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                 INTERNATIONAL ACADEMY OF BUSINESS    PHILOSOPHY    BATSUEVA DINAH I.

INTERNATIONAL ACADEMY OF  BUSINESS

                                                         HAND –OUTS

Philosophy

Lecture 13. The Philosophy of Life. Friedrich Nietzsche. – 2 hours.

Lecturer: Batsueva Dinah Iuryevna, senior lecturer         

The Department

of  Business Administration

The brief contents of the lecture

Friedrich Nietzsche

born Oct. 15, 1844, Röcken, Saxony, Prussia [now in Germany]

died Aug. 25, 1900, Weimar, Thuringian States

German classical scholar, philosopher, and critic of culture, who became one of the most influential of all modern thinkers. His attempts to unmask the motives that underlie traditional Western religion, morality, and philosophy deeply affected generations of theologians, philosophers, psychologists, poets, novelists, and playwrights. Although he was an ardent foe of nationalism, anti-Semitism, and power politics, his name was later invoked by Fascists to advance the very things he loathed.

Nietzsche's mature philosophy

Nietzsche's writings fall into three well-defined periods. The early works, The Birth of Tragedy and the four Untimely Meditations, are dominated by a Romantic perspective influenced by Schopenhauer and Wagner. The middle period, from Human, All-Too-Human up to The Gay Science, reflects the tradition of French aphorists. It extols reason and science, experiments with literary genres, and expresses Nietzsche's emancipation from his earlier Romanticism and from Schopenhauer and Wagner. Nietzsche's mature philosophy emerged after The Gay Science.

In his mature writings Nietzsche was preoccupied by the origin and function of values in human life. If, as he believed, life neither possesses nor lacks intrinsic value and yet is always being evaluated, then such evaluations can usefully be read as symptoms of the condition of the evaluator. He was especially interested, therefore, in a probing analysis and evaluation of the fundamental cultural values of Western philosophy, religion, and morality, which he characterized as expressions of the ascetic ideal.

The ascetic ideal is born when suffering becomes endowed with ultimate significance. According to Nietzsche the Christian tradition, for example, made suffering tolerable by interpreting it as God's intention and as an occasion for atonement. Christianity, accordingly, owed its triumph to the flattering doctrine of personal immortality, that is, to the conceit that each individual's life and death have cosmic significance. Similarly, traditional philosophy expressed the ascetic ideal when it privileged soul over body, mind over senses, duty over desire, reality over appearance, the timeless over the temporal. While Christianity promised salvation for the sinner who repents, philosophy held out hope for salvation for its sages. Common to traditional religion and philosophy was the instated but powerful motivating assumption that existence requires explanation, justification, or expiation. Both denigrated experience in favour of some other, “true” world. Both may be read as symptoms of a declining life, or life in distress.

Nietzsche's critique of traditional morality centred on the typology of “_______” and “_______” morality. By examining the etymology of the German words gut (“_____”), schlecht (“_____”), and böse (“_____”), Nietzsche maintained that the distinction between good and bad was originally descriptive, that is, a nonmoral reference to those who were privileged, the masters, as opposed to those who were base, the slaves. The good/evil contrast arose when slaves avenged themselves by converting attributes of mastery into vices. If the favoured, the “good,” were powerful, it was said that the meek would inherit the earth. Pride became ____. Charity, humility, and obedience replaced competition, pride, and autonomy. Crucial to the triumph of slave morality was its claim to being the only true morality. This insistence on absoluteness is as essential to philosophical as to religious ethics. Although Nietzsche gave a historical genealogy of master and slave morality, he maintained that it was a historical typology of traits present in everyone.

“Nihilism” was the term Nietzsche used to describe the devaluation of the highest values posited by the ascetic ideal. With the collapse of metaphysical and theological foundations and sanctions for traditional morality only a pervasive sense of purposelessness and meaninglessness would remain. In addition, the triumph of meaninglessness is the triumph of nihilism: “God is dead.” Nietzsche thought, however, that most men could not accept the eclipse of the ascetic ideal and the intrinsic meaninglessness of existence but would seek supplanting absolutes to invest life with meaning. He thought the emerging nationalism of his day represented one such ominous surrogate god, in which the nation-state would be invested with transcendent value and purpose. Moreover, just as absoluteness of doctrine had found expression in philosophy and religion, absoluteness would become attached to the nation-state with missionary fervour. The slaughter of rivals and the conquest of the earth would proceed under banners of universal brotherhood, democracy, and socialism. Nietzsche's prescience here was particularly poignant, and the use later made of him especially repellent. For example, two books were standard issue for the rucksacks of German soldiers during World War I, _______________________________ and ___________________________. It is difficult to say which author was more compromised by this gesture.

Nietzsche often thought of his writings as struggles with nihilism, and apart from his critiques of religion, philosophy, and morality he developed original theses that have commanded attention, especially perspectivism, will to power, eternal recurrence, and the superman.

Perspectivism is a concept, which holds that knowledge is always perspectival, that there are no immaculate perceptions, and that knowledge from no point of view is as incoherent a notion as seeing from no particular vantage point. Perspectivism also denies the possibility of an all-inclusive perspective, which could contain all others and, hence, make reality available as it is in itself. The concept of such an all-inclusive perspective is as incoherent as the concept of seeing an object from every possible vantage point simultaneously.

Nietzsche's perspectivism has sometimes been mistakenly identified with relativism and scepticism. Nonetheless, it raises the question of how one is to understand Nietzsche's own theses, for example, that the dominant values of the common heritage have been underwritten by an ascetic ideal. Is this thesis true absolutely or only from a certain perspective? It may also be asked whether perspectivism can be asserted consistently without self-contradiction, since perspectivism must presumably be true in an absolute that is a nonperspectival sense. Concerns such as these have generated much fruitful Nietzsche commentary as well as useful work in the theory of knowledge.

Nietzsche often identified life itself with “will to power,” that is, with an instinct for growth and durability. This concept provides yet another way of interpreting the ascetic ideal, since it is Nietzsche's contention “that all the supreme values of mankind lack this will—that values which are symptomatic of decline, nihilistic values, are lording it under the holiest names.” Thus, traditional philosophy, religion, and morality have been so many masks a deficient will to power wears. The sustaining values of Western civilization have been sublimated products of decadence in that the ascetic ideal endorses existence as pain and suffering. Some commentators have attempted to extend Nietzsche's concept of the will to power from human life to the organic and inorganic realms, ascribing a metaphysics of will to power to him. Such interpretations, however, cannot be sustained by reference to his published works.

The doctrine of eternal recurrence, the basic conception of Thus Spoke Zarathustra, asks the question “How well disposed would a person have to become to himself and to life to crave nothing more fervently than the infinite repetition, without alteration, of each and every moment?” Presumably most men would, or should, find such a thoughts hattering because they should always find it possible to prefer the eternal repetition of their lives in an edited version rather than to crave nothing more fervently than the eternal recurrence of each of its horrors. The person who could accept recurrence without self-deception or evasion would be a superhuman being, a superman whose distance from the ordinary man is greater than the distance between man and ape, Nietzsche says. Commentators still disagree whether there are specific character traits that define the person who embraces eternal recurrence.

Nietzsche's influence

Nietzsche once wrote that some men are born posthumously, and this is certainly true in his case. The history of 20th-century philosophy, theology, and psychology are unintelligible without him. The German philosophers Max Scheler, Karl Jaspers, and Martin Heidegger laboured in his debt, for example, as did the French philosophers Albert Camus, Jacques Derrida, and Michel Foucault. Existentialism and deconstructionism, a movement in philosophy and literary criticism, owe much to him. The theologians Paul Tillich and Lev Shestov acknowledged their debt as did the “God is dead” theologian Thomas J.J. Altizer; Martin Buber, Judaism's greatest 20th-century thinker, counted Nietzsche among the three most important influences in his life and translated the first part of Zarathustra into Polish. The psychologists Alfred Adler and Carl Jung were deeply influenced, as was Sigmund Freud, who said of Nietzsche that he had a more penetrating understanding of himself than any man who ever lived or was ever likely to live. Novelists like Thomas Mann, Hermann Hesse, André Malraux, André Gide, and John Gardner were inspired by him and wrote about him, as did the poets and playwrights George Bernard Shaw, Rainer Maria Rilke, Stefan George, and William Butler Yeats, among others. Nietzsche is certainly one of the most influential philosophers who ever lived; and this is due not only to his originality but also to the fact that he was the German language's most brilliant prose writer.

Major Works:

1872; The Birth of Tragedy; 1873–76; Untimely Meditations; 1878; Human, All-Too-Human; 1881; Daybreak; 1887; The Gay Science; 1885; Thus Spoke Zarathustra; 1886; Beyond Good and Evil; 1887; On the Genealogy of Morals; 1888; The Case of Wagner; 1889; Twilight of the Idols; 1895; The Antichrist; Nietzsche contra Wagner (1895); Ecce Homo (1908).

 

Questions:

        1)To what kind of philosophy did Friedrich Nietzsche belongs?

 2)Friedrich Nietzsche contribution in philosophy, in the whole Western European culture.

 3)By what was Friedrich Nietzsche preoccupied in his mature writings?

 4)How did Nietzsche characterize the fundamental cultural values of Western philosophy, religion and morality?

 5) According to Nietzsche, Christianity offered imaginary world as truly real instead of

 6)Etymology of what words did F. Nietzsche examine in his analysis of traditional values?

 7)In pagan world the principle values were

 8)Nietzsche asserted that man must live his life in such a way that he would find it possible to accept the eternal repetition of his very life. How is this concept called?

 9) To whom Zarathustra gives such characteristic: “One no longer become poor or rich; both are too burdensome. Who still want to rule? Who still want to obey? Both are too burdensome”?

10) According to “Zarathustra”’s “Three Metamorphoses” of the spirit, the first, second, third metamorphoses.

The task for the office hour

1.To read and analyze “Thus Spoke Zarathustra” by Friedrich Nietzsche.

                2.To assimilate the lecture material and be ready to answer the hand out questions.

                                                                     The list of literature on the topic

( compulsory and additional)

                                                               Compulsory:

  1.  Friedrich Nietzsche – Thus Spoke Zarathustra, any edition.
  2.  Forrest E. Baird, Walter Kaufmann – From Plato to Derrida, Prentice-Hall, 2003;

p. 1031-1062;

                                                                 Additional:

  1.  Friedrich Nietzsche – The Birth of Tragedy, any edition; 
  2.  Friedrich Nietzsche – On the Genealogy of Moral, any edition;
  3.  Friedrich Nietzsche – Beyond Good and Evil, any edition;
  4.  Friedrich Nietzsche – Human, All-Too-Human, any edition;
  5.  Friedrich Nietzsche – Ecce Homo, any edition.            

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