Followers

Saturday, 22 August 2020

Friedrich Nietzsche: a much misunderstood philosopher

 


Friedrich Nietzsche was a philosopher who has been regarded as providing intellectual support to anti-Semitism and Nazism. However, a close reading of his works does little to support this view. The blame for his views being misinterpreted lies very largely with his sister Elizabeth, who edited his work and used it as backing for her own beliefs, which were blatantly in favour of Germany’s National Socialists. When she died in 1935, Adolf Hitler attended her funeral.

Friedrich Nietzsche was born in 1844 in a small town in Saxony which was then part of Prussia. The son of a Protestant minister, he became a professor at the University of Basel but had to retire after only ten years due to ill health. He then wandered across Europe, devoting himself to writing and trying to recover his health. In 1889 he suffered a complete relapse into insanity, dying in 1900 at the age of 55.

Shortly after his death, his writings were edited and published by his sister under the title “The Will to Power”, but there is plenty of evidence to show alterations to his original texts, which has done much to mar the reception of Nietzsche’s thought ever since.

Nietzsche’s writings are varied and cover diverse topics, but he is most renowned for his concept of “the will to power”. He saw that the fundamental driving force of the individual is expressed in the need to dominate and control the external forces operating upon him. He seeks the power to be master of his own destiny.

The frustration of this urge, according to Nietzsche, is responsible for the existence of various moral systems and religious institutions, all of which attempt to bind and subdue the will. This view made Nietzsche particularly hostile to Christianity, which he termed a “slave morality”.

Friedrich Nietzsche saw the will to power as something to be pursued and affirmed, and not to be resisted. However, he did not advocate the dominance of the strong over the weak, nor suggest that mastery of the will to power belongs to some special elite by virtue of birth. The absence of such statements in his work make clear that the Nazis were entirely wrong in their interpretation of his philosophy.

What Nietzsche actually said was that strength is necessary to the evolutionary progress of the human being. But strength, as he understood it, was not constituted in physical but in psychological force. The strong are those who are more complete as human beings because they have learnt to control their passions and have channelled the will to power into a creative force.

Nietzsche used the term “superman”, but his concept had more to do with Aristotle’s notion of a man of virtue than of the Aryan superhero of Nazi philosophy.

Nietzsche’s moral philosophy did not advocate “master morality”, although he clearly believed that being a master was better than being a slave. The point about being strong was that one was then in a position to help the weak, and that was the duty of the man of virtue. Helping the weak was not to be done from a sense of pity, but as a result of the natural urge to have power over one’s own development.

It has to be hoped that in future Nietzsche’s reputation will depend on what he actually wrote rather than on what others may have supposed he did.

© John Welford

No comments:

Post a Comment