying to “Improve our self-esteem” in childhood. This can be earth shattering for many people, and a lot of people spend their lives cocooning themselves in narratives to hide the truth from themselves. The issue is when you do this you sacrifice the potential for success for fantasy—it’s a choice many choose to make.

    To be successful as adults we need to construct accurate models of reality. Accepting ugly truths is a key element of this. The monopoly on technologies of violence is the key determining factor of history. People have different talents and skills that for the most part are genetically predetermined. Love is a hormonal system designed to keep you blinded to truth till you have become (or gotten someone) pregnant. You’ll never be able to change people to make relationships or an ideal society work. There are no solutions, only tradeoffs. The list goes on…

    One of the most difficult books i ever read was The Mating Mind by Miller. He argued that the human cerebral canopy evolved like a peacocks tale. I hated reading it. He disassembled things I thought were valuable and revealed them to just be ways to single my mate value. I thought I was compassionate and cared about the disadvantaged, he pointed out I just talked about it to demonstrate my childrearing potential symbolically. My resources still just went to my family—like any mammal would. My independent streak and argumentation for free market principles was just a way for me to signal my resource acquisition potential—again I was just signaling like a peacock with their tail. (my tale of what I wanted to be perceived as, when in reality I am just an ape wearing a costume acting serious—acting the way apes always have, just with the ability to deceive myself and others with stories)

    Coming out of the cocoon of my self-congratulatory narratives was painful, but now I have a more accurate view of reality. This allows me to make better decisions, which has resulted in more career success. This is the key way to deal with Ugly truths: realize that once you have accepted them you will see the world more clearly—and he who sees most clearly wins (most of the time).

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    Painter, Sculpt, PhD African lit, author, performance artist
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    PhD in African Literature & Multidisciplinary StudiesThe University of Western AustraliaGraduated 2010
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  3.  

    How does Nietzsche's idea of the will to power differ from that of Freud?
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    It’s actually very different indeed. The main point of difference is that psychoanalysis naturalizes the existing systems of power, particularly patriarchal power, (which is deemed in all of its manifestations to be healthy and normal). Freud approaches the matter of human relations from a perspective of conventionality. Underneath this are several moral presuppositions, maintaining the idea that convention is healthy, and that deviation from convention is a sign of those who are maladaptive “discontents”.

    Actually, there is both a similarity and a difference in this view of Freud’s compared with that of Nietzsche. Nietzsche himself actually valorizes convention, in a lot of ways (a point that would surprise some of his followers). In the last part of his volumes called Will to Power, Nietzsche speaks of his idea that humanity is maintained as a whole by virtue of the fact that the majority of people are simply conventional and cannot be anything more than this. He sees that there is even a sort of strength in this, that “mediocrity” offers, one might say, a stronger basis for personality development than that which available to “exceptions”. He puts it this way, that the weakest of the conventional people are still generally stronger than those who find themselves in the position of “exceptions”.

    Along with this, what is similar is that both Nietzsche and Freud appraise, in their different ways, the adherence to convention as laudable in itself. Freud sees it, in effect, as ego-syntonic, and also a sign that one, as I have said, is not pathologically maladjusted. Nietzsche goes a bit further in terms of his own clarity of position by labeling such adherence as, (one might say) “morality itself”.

    However — and one must understand this in both cases —- “morality” has a different principle on which it operates than do those who understand and involve themselves with the operations of power. Moral systems invoke the desirability of conformity, of settling down, and behaving conventionally. They appeal to people who already have personalities that are very common or typical. More importantly, systems of morality create a fence or limit around what is possible for a human being. And even more interestingly, moral systems place a roof over a certain normative or conventional level of human experience, and denounce anything outside of this as “reprehensible” or “evil”.

    So, Freud’s system — which can actually be viewed as a moral system, as I’ve intimated —safeguards the well-being of highly normative by keeping human experience within a contained and limited space. The herd is thus protected, by a reinforcement of the idea that convention is, in effect, “morality”.

    What Nietzsche does, however, is to side with this notion of convention, and to reinforce it. He denies that there can in fact be anything that goes beyond convention that can still be “moral”. Anything that doesn’t embrace mediocrity ought to be viewed as thoroughly “immoral”.

    Unlike Freud, however, Nietzsche views that there are very immoral people, living above the roof system that contains and protects “The herd”. These are people who have no form of protection whatsoever, least of all from systems of morality. Moreover, because they sit above the roof that is designed to protect the herd, the herd cannot make them out clearly. The moral systems invented by the herd for its own protection give the herd no means to grasp the independence of mind that enables one to be a roof-sitter. Of course the herd are naturally antagonistic to the roof-sitters, and accuse them of all sorts of devious and immoral acts. (And well they should, says Nietzsche. They are quite within their rights to do so, as the roof sitters do genuinely pose a threat to the herd’s systems of conventions, and so make life much more difficult for those who crave only their own safety.)

    “Will to power”, though, is the barefaced immorality that happens above the purview of the herd.

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  4. Jennifer Armstrong's answer to Is the internet having a good or a bad impact on our lives? - Quora


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    It probably is neither. I am coming more and more to Nietzsche's idea of eternal recurrence, that fundamentally the elements that make up humanity do not change their value. There can, however, be a drop in the level of culture, from higher to lower, which I think is what has actually occurred.

    But if we look at this in a Nietzschean way as well, this is just cracking open the kernel of what was already there, revealing human society for what it is. In the past, prior to the Internet, much more of human thoughts and aspirations were cloaked with the ideas that came from a higher strain of culture. It was, for instance, in the same way that the weddings of the common folk even today have the form of allowing them to become aristocrats for just one day.

    In a similar sense, people in the near recent past were spoon-fed higher quality dramas and written materials through the regular media and other established sources. It made things look as if people were more cultivated and aware than they actually might have been, since this was the only go-to source, which came from one level higher than average, everyday normality.

    It seems we are now seeing things as they actually are, which is that people tend to prefer many things that were once through pedestrian or not altogether sophisticated. The values promulgated over the Internet have various forms of right-wing populism, or left-wing populism.

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  5. (1) Jennifer Armstrong's answer to What is Nietzsche's critique of morality? - Quora


    From everything you've stated, it seems that he didn't even have the kind of potential that history gives him, and honestly, his end isn't even surprising. In any case, it is not one's own immorality that demands the establishment of the morality of a society, which he calls a herd, but it is precisely the immorality of the same herd, recognized through the eyes of a moral individual, that demands the reestablishment of morality. And it is wisdom that negates his claims, so if we look at the history of mankind and the world in general, we can find that it has been preserved all along by the wisdom of those who led the "herds", but today we face a real danger of cataclysm due to the influence individuals on the environment, which together form a crowd, as long as it is not overtaken by the reality of a nuclear conflict between two or more superpowers. Therefore, individualism and the egoism associated with it is extremely unreasonable, in my opinion even a stupid path, which inevitably leads to the destruction of everyone. Of course, just my opinion.

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    A few points: One. It is quite typical of “the herd” to make covertly vicious and antagonistic remarks in a glib fashion, such as “honestly his end isn’t even surprising”. It is due to this observable tendency that Nietzsche rises up against the so-called “morality” of the herd. It’s not really so moral when one hates on other people to this degree and wishes them harm.

    Secondly, Nietzsche doesn’t actually disagree with you that herd morality has a preservative effect. His point of disagreement is that he doesn’t think that “herd morality” is the only morality possible.

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  6. (1) Jennifer Armstrong's answer to How do you deal with an audience who is not responsive to your performance? - Quora

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    The majority of people these days are not going to be highly responsive and this is because are currently undergoing a cultural low point, where much of reality, including artistic contributions and constructs are reduced to mere psychological definitions.

    As a consequence of too many armchair diagnosticians, the works of art we come across do not have time to really percolate through the society, or in our minds. instead of allowing the art to lead us down as yet unvisited corridors, we pre-empt the entire process by making evaluations on an individual psychological level. Our favorite it to judge those who have something more interesting to say as “grandiose”.

    As a consequence of this we are to a large extent in an era of unresponsiveness. All the question marks that philosophy raises, and the mystery that art seeks to evoke already have readymade “answers” (although not actually real answers at all). Psychology and psychiatry provide the stop-gap to the mind, preventing it from questioning, or looking deeper.

    How one deals with this is by realizing what has occurred. One must allow what is, in Nietzsche’s terms, a certain degree of “leveling”, whereby those who adopt psychological explanations are left to do so. One yields the ground of “psychological explanations” to them. Over a bit more time, those who have adopted psychological explanations will forge themselves into the lower part of culture. This lower sector will be functional, regulated and highly standardized. It will also have the tendency to self-police anything that isn’t bland, and to raise psychological question marks against it.

    After an even longer time, those who can still create art will forge a higher culture. This higher culture will eschew all psychological explanations in favor of much grittier, much more profound, and highly meaningful and colorful take on reality. Entrance to this level of higher culture will come at a premium price.

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