Friedrich Nietzsche is an elitist and
anti-democratic philosopher. They say that Nietzsche is one of the easiest
philosophers to read but one of the most difficult to understand.
It has frequently been claimed that Nietzsche
despised modern feminism, along with democracy and socialism. The English
philosopher Bertrand Russell wrote that Nietzsche never tired of inveighing
against women and said that Nietzsche wrote: "Thou goest to woman? Do not forget thy whip." This actual
quote is uttered by an old woman to Zarathustra. Russell wrote that Nietzsche's
writings displayed the power fantasies of an invalid and that nine times out of
ten, a woman would've taken that whip off Nietzsche, and given him a good
beating with it. Yet, Nietzsche had numerous close friendships with early
feminists and highly educated women, including Meta von Salis, the first woman
in Switzerland to gain a PhD. He was also a friend of Lou Salome, a
psychoanalyst, author and essayist.
Nietzsche called socialism "the tyranny of the meanest and the dumbest"
and claimed that it attracts inferior people who are motivated by resentment.
Nietzsche saw ordinary human beings as the "bungled and botched" and he saw no objection to their
suffering if it was necessary for the production of a great man. He claimed
that exemplary human beings must craft their own identity through
self-realization and become the masters of their own fate. Nietzsche's "Ubermensch' or 'Overman' represents a human ideal and a goal for humanity. He saw
civilization and its values has being born from barbarism a process where the
strong eliminated the weak and the educated eliminated the uneducated. He
wrote:
"Life is
the will to power; our natural desire to dominate and reshape the world to fit
our own preference and assert our personal strength to the fullest degree."
He also believed that morality was the herd
instinct of the individual and that there were no facts but only
interpretations. He wrote: “Morality is
just fiction used by the herd of inferior human beings to hold back the few
superior individuals.”
Bertrand Russell wrote: "What Caesar Borgia was to Machiavelli, Napoleon was to Nietzsche: a
great man defeated by petty opponents."
I know that Nietzsche greatly admired the writings
of Fyodor Dostoevsky and in Dostoevsky's novel 'Crime and Punishment', there is much talk of the Napoleon complex
and ordinary and extraordinary people. Raskolnikov's theory of the ordinary and
extraordinary individual, mirrors Nietzsche's thoughts very closely. I think
Nietzsche was probably very much influenced by this book and Dostoevsky in
general who he saw as great psychological writer.
Nietzsche has been identified with German Nazis but
this is mainly due to the influence of his pro-Nazi sister Elisabeth, who had
married a notorious anti-Semite agitator called Bernhard Forster in 1885.
Nietzsche refused to attend the wedding and the couple went off to Paraguay to
found a New Germany of "pure blooded"
Aryan colonists.
If there were three things that Nietzsche hated, it
was the big state, nationalism and anti-Semitism. He once proposed marriage to
the Russian-born, Lou Salome, who was Jewish and she refused his offer. She
certainly made the right decision because Nietzsche finished up going mad which
they think was due to syphilis. His philosophy influenced many writers
including Jack London, D.H. Lawrence and George Bernard Shaw.
Today, this German philosopher, has been adopted by
the alt-right. Richard Spencer, a leading light of America's alt-right claimed
in an interview that he'd been "red-pilled" by reading Nietzsche. In
the film 'The Matrix', popping the
red pill, allows you to perceive reality. Spencer is an advocate of white
nationalism, anti-feminism, racial and cultural purity. Nietzsche would've been
opposed to all these things. He insisted that he'd rather be a good European
than a good German, calling ("Germany,
Germany, above all") the death of German philosophy. One of his last
letters proposed that all anti-Semites should be shot.
1 comment:
Spot on this. His sister offered Hitler her brothers cane , Hitler flatly refused he claimed to know very little of Nietzsche , he was certainly not referenced in any of the Nazi
Propaganda speeches. Hitler thought his sister was always trying to win favour with him.
He was a consummate believer in European
Ideal . Thus spoke Zarathustra is a complicated book with a lot of undercurrents
and the tight rope chapter has a lot of different meanings . I’m not so certain that anybody understands this book to any degree of certainty , what it’s defined purpose and understanding really is .
“At least I never got it completely”…
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