Genealogy of Morals
From charlesreid1
Notes
Preface
In the Preface, Nietzsche makes clear the aim of the book: it is to answer the question quoted below. "Under what conditions did man construct the value judgments good and evil? And what is their intrinsic worth?" In this book Nietzsche questions the widely-held notions of good and evil, and pulls apart notions of "good". At the center of the book is the following thesis, also from the preface:
What if the "good" man represents not merely a retrogression but even a danger, a temptation, a narcotic drug enabling the present to live at the expense of the future? More comfortable, less hazardous, perhaps, but also baser, more petty - so that morality itself would be responsible for man, as a species, failing to reach the peak of magnificence of which he is capable? What if morality should turn out to be the danger of dangers? ...- Preface, VI
Unfortunately, this is an extremely toxic and dangerous notion to be planted in the wrong mind. This is one of the troubles with interpreting Nietzsche - he writes in generalities and metaphors, so he speaks to every a little differently.
As the book launches into its opening, there are several attacks on "the Jews", a group that Nietzsche uses throughout the book, in very biting ways, to illustrate what he sees as an inversion of values that was introduced by Judaism and the Judeo-Christian tradition - and culminating in "Jesus of Nazareth, the gospel of love made flesh, the 'redeemer', who brought blessing and victory to the poor, the sick, the sinners - what was he but temptation in its most sinister and irresistible form, bringing men by a roundabout way to precisely those Jewish values and renovations of the ideal?"
Nietzsche also refers to the Judeo-Christian moral value system as "slave ethics" - a repugnant term from a different time. As Nietzsche scores points trolling everyone from psychologists to Jews, to Germans, to Christians, it becomes clear how an ignorant mind with ill-formed ideas could easily twist this book into an intellectual hammer with which to smash everything.
This is how Nietzsche is, though - tone-deaf to the implications of what he's saying. It brings to mind a quote about Nietzsche from Bertrand Russell's History of Western Philosophy:
He [Nietzsche] has never conceived of the man who, with all the fearlessness and stubborn pride of the superman, nevertheless does not inflict pain because he has no wish to do so. Does any one suppose that Lincoln acted as he did from fear of hell?- Bertrand Russell, History of Western Philosophy
Quotes
Preface
We have no right to isolated thoughts, whether truthful or erroneous. Our thoughts should grow out of our values with the same necessity as the fruit out of the tree. Our yeas and nays, our ifs and buts should all be intimately related and bear testimony to one will, one health, one soil, one sun. Supposing you find these fruits unpalatable? What concern is that of the trees - or of us, the philosophers?- Preface, II
Under what conditions did man construct the value judgments good and evil? And what is their intrinsic worth?- Preface, III
What if the "good" man represents not merely a retrogression but even a danger, a temptation, a narcotic drug enabling the present to live at the expense of the future? More comfortable, less hazardous, perhaps, but also baser, more petty - so that morality itself would be responsible for man, as a species, failing to reach the peak of magnificence of which he is capable? What if morality should turn out to be the danger of dangers? ...- Preface, VI
Should this treatise seem unintelligible or jarring to some readers, I think the fault need not necessarily be laid at my door. It is plain enough, and it presumes only that the reader will have read my earlier works with some care - for they do, in fact, require careful reading.- Preface, VIII
Links
PDF copy of Cambridge Press edition: http://www.inp.uw.edu.pl/mdsie/Political_Thought/GeneologyofMorals.pdf