Introduction
If you were to design a machine for endless debate and
disagreement you would still be less successful than Nietzsche. His critique of
morality, On the Genealogy of Morals, ‘GM’ from here onwards, paints a picture
of the complex road that led us to our current value systems and the characters
and instincts that caused it. The following evaluation looks at how effective
Nietzsche was with this critique, arguing the although he succeeds in part
there are also areas where more recent advances in our understanding of
ourselves offer a better explanation.
Evaluating Nietzsche
Nietzsche’s preface sets out what he wishes to achieve in
producing a polemic, “a piece of writing or a speech in which a person strongly
attacks or defends a particular opinion, person, idea, or set of beliefs”
Generally, we consider morality or ethics as a system of
values which enable us to determine the rightness or wrongness of thoughts and
actions
‘Genealogy’ is a form of historical critique that, by tracing
the components of an idea, it reveals their true nature and the actors involved,
often providing a new previously hidden perspective. Nietzsche’s method relies
on psychological explanations of our behaviour and thoughts on supposedly well
understood beliefs, such as religion
General Themes of GM
In GM Nietzsche asks: “How was it that humility and
meekness, modesty and denial of the flesh – and, in a way, the wholesale denial
of the self – were turned into values? How can one explain that these became
the compass-setting gauges by which people steered the courses of their lives?”
The answer to those questions forms part of his no-saying
phase after his yes-saying phase: the latter being completed by Thus Spoke
Zarathustra
The scope of the critique, which heavily targets Christian,
Kantian and Utilitarian philosophy, is actually aimed at the ideas that each of
them have that cause damage to an individual or a societies will to life,
ultimately damaging ‘higher individuals’ for the benefit of ‘lower individuals.
The value systems that GM highlights that should be mistrusted are ones that
consider themselves to be universal, give individuals free will (Free Will Thesis),
visible inner worlds (Transparency of Self Thesis) and claim that we are created
equal (Similarity Thesis)
Value systems do have the effect of differentiating the good
from the bad, or evil, which would create a caste of higher or lower individuals.
The value system would be brought about by a wider system of beliefs which
means the level to which you are convinced is based on your acceptance of
Nietzsche’s belief that the ‘will to life’ should be our primary measure of
value over other possible objectives . The general point is that the
differentiation and origin of value systems must be questioned. That corrosive
norms can erode societies, or at the very least change them, is a persuasive
notion
The existence of - or nonexistence of - free will based on
the reasons Nietzsche puts forward, that we lack freedom as we are ‘causa
sui’ or caused by, are simple and have been both supported and countered
with neither side gaining a clear upper hand
I concur with Nietzsche’s rejection of the Transparency of
Self Thesis, that we do not have perfect understanding and control of our inner
world, as seen through both akratic and recalcitrant behaviour
Just as the view that there is not a universal morality
within GM, the view that these systems rely on showing equality amongst
individuals is also well argued for
GM builds a grand and often imprecise narrative. Although the
core narrative is persuasive, it is difficult to grasp at exactly why,
especially if we look at recorded history. This kind of system is well
described by Hofstadter in Gödel, Escher, Bach where he show how there
are generally two type of system, one that gives some of the truth and no
falsehood and another that gives us all of the truth but some of its results
are false
The ‘slave revolt’ in morality
“The truth of the first essay is the psychology of
Christianity: the birth of Christianity out of the spirit of ressentiment,
not, as is believed, out of the ‘spirit’, – a countermovement in its very
essence, the great revolt against the dominance of noble values”
The second essay starts with English psychologists seeking
immortal truth but not in the right way. They look at the concept of goodness and
not those who are good; they look too deeply and do not question the concept of
good itself. Nietzsche argues that those who are truly good, the nobles, have
been brought down and their virtues forgotten by our ‘herd instinct’ and that
tells us we need no ego. Part of the ruling class become priestly, panderers to
the poor, who use their worst instincts against them and the nobles. This process
takes place over many years and has been brought about by many doctrines (Jews,
Christians, Plebs), driven by resentful creativity due to a ‘lack of’ rather
than a triumphant striving. Leaving what was previously good, or triumphant not
just as bad but as evil, as those systems lead to denying or causing suffering
to others. Noble ideas can lead to bad individuals such as Napoleon but unlike
slave morality they do not lead to evil ones
In his strategic view Jay argues this is untenable, the
revolt is for the weak to harm the powerful, resentment is great enough to
cause action. He asks why would the weak use a roundabout way of harming the
powerful? I would argue Jay has straw-manned Nietzsche’s conceptual framework
as a described plan enacted by an individual or group consciously as opposed to
the end result of a more complex system, Wallace notes this but still disagrees
Jay has a preferred proposal: his ‘Expressive
interpretation’ which details how resentment at a moral psychological level would
lead to the slave revolt, to which I agree is a reasonable view as peoples will
and emotions when aggregated could drive them to take action in order to change
their circumstance
The emergence of bad conscience and guilt
“The second essay gives the psychology of the conscience:
conscience is not, as is believed, ‘the voice of God in man’, – it is the
instinct of cruelty that is turned inwards after it cannot discharge itself
outwards anymore. Cruelty is first brought to light here as one of the oldest
and most persistent underpinnings of culture”
Nietzsche explains how Humans are the animal that can
promise, that as a group can have a morality of custom. These promises we can
make to ourselves and others and through our memory brings about the emergence
of our conscience. This conscience can be made to punish those who feel they
owe another or themselves. This creditor/debtor relationship goes from practical
trading to a suffering on behalf of those who are owed; the suffering becomes
the payment. We are given a way out not through paying debts but increased
suffering. A further step paints suffering as the purpose of life, and such a
view is attributed to Christianity. Nietzsche argues we should actually aim for
prosperity amongst creditors to forgive or ignore debts. Instead, doctrines of
revenge disguised as justice demand payment, even when not needed, and these
are entrenched through codification into religious doctrine and laws. The
codified system of constraints forces individuals’ energies to be internalised
causing our instincts for freedom to produce a bad conscience towards our
thoughts and actions. For all these internalised debts now need an ultimate
creditor, so we create God
In analysing the second essay Risse provides a view from
Nietzsche that explains how a complex structure must have isolatable roots, of
which each of the essays identifies a root of Morality. He agrees with Nietzsche
about the fundamentals of instincts, our inner world and the debt we incur to
ancestors and gods and that the death of God will allow us to find a new better
way
Risse’s account is questioned by Ridley
A more interesting critique of the emergence of the bad
conscience is the more modern idea of the Selfish gene. Richard Dawkins builds
a compelling case for how genes, via an evolutionary process, would survive if
they cause altruistic behaviour that allows them to spread in a population
The ascetic ideal
“The third essay gives the answer to the question of how the
ascetic ideal, the priestly ideal, acquired such incredible power despite the
fact that it is the detrimental ideal par excellence, a will to the end, a
decadence ideal”
Nietzsche explains how we will nothingness rather than not will.
This instinct leads us to ascetic ideals. He paves the road to those ideals
through a range of characters. Philosophers, for example, start to see things
as only if they can be seen as such without interest or emotion, as things in
themselves. This, Nietzsche asserts, is a case of philosophers denying life to
themselves in order to suffer for the truth, a truth they may never even be
able to achieve. These types of movement start to be guided by priests who
spread these resentful and hostile ideals to harness the power of slaves. They
place life as against death, preserving life but limiting it. The limiters then
hold themselves up as something to strive for, a gold standard over nobles, but
they only anaesthetise rather than cure, keeping their followers forever ill. Nietzsche
also explains how philosophers and scientists look like they are the answer,
but in reality they are just the next phase of the ascetic ideals as they
merely have a metaphysical faith not a love of life, affirming another world
but not the one we must live in
These Ascetic Ideals adopted by philosophers, artists,
priests and most people are driven by striving for optimal conditions and to
maximise their power. Given that suffering is unavoidable and meaningless,
suffering is unbearable; anything that gives meaning to suffering is something
life will choose as meaningless suffering is the worst fate we can suffer
The third essay is vastly speculative beyond its effective
arguments against our existing value systems and how they are unlikely to truly
deliver for us but offering no deeply insightful critiques of Morality.
Conclusion
Nietzsche’s critique is not exhaustive but well focussed on
key roots of our concept of morality. The powerful genealogical method feels like
it can give us all the truth but makes it hard to see its falsehoods. The Free
Will Thesis, Transparency of self-thesis and Similarity Thesis convincingly
make us question what we need to understand from any system of values we
subscribe to. The first essay’s revolt as real-world corollaries that we could
apply Nietzsche’s framework to question and understand todays views on Morality.
The second essay relies on an underlying cruelty that does not seem to fit with
the latest understanding of what drives our instincts. With the third essay
once more raising key questions we should pose to any value system. Nietzsche
succeeds in his nay-saying but not all of his reasoning is valid or sound. His
limited yes-saying is too cryptic to leave us with a clear route forward and
will remain a topic of debate until the end of time.
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