(Although it may appear
otherwise, this is not another Genealogie
entry, but a smooth move from that one to the next Nietzschean work, which
is Die Götzen-Dämmerung.)
In an already quoted passage from
Genealogie-3-12, Nietzsche remarks that the
more eyes, different eyes, we can use to observe one thing, the more complete
will our concept of this thing, our objectivity, be. We ought to
keep this profound observation in mind as we approach one of the so many
ostensibly unpalatable statements he has in store for us, as I do, reconciling
my love of Nietzsche with the offended sense of right and wrong, whenever these
two are at odds over something downright outrageous that he has just said in my
presence.
Both my mother and my father were
Russian Orthodox believers, religion and patriotism being inseparable --- not
at all paradoxically --- in the Soviet State.
I was raised in a God-loving
home, where “morality” was one of the most important words in our
lexicon, and the goodness, the propriety, and the absolute necessity of moral
conduct was unequivocally recognized and honored. It is therefore
impossible to take Nietzsche’s side in his relentless attacks on morality,
should the question be formulated as “are you for it or against it?” But
fortunately Nietzsche himself provides the solution for establishing a
reasonable compatibility of the incompatibles. He does not require us to take
the side of Böse against the side of niceness, as Maxwell Smart
used to euphemize the word Gut. Rather than taking sides, what he has
suggested is to go jenseits, and, all of a sudden, his intention, and the
advantage that it offers to us, are daylight clear: he is offering us an “extra
eye” to look at the subject of morality, so dear to our hearts and minds.
And, of course, the more eyes, different eyes, we
may use to observe the same thing, the more complete will our concept of this
thing, our objectivity, be. Therefore, we have nothing to lose, but
a great deal to gain here, thus paying proper tribute to the subject whose “goodness,
propriety, and absolute necessity we unequivocally recognize and honor.”
The whole preceding consideration
has been presented to the reader in anticipation of the following passage, which
is both explosive and breathtakingly fresh, from Nietzsche’s Die
Götzen-Dämmerung: The Improvers of Mankind: 1-2:
“…My
demand of the philosopher is well known: that he take his stand beyond good and
evil, and treat the illusion of moral judgment as beneath him. This demand
follows from an insight I was first to articulate, namely, that there are no
moral facts. Moral and religious judgments are based on realities which do not
exist. Morality is merely an interpretation of certain phenomena --- or, more
precisely, a misinterpretation. Moral judgments, like religious ones, belong to
a stage of ignorance, in which the very concept of the real, and the
distinction between what is real and imaginary, are still lacking. “Truth” at
this stage designates all sorts of things which we today call “figments of the
imagination.” Moral judgments are therefore never to be taken literally: So
understood, they are always merely absurd. Semiotically, however, they remain
invaluable: they reveal, at least for those who can interpret them, the most
valuable realities of cultures and psychologies that did not know how to
“understand” themselves. Morality is only a language of signs (a group of
symptoms): one must know how to interpret them correctly, to be able to profit
from them.
A
first, tentative example: at all times morality has aimed to “improve” men ---
this aim is above all what was called morality. Under the same word, however,
the most divergent tendencies have been concealed. But “improvement” has meant
both taming the beast called man, and breeding a particular kind of man. Such
zoological concepts are required to express the realities--- realities, of
which the typical “improver,” the priest, admittedly neither knows anything, nor
wants to know anything.
To
call the taming of an animal its “improvement” sounds almost like a joke to our
ears. Whoever knows what goes on in kennels, doubts that dogs are “improved”
there. They are weakened, they are made less harmful, and through the
depressive effect of fear, through pain, through wounds, and through hunger,
they become sickly beasts. It is no different with the tamed man. whom the priest
has “improved.” In the early Middle Ages,-- when the church was indeed, above
all, a kennel,-- the most perfect specimens of the “blond beast” were hunted
down everywhere; and the noble Teutons, for example, were “improved.” But how
did such an “improved” Teuton look, after he had been drawn into a monastery?
Like a caricature of man, a miscarriage: he had become a ‘sinner,’ he was stuck
in a cage tormented with all sorts of painful concepts. And there he lay, sick,
miserable, hateful to himself, full of evil feelings against the impulses of
his own life, full of suspicion against all that was still strong and happy. In
short, a “Christian.”
Physiologically
speaking, in the struggle with beasts, making them sick may be the only way to
make them weak. The church understood this: it sickened and weakened man--- and
by so doing, “improved” him.”
As I said before, it is
practically impossible for a Christian, or for an adherent of a great religious
tradition other than Christianity, to accept this ruthless assassination of
morality, while standing on the moral ground provided by those traditions. But
then, it is equally impossible to make a moralist of one religious tradition
accept the morality of a competing religious tradition as well. It is only on
neutral ground, provided to the thinking man by philosophy, and general common
sense, that such philosophical challenges and dares may be accepted, and, both
intellectually and morally, benefited from.
In fact, it is only when standing
on such neutral ground, while reading Nietzsche, that we can properly see and
address--not the basics of our morality, which are hopefully unassailable in
the best of us--but some of the worst excesses of micro-religious moralities
imposed on the believers by their crafty denominations.
This reminds me of a conversation
I had with a conservative Baptist pastor a few years ago about the evils of
drinking and smoking in the eyes of some, while not in the eyes of others. Many
Baptist congregations, he told me, outlaw smoking as an immoral vice across the
United States, but not in Kentucky, where tobacco is grown, and any attack on
smoking is considered an attack on an important home industry, and therefore,
immoral in itself, as outlawing smoking in Kentucky undercuts people’s ability
to be self-sufficient. By the same token, drinking alcohol is prohibited as a
noxious vice by numerous congregations across the United States, but not in the
State of California, where Sonoma and Napa Counties depend on the wine industry
in making their ends meet… Mind you, we were not even talking about the
practices of different Christian or Baptist denominations in America, but about
the practices of a single denomination --- Southern Baptist, --- which vary from state
to state in their definition of Gut und Böse, depending on the types of
industries these states rely on, a criterion which has nothing to do with
religious morality per se!
So, long live Nietzsche’s extra
eye and his daring to criticize those who dare to hide behind the authority
of God just because it best suits their worldly purposes!