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Good and Bad, Good and Evil
The
Genealogy of Morals
Friedrich Nietzsche

1
These English psychologists whom
we have to thank for the only attempts up to this point to produce a history
of the origins of morality—in themselves they serve up to us no small riddle.
In the way of a lively riddle, they even offer, I confess, something substantially
more than their books—they are interesting in themselves! These English
psychologists—what do they really want? We find them, willingly or
unwillingly, always at the same work, that is, hauling the partie honteuse
[shameful part] of our inner world into the foreground, in order to
look right there for the truly effective and operative force which has
determined our development, the very place where man’s intellectual pride
least wishes to find it (for example, in the vis inertiae [force of
inertia] of habit or in forgetfulness or in a blind, contingent,
mechanical joining of ideas or in something else purely passive, automatic,
reflex, molecular, and completely stupid)—what is it that really drives these
psychologists always in this particular direction?
Is it a secret, malicious, common
instinct (perhaps one which is self-deceiving) for belittling humanity? Or
something like a pessimistic suspicion, the mistrust of idealists who’ve
become disappointed, gloomy, venomous, and green. Or a small underground
hostility and rancour towards Christianity (and Plato), which perhaps has
never once managed to cross the threshold of consciousness? Or even a
lecherous taste for what is odd or painfully paradoxical, for what in
existence is questionable and ridiculous? Or finally a bit of all of these—a
little vulgarity, a little gloominess, a little hostility to Christianity, a
little thrill, and a need for pepper? . . .
But people tell me that these men
are simply old, cold, boring frogs, who creep and hop around people as if
they were in their own proper element, that is, in a swamp. I resist that
idea when I hear it. What’s more, I don’t believe it. And if one is permitted
to hope where one cannot know, then I hope from my heart that the situation
with these men could be reversed, that these investigators peering at the
soul through their microscopes could be thoroughly brave, generous, and proud
animals, who know how to control their hearts and their pain and who have
educated themselves to sacrifice everything desirable for the sake of the
truth, for the sake of every truth, even the simple, the bitter, the hateful,
the repellent, the unchristian, the unmoral truth. . . . For there are such
truths.—

2
So all respect to the good
spirits that may govern in these historians of morality! But it’s certainly a
pity that they lack the historical spirit itself, that they’ve been left in
the lurch by all the good spirits of history! Collectively they all think
essentially unhistorically, in what is now the traditional manner of
philosophers. Of that there is no doubt. The incompetence of their
genealogies of morals reveals itself at the very beginning, where the issue
is to determine the origin of the idea and of the judgment “good.”
“People,” so they proclaim,
“originally praised unegoistic actions and called them good from the
perspective of those for whom they were done, that is, those for whom such
actions were useful. Later people forgot how this praise began, and because
unegoistic actions had, according to custom, always been praised as good,
people then simply felt them as good, as if they were something inherently
good.”
We see right away that this
initial derivation already contains all the typical characteristics of the
idiosyncrasies of English psychologists—we have “usefulness,” “forgetting,”
“habit,” and finally “error,” all as the foundation for an evaluation in which
the higher man up to this time has taken pride, as if it were a sort of
privilege of men generally. This pride should be humbled, this evaluation of
worth emptied of value. Has that been achieved?
Now, first of all, it’s obvious
to me that from this theory the origin of the idea “good” has been sought for
and established in the wrong place: the judgment “good” did not move here
from those to whom “goodness” was shown! It is much more that case that the
“good people” themselves, that is, the noble, powerful, higher-ranking, and
higher-thinking people felt and set themselves and their actions up as good,
that is to say, of the first rank, in contrast to everything low, low-minded,
common, and vulgar. From this pathos of distance they first arrogated to themselves
the right to create values, to stamp out the names for values. What did they
care about usefulness!
In relation to such a hot pouring
out of the highest rank-ordering, rank-setting judgments of value, the point
of view which considers utility is as foreign and inappropriate as possible.
Here the feeling has reached the opposite of that low level of warmth which
is a condition for that calculating shrewdness, that calculation by
utility—and not just for a moment, not for an exceptional hour, but permanently.
The pathos of nobility and distance, as mentioned, the lasting and
domineering feeling, something total and complete, of a higher ruling nature
in relation to a lower nature, to a “beneath”—that is the origin of the
opposition between “good” and “bad.” (The right of the master to give names
extends so far that we could permit ourselves to grasp the origin of language
itself as an expression of the power of the rulers: they say “that is such
and such,” seal every object and event with a sound and, in the process, as
it were, take possession of it.)
Given this origin, the word
“good” was not in any way necessarily tied up with “unegoistic” actions, as
it is in the superstitions of those genealogists of morality. Rather, that occurs
for the first time with the collapse of aristocratic value judgments, when
this entire contrast between “egoistic” and “unegoistic” pressed itself ever
more strongly into human awareness—it is, to use my own words, the instinct
of the herd which, through this contrast, finally gets its word (and its
words). And even so, it took a long time until this instinct in the masses
became master, with the result that moral evaluation got thoroughly hung up
and bogged down on this opposition (as is the case, for example, in modern
Europe: today the prejudice that takes “moralistic,” “unegoistic,” and “désintéressé”
[disinterested] as equally valuable ideas already governs, with the
force of a “fixed idea” and a disease of the brain).

3
Secondly, however, and quite
separate from the fact that this hypothesis about the origin of the value
judgment “good” is historically untenable, it suffers from an inherent
psychological contradiction. The utility of the unegoistic action is supposed
to be the origin of the praise it receives, and this origin has allegedly
been forgotten: but how is this forgetting even possible? Could the
usefulness of such actions at some time or other perhaps just have stopped?
The case is the opposite: this utility has rather been an everyday experience
throughout the ages, and thus something that has always been constantly
re-emphasized. Hence, instead of disappearing out of consciousness, instead
of becoming something forgettable, it must have pressed itself into the
consciousness with ever-increasing clarity.
How much more sensible is the
contrasting theory (which is not therefore closer to the truth), for example,
the one which is advocated by Herbert Spencer: he proposes that the idea
“good” is essentially the same as the idea “useful” or “functional,” so that
in judgments about “good” and “bad” human beings sum up and endorse the
experiences they have not forgotten and cannot forget concerning the
useful-functional and the harmful-useless. According to this theory, good is
something which has always proved useful, so that it may assert its validity
as “valuable in the highest degree” or as “valuable in itself.” This path to
an explanation is, as mentioned, also false, but at least the account itself
is sensible and psychologically tenable.

4
I was given a hint of the right
direction by this question: What, from an etymological perspective, do the
meanings of “Good” as manifested in different languages really mean? There I
found that all of them lead back to the same transformation of ideas, that
everywhere “noble” or “aristocratic” in a social sense is the fundamental
idea out of which “good” in the sense of “spiritually noble,” “aristocratic,”
“spiritually high-minded,” “spiritually privileged” necessarily develop—a
process which always runs in parallel with that other one which finally
transforms “common,” “vulgar,” and “low” into the concept “bad.” The most
eloquent example of the latter is the German word “schlect”[bad]
itself—which is identical with the word “schlicht” [plain]—compare
“schlectweg” [quite simply] and “schlechterdings” [simply].
Originally these words designated the plain, common man, but without any
suspicious side glance, simply in contrast to the nobility. Around the time
of the Thirty Years War approximately—hence late enough—this sense changed
into the one used now.
As far as the genealogy of morals
is concerned, this point strikes me as a fundamental insight—that it was
first discovered so late we can ascribe to the repressive influence which
democratic prejudice in the modern world exercises over all questions of
origin. And this occurs in what appears to be the most objective realm of
natural science and physiology, a point which I can only hint at here. But
the sort of mischief this prejudice can cause, once it has become unleashed
as hatred, particularly where morality and history are concerned, is revealed
in the well-known case of Buckle: the plebeian nature of the modern spirit,
which originated in England, broke out once again on its home turf, as violently
as a muddy volcano and with the same salty, overloud, and common eloquence
with which all previous volcanoes have spoken.

5
With respect to our problem—which
for good reasons we can call a quiet problem, so refined that it directs
itself only at a few ears—there is no little interest in establishing the
point that often in those words and roots which designate “good” there still shines
through the main nuance of what made the nobility feel they were men of
higher rank. It’s true that in most cases they perhaps named themselves
simply after their superiority in power (as “the powerful,” “the masters,”
“those in command”) or after the most visible sign of their superiority, for
example, as “the rich” or “the owners” (that is the meaning of arya,
and the corresponding words in Iranian and Slavic). But they also named
themselves after a typical characteristic, and that is the case which is our
concern here.
For instance, they called
themselves “the truthful”—above all the Greek nobility, whose mouthpiece is
the Megarian poet Theogonis. The word developed for this characteristic—esthlos
[fine, noble]—indicates, according to its root meaning, a man who is,
who possess reality, who really exists. Then, with a subjective
transformation, it indicates the true man as the truthful man. In this phase
of conceptual transformation it became the slogan and catch phrase for the
nobility, and its sense shifted entirely over to “aristocratic,” to mark a
distinction from the lying common man, as Theogonis takes and presents him,
until finally, after the decline of the nobility, the word remains as a
designation of spiritual nobility and becomes, as it were, ripe and sweet.
In the word kakos [weak,
worthless] as in the word deilos [cowardly] (the plebeian
in contrast to the agathos [good, excellent]) the cowardice is
emphasized. This perhaps provides a hint about the direction in which we have
to seek the etymological origin for the multiple meanings of agathos.
In the Latin word malus [bad] (which I place alongside melas
[black]) the common man could be designated as the dark-coloured,
above all as the dark-haired (“hic niger est” [“this man is black”]),
as the pre-Aryan inhabitant of Italian soil, who stood out from those who
became dominant, the blonds, that is, the conquering race of Aryans, most
clearly through this colour. At any rate, the Gaelic race offers me an
exactly corresponding example. The word fin (for example, in the name Fin-Gal),
the term designating nobility and finally the good, noble, and pure,
originally referred to the blond-headed man in contrast to the dusky,
dark-haired original inhabitants.
Incidentally, the Celts were a thoroughly
blond race. People are wrong when they link the traces of a basically
dark-haired population, which are noticeable on the carefully prepared
ethnographic maps of Germany, with any Celtic origin and mixing of blood, as
Virchow does. It is much rather the case that in these places the pre-Aryan
population of Germany emerged. (The same is true for almost all of Europe:
essentially the conquered races finally attained the upper hand for
themselves once again in colour, shortness of skull, perhaps even in the
intellectual and social instincts. Who can confirm for us that modern
democracy, the even more modern anarchism, and indeed that preference for the
“Commune,” for the primitive form of society, which all European socialists
now share, does not indicate a monstrous counter-attack and that the ruling
and master race, the Aryans, is not being defeated, even physiologically?)
The Latin word bonus [good]
I believe I can explicate as “the warrior,” provided that I am correct in
tracing bonus back to an older word duonus (compare bellum
[war] = duellum [war] = duen-lum, which seems to me to
contain that word duonus). Hence, bonus as a man of war, of
division (duo), as a warrior. We can see what constituted a man’s
“goodness” in ancient Rome. What about our German word “Gut” [good]
itself? Doesn’t it indicate “den Göttlichen” [the god-like man],
the man of “göttlichen Geschlechts” [“the generation of gods]”?
And isn’t that identical to the people’s (originally the nobles’) name for
the Goths? The basis for this hypothesis does not belong here.

6
From this rule that
the concept of political superiority always resolves itself into the concept
of spiritual priority, it is not really an exception (although there is room
for exceptions), when the highest caste is also the priest caste and
consequently for its total range of meanings prefers a scale of values which
recalls its priestly function. So, for example, for the first time the words
“pure” and “impure” appear as marks of one’s social position and later a
“good” and a “bad” develop which no longer refer to social position.
Incidentally, people should be
warned not to take these ideas of “pure” and “impure” from the outset too
seriously, too broadly, or even symbolically. All the ideas of ancient
humanity are initially to be understood to a degree we can hardly imagine,
much more as coarse, crude, superficial, narrow, blunt and, in particular,
unsymbolic. The “pure man” is from the start simply a man who washes himself,
who forbids himself certain foods which produce diseases of the skin, who
doesn’t sleep with the dirty women of the lower people, who has a horror of
blood—no more, not much more!
On the other hand, from the very
nature of an essentially priestly aristocracy it is clear enough how even
here early on the opposition between different evaluations could become
dangerously internalized and sharpened. And in fact they finally ripped open
fissures between man and man, over which even an Achilles of the free spirit
could not cross without shivering. From the very beginning there is something
unhealthy about such priestly aristocracies and about the customary attitudes
which govern in them, which turn away from action, sometimes brooding,
sometimes exploding with emotion, as a result of which in the priests of
almost all ages there have appeared almost unavoidably debilitating
intestinal illness and neurasthenia.
But what they themselves came up
with as a remedy for this pathological disease—surely we can assert that it
has finally shown itself, through its effects, as even a hundred times more
dangerous than the illness for which it was meant to provide relief. Human
beings are still sick from the after-effects of this priestly naïveté in
healing! Let’s think, for example, of certain forms of diet (avoiding meat),
of fasting, of celibacy, of the flight “into the desert” (Weir Mitchell’s
isolation, but naturally without the fattening up cure and overeating which
follow it—a treatment which constitutes the most effective treatment for all
hysteria induced by the ideals of asceticism): consider also the whole
metaphysic of the priests—so hostile to the senses, making men so lazy and
sophisticated—or the way they hypnotize themselves in the manner of fakirs
and Brahmins—Brahmanism employed as a glass head and a fixed idea. Consider
finally the only too understandable and common dissatisfaction with its
radical cure, with nothingness (or God—the desire for a unio mystica
[mystical union] with God is the desire of the Buddhist for nothingness,
nirvana—nothing more!).
Among the priests, everything
mentioned above becomes more dangerous—not only the remedies and arts of
healing, but also pride, vengeance, mental acuity, excess, love, thirst for
power, virtue, illness—although it’s fair enough to add that on the
foundation of this basically dangerous form of human existence, the priest,
for the first time the human being became, in general, an interesting animal,
that here the human soul first attained depth in a higher sense and became
evil—and, indeed, these are the two fundamental reasons for humanity’s superiority,
up to now, over other animals.

7
You will have already guessed how
easily the priestly way of evaluating could split from the knightly-aristocratic
and then continue to develop into its opposite. Such a development receives a
special stimulus every time the priest caste and the warrior caste confront
each other jealously and are not willing to agree about the winner. The
knightly-aristocratic judgments of value have as their basic assumption a
powerful physicality, a blooming, rich, even overflowing health, together
with those things which are required to maintain these qualities—war,
adventure, hunting, dancing, war games, and in general everything which
involves strong, free, happy action. The priestly-noble method of evaluating
has, as we saw, other preconditions: these make it difficult enough for them
when it comes to war!
As is well known, priests are the
most evil of enemies—but why? Because they are the most powerless. From their
powerlessness, their hate grows into something immense and terrifying, to the
most spiritual and most poisonous manifestations. Those who have been the
greatest haters in world history and the most spiritually rich haters have
always been the priests—in comparison with the spirit of priestly revenge all
the remaining spirits are, in general, hardly worth considering. Human
history would be a really stupid affair without that spirit which entered it
from the powerless.
Let us quickly consider the
greatest example. Everything on earth which has been done against “the
nobility,” “the powerful,” “the masters,” “the possessors of power” is not
worth mentioning in comparison with what the Jews have done against them—the
Jews, that priestly people who knew how to get final satisfaction from their
enemies and conquerors through a radical transformation of their values, that
is, through an act of the most spiritual revenge. This was appropriate only
to a priestly people with the most deeply rooted priestly desire for revenge.
In opposition to the aristocratic
value equations (good = noble = powerful = beautiful = fortunate = loved by
god), the Jews, with a consistency inspiring fear, dared to reverse it and to
hang on to that with the teeth of the most profound hatred (the hatred of the
powerless), that is, to “only those who suffer are good; the poor, the
powerless, the low are the only good people; the suffering, those in need,
the sick, the ugly are also the only pious people; only they are blessed by
God; for them alone there is salvation. By contrast, you privileged and
powerful people, you are for all eternity the evil, the cruel, the lecherous,
the insatiable, the godless—you will also be the unblessed, the cursed, and
the damned for all eternity!” . . . We know who inherited this Judaic
transformation of values . . .
In connection with that huge and
immeasurably disastrous initiative which the Jews launched with this most
fundamental of all declarations of war, I recall the sentence I wrote at
another time (in Beyond Good and Evil, p. 118)—namely, that with the
Jews the slave condition in morality begins: that condition which has a
two-thousand-year-old history behind it and which we nowadays no longer notice
because it has triumphed.

8
But you fail to understand that? You
have no eye for something that needed two millennia to emerge victorious? . .
. That’s nothing to wonder at: all lengthy things are hard to see, to assess.
However, that’s what took place: out of the trunk of that tree of vengeance
and hatred, Jewish hatred—the deepest and most sublime hatred, that is, a
hatred which creates ideals and transforms values, something whose like has
never been seen on earth—from that grew something just as incomparable, a new
love, the deepest and most sublime of all the forms of love. From what other
trunk could that have grown?
However, you must not make the
mistake of thinking that this love arose essentially as the denial of that
thirst for vengeance, as the opposite of Jewish hatred. No. The reverse is
the truth! This love grew out of that hatred, as its crown, as the victorious
crown extending itself wider and wider in the purest brightness and sunshine,
which, so to speak, was seeking for the kingdom of light and height, the goal
of that hate—aiming for victory, trophies, seduction, with the same urgency
with which the roots of that hatred were sinking down ever deeper and more
greedily into everything deep and evil.
Take this Jesus of Nazareth, the
bodily evangelist of love, the “Saviour,” who brought holiness and victory to
the poor, to the sick, to the sinners. Was he not in fact seduction in its
most terrible and irresistible form, the seduction and detour to exactly
those Judaic values and new ideals? Didn’t Israel in fact attain, with the
detour of this “Saviour,” with this apparent enemy to and dissolver of
Israel, the final goal of its sublime thirst for vengeance? Isn’t it part of
the secret black art of a truly great politics of vengeance, a far-sighted,
underground, slowly expropriating, and premeditated revenge, that Israel
itself had to disown and nail to the cross, like some mortal enemy, the tool
essential to its revenge before all the world, so that “all the world,” that
is, all Israel’s enemies, could then swallow this bait without a second
thought?
On the other hand, could anyone,
using the full subtlety of his mind, imagine a more dangerous bait? Something
to match the enticing, intoxicating, narcotizing, corrupting power of that
symbol of the “holy cross,” that ghastly paradox of a “god on the cross,”
that mystery of an unimaginable and ultimate final cruelty and
self-crucifixion of god for the salvation of mankind? At least it is certain
that sub hoc signo [under this sign] Israel, with its vengeance and
revaluation of the worth of all other previous values, has triumphed again
and again over all other ideals, over all nobler ideals.

9
“But what are you doing still talking
about more noble ideals! Let’s look at the facts: the people have
triumphed—or ‘the slaves,’ or ‘the rabble,’ or ‘the herd,’ or whatever you
want to call them—if this has taken place because of the Jews, then good for
them! No people had a more world-historical mission. ‘The masters’ have been
disposed of. The morality of the common man has won. We may take this victory
as a blood poisoning (it did mix the races up)—I don’t deny that. But this
intoxication has undoubtedly been successful. The ‘Salvation’ of the human
race (namely, from ‘the masters’) is well under way. Everything is visibly
turning Jewish or Christian or plebeian (what do the words matter!).
The progress of this poison
through the entire body of humanity seems irresistible—although its tempo and
pace may seem from now on constantly slower, more delicate, less audible,
more circumspect—well, we have time enough. . . From this point of view, does
the church today still have necessary work to do, does it really have a right
to exist? Or could we dispense with it? Quaeritur. [That’s a
question to be asked]. It seems that it obstructs and hinders the
progress of this poison, instead of speeding it up? Well, that might even be
what makes the church useful . . . Certainly the church is something
positively gross and vulgar, which a more delicate intelligence, a truly
modern taste resists. Should the church at least not be something more
sophisticated? . . . Today the church alienates more than it seduces. . . Who
among us would really be a free spirit if the church were not there? The
church repels us, not its poison. . . . Apart from the church, we love the
poison. . .”
This is the epilogue of a “free
thinker” to my speech, an honest animal, who has revealed himself well—and in
addition he’s a democrat. He listened to me up that that point and couldn’t
bear to hear my silence. But for me at this point there is much to be silent
about.

10
The slave revolt in morality
begins when the resentment itself becomes creative and gives birth to values:
the resentment of those beings who are prevented from a genuinely active
reaction and who compensate for that with a merely imaginary vengeance. While
all noble morality grows out of a triumphant self-affirmation, slave morality
from the start says “No” to what is “outside,” “other,” “a non-self”. And
this “No” is its creative act. This transformation of the glance which
confers value—this necessary projection towards what is outer instead of back
onto itself—that is inherent in resentment. In order to arise, slave morality
always requires first an opposing world, a world outside itself.
Psychologically speaking, it needs external stimuli in order to act at all.
Its action is basically reaction.
The reverse is the case with the
noble method of valuing: it acts and grows spontaneously. It seeks its
opposite only to affirm itself even more thankfully, with even more
rejoicing. Its negative concept of “low,” “common,” “bad” is only a pale
contrasting image after the fact in relation to its positive basic concept,
thoroughly intoxicated with life and passion, “We are noble, good, beautiful,
and happy!” When the noble way of evaluating makes a mistake and abuses
reality, that happens with reference to the sphere which it does not know
well enough, indeed, the sphere it has strongly resisted learning the truth
about: under certain circumstances it misjudges the sphere it despises—the
sphere of the common man, the low people.
On the other hand, we should
consider that even assuming that the feeling of contempt, of looking down, or
of looking superior falsifies the image of the person despised, such
distortion will fall short by a long way of the distortion with which the
repressed hatred and vengeance of the powerless man mistakenly assault his
opponent—naturally, in effigy. In fact, in contempt there is too much
negligence, too much dismissiveness, too much looking away and impatience,
all mixed together, even too much feeling of joy, for it to be capable of
converting its object into a truly distorted monster.
We should not fail to hear the
almost benevolent nuances which for a Greek noble, for example, lay in all
the words with which he set himself above the lower people—how a constant
form of pity, consideration, and forbearance is mixed in there, sweetening
the words, to the point where almost all words which refer to the common man
finally remain as expressions for “unhappy,” “worthy of pity” (compare deilos
[cowardly], deilaios [lowly, mean], poneros [oppressed
by toil, wretched], mochtheros [suffering, wretched]—the
last two basically designating the common man as a slave worker and beast of
burden). On the other hand, for the Greek ear the words “bad,” “low,”
“unhappy” have never stopped echoing a single note, one tone colour, in which
“unhappy” predominates. That is the inheritance of the old, noble,
aristocratic way of evaluating, which does not betray its principles even in
contempt.
(Philologists might recall the
sense in which oizuros [miserable], anolbos [unblessed],
tlemon [wretched], dustychein [unfortunate], xymfora
[misfortune] were used). The “well born” felt that they were “the happy
ones”; they did not have to construct their happiness artificially first by
looking at their enemies, or in some circumstance to talk themselves into it,
to lie to themselves (the way all men of resentment habitually do). Similarly
they knew, as complete men, overloaded with power and thus necessarily
active, they must not separate action from happiness. They considered being
active necessarily associated with happiness (that’s where the phrase eu
prattein [do well, succeed] derives its origin)—all this is very much the
opposite of “happiness” at the level of the powerless, the oppressed, those
festering with poisonous and hostile feelings, among whom happiness comes out
essentially as a narcotic, an anesthetic, quiet, peace, “Sabbath”, relaxing
the soul, stretching one’s limbs, in short, as something passive.
While the noble man lives for
himself with trust and candour (gennaios, meaning “of noble birth”
stresses the nuance “upright” and also probably “naïve”); the man of
resentment is neither upright nor naïve, nor honest and direct with himself.
His soul squints. His spirit loves hiding places, secret paths, and back
doors. Everything furtive attracts him as his world, his security, his
refreshment. He understands about remaining silent, not forgetting, waiting,
temporarily diminishing himself, humiliating himself. A race of such men of
resentment will necessarily end up cleverer than any noble race. It will
value cleverness to a very different extent, that is, as a condition of existence
of the utmost importance; whereas, cleverness among noble men easily acquires
a delicate aftertaste of luxury and sophistication about it. Here it is not
nearly so important as the complete certainly of the ruling unconscious
instincts or even a certain lack of cleverness, something like brave
recklessness, whether in the face of danger or of an enemy, or wildly
enthusiastic, sudden fits of anger, love, reverence, thankfulness, and
vengefulness, by which in all ages noble souls have recognized each other.
The resentment of the noble man
himself, if it comes over him, consumes and exhausts itself in an immediate
reaction and therefore does not poison. On the other hand, in countless cases
it just does not appear at all; whereas, in the case of all weak and
powerless people it is unavoidable. The noble man cannot take his enemies,
his misfortunes, even his bad deeds seriously for very long—that is the mark
of strong, complete natures, in whom there is a surplus of plastic, creative,
healing power, as well as the power to forget (a good example for that from
the modern world is Mirabeau, who had no memory of the insults and
maliciousness people directed at him, and who therefore could not forgive,
because he just forgot). Such a man with a single shrug throws off himself
all those worms which eat into other men. Only here is possible (provided
that it is at all possible on earth) the real “love for one’s enemy.” How
much respect a noble man already has for his enemies! And such a respect is
already a bridge to love . . . In fact, he demands his enemy for himself, as
his mark of honour. Indeed, he has no enemy other than one who has nothing to
despise and a great deal to respect! By contrast, imagine for yourself “the
enemy” as a man of resentment conceives him—and right here we have his
action, his creation: he has conceptualized “the evil enemy,” “the evil one,”
as a fundamental idea—and from that he now thinks his way to an opposite
image and counterpart, a “good man”—himself!

11
We see exactly the opposite with
the noble man, who conceives the fundamental idea “good” in advance and
spontaneously by himself and from there first creates a picture of “bad” for
himself. This “bad” originating from the noble man and that “evil” arising
out of the stew pot of insatiable hatred—of these the first is a later
creation, an afterthought, a complementary colour; whereas, the second is the
original, the beginning, the essential act of conception in slave morality.
Although the two words “bad” and
“evil” both seem opposite to the same idea of “good,” how different they are.
But it is not the same idea of the “good”; it is much rather a question of
who the “evil man” really is, in the sense of the morality of resentment. The
strict answer to that is as follows: precisely the “good man” of the other
morality, the noble man himself, the powerful, the ruling man, only coloured
over, reinterpreted, and seen only through the poisonous eyes of resentment.
Here there is one thing we will
be the last to deny: the man who knows these “good men” only as enemies,
knows them as nothing but evil enemies, and the same men who are so strongly
bound by custom, honour, habit, thankfulness, even more by mutual suspicion
and jealousy inter pares [among equals] and who, by contrast,
demonstrate in relation to each other such resourceful consideration,
self-control, refinement, loyalty, pride, and friendship—these men, once outside
where the strange world, the foreign, begins, are not much better than beasts
of prey turned loose. There they enjoy freedom from all social constraints.
In the wilderness they make up for the tension which a long fenced-in
confinement within the peace of the community brings about. They go back to
the innocent consciousness of a wild beast of prey, as joyful monsters, who
perhaps walk away from a dreadful sequence of murder, arson, rape, and
torture with exhilaration and spiritual equilibrium, as if they had merely
pulled off a student prank, convinced that the poets now have something more
to sing about and praise for a long time to come.
At the bottom of all these noble
races we cannot fail to recognize the beast of prey, the blond beast splendidly
roaming around in its lust for loot and victory. This hidden basis from time
to time needs to be discharged: the animal must come out again, must go back
into the wilderness,—Roman, Arab, German, Japanese nobility, Homeric heroes,
Scandinavian Vikings—in this need they are all alike.
It was the noble races which left
behind the concept of the “barbarian” in all their tracks, wherever they
went. A consciousness of and a pride in this fact reveals itself even in
their highest culture (for example, when Pericles says to his Athenians, in
that famous Funeral Speech, “our audacity has broken a way through to every
land and sea, putting up permanent memorials to itself for good and
ill.”)—this “audacity” of the noble races, mad, absurd, sudden in the way it expresses
itself, its unpredictability, even the improbability of its
undertakings—Pericles emphatically praises the rayhumia [mental
balance, freedom from anxiety] of the Athenians—its indifference to and
contempt for safety, body, life, comfort, its fearsome cheerfulness and the
depth of its joy in all destruction, in all the physical pleasures of victory
and cruelty—everything summed up for those who suffer from such audacity in
the image of the “barbarian,” the “evil enemy,” something like the “Goth” or
the “Vandal.”
The deep, icy mistrust which the
German evokes, as soon as he comes to power—even today—is still an
after-effect of that unforgettable terror with which for centuries Europe
confronted the rage of the blond German beast (although there is hardly any
idea linking the old Germanic tribes and we Germans, let alone any blood
relationship).
Once before I have remarked on
Hesiod’s dilemma when he thought up his sequence of cultural periods and
sought to express them as Gold, Silver, and Iron. But he didn’t know what to
do with the contradiction presented to him by the marvelous but, at the same
time, horrifying and violent world of Homer, other than to make two cultural
ages out of one and then place one after the other—first the age of Heroes
and Demi-gods from Troy and Thebes, just as that world remained as a memorial
for the noble races who had their own ancestors in it, and then the Iron Age,
as that same world appeared to the descendants of the downtrodden, exploited,
ill treated, those carried off and sold—a metallic age, as mentioned: hard,
cold, cruel, empty of feeling and scruples, with everything crushed and
covered over in blood.
Assuming as true what in any
event is taken as “the truth” nowadays, that it is precisely the purpose of
all culture to breed a tame and civilized animal, a domestic pet, out of the
beast of prey “man,” then we would undoubtedly have to consider the essential
instruments of culture all those instinctive reactions and resentments by
means of which the noble races with all their ideals were finally disgraced
and overpowered—but that would not be to claim that the bearers of these
instincts also in themselves represented culture. It would much rather be the
case that the opposite is not only probable—no! nowadays it is visibly
apparent. These people carrying instincts for oppression and a lust for
revenge, the descendants of all European and non-European slavery, and all
pre-Aryan populations in particular, represent the regression of mankind!
These “instruments of culture” are a disgrace to humanity, more a reason to
be suspicious of or a counterargument against “culture” in general!
We may well be right when we hang
onto our fear of the blond beast at the base of all noble races and keep up
our guard. But who would not find it a hundred times better to fear if he
could at the same time be allowed to admire, rather than not fear and no
longer be able to rid himself of the disgusting sight of the failures, the
stunted, the emaciated, the poisoned? Is not that our fate? Today what is it
that constitutes our aversion to “man”? For we suffer from man—there’s no
doubt of that. It’s not a matter of fear.
Rather it’s the fact that we have nothing more to fear from men, that
the maggot “man” is in the foreground swarming around, that the “tame man,”
the hopelessly mediocre and unpleasant man, has already learned to feel that
he is the goal, the pinnacle, the meaning of history, “the higher man,”—yes
indeed, he even has a certain right to feel that about himself, insofar as he
feels separate from the excess of failed, sick, tired, spent people, who are
nowadays beginning to make Europe stink, and feels at least somewhat
successful, at least still capable of life, at least able to say “Yes” to
life. . .

12
At this point I won’t suppress a
sigh and a final hope. What is it exactly that I find so totally unbearable?
Something which I cannot deal with on my own, which makes me choke and feel
faint? Bad air! Bad air! It’s when something which has failed comes close to
me, when I have to smell the entrails of a failed soul! Apart from that what
can we not endure by way of need, deprivation, bad weather, infirmity,
hardship, loneliness? Basically we can deal with all the other things, born
as we are to an underground and struggling existence. We come back again and
again into the light, we live over and over our golden hour of victory—and
then we stand there, just as we were born, unbreakable, tense, ready for
something new, for something even more difficult, more distant, like a bow
which all trouble only serves always to pull tighter.
But if there are heavenly
goddesses who are our patrons, beyond good and evil, then from time to time
grant me a glimpse, grant me a single glimpse into something perfect,
something completely developed, something happy, powerful, triumphant, from
which there is still something to fear! A glimpse of a man who justifies
humanity, of a complementary and redeeming stroke-of-luck of a man, for whose
sake we can hang onto a faith in humanity! . . .
For matters stand like this: the
diminution and levelling of European man hides our greatest danger, for the
sight of him makes us tired. We see nothing today which wants to be greater.
We suspect that things are constantly going down and down into something
thinner, more good-natured, more prudent, more comfortable, more mediocre,
more indifferent, more Chinese, more Christian—humanity, there is no doubt,
is becoming constantly “better” . . . Europe’s fate lies right here. With our
fear of mankind we also have lost our love for mankind, our reverence for
mankind, our hopes for mankind, even our will to be mankind. A glimpse at man
nowadays makes us tired—what is today’s nihilism, if it is not that? . . . We
are weary of man.

13
But let’s go back: the problem with
the other origin of the “good,” of the good man as the person of resentment
has imagined it for himself, demands some conclusion. That lambs are annoyed
at the great predatory birds is not a strange thing, and the fact that they
snatch away small lambs provides no reason for holding anything against these
large birds of prey. And if the lambs say among themselves, “These predatory
birds are evil—and whoever is least like a predatory bird—and especially
anyone who is like its opposite, a lamb—shouldn’t that animal be good?” there
is nothing to find fault with in this setting up of an ideal, except for the
fact that the birds of prey might look down with a little mockery and perhaps
say to themselves, “We are not at all annoyed with these good lambs—we even
love them. Nothing is tastier than a tender lamb.”
To demand that strength does not
express itself as strength, that it must not consist of a will to overpower,
a will to throw down, a will to rule, a thirst for enemies and opposition and
triumph—that is as unreasonable as to demand that weakness express itself as
strength. A quantum of force is just such a quantum of drive, will,
action—indeed, it is nothing but these drives, willing, and actions in
themselves—and it cannot appear as anything else except through the seduction
of language (and the fundamental errors of reason petrified in it), which
understands and misunderstands all action as conditioned by something which
causes actions, by a “Subject.”
In fact, in just the same way as
people separate lightning from its flash and take the latter as an action, as
the effect of a subject, which is called lightning, so popular morality
separates strength from the manifestations of that strength, as if behind the
strong person there is an indifferent substrate, which is free to manifest
strength or not. But there is no such substrate; there is no “being” behind
the doing, acting, becoming. “The doer” is merely invented after the fact—the
act is everything. People basically duplicate the event: when they see
lightning, well, that is an action of an action: they set up the same event
first as the cause and then again as its effect.
Natural scientists are no better
when they say “Force moves, force causes,” and so on—our entire scientific
knowledge, for all its coolness, its freedom from feelings, still remains
exposed to the seductions of language and has not gotten rid of the
changelings foisted on it, the “Subject” (the atom, for example, is such a
changeling, like the Kantian “Thing in itself”): it’s no wonder that the
repressed, secretly smouldering feelings of rage and hate use this belief for
themselves and, in fact, even maintain a faith in nothing more strongly than
in the idea that the strong are free to be weak and predatory birds are free
to be lambs—and, in so doing, they arrogate to themselves the right to blame
the birds of prey for being birds of prey . . .
When the oppressed, the
downtrodden, the conquered say to each other, with the vengeful cunning of
the powerless, “Let us be different from evil people, namely, good! And that
man is good who does not overpower, who hurts no one, who does not attack,
who does not retaliate, who hands revenge over to God, who keeps himself
hidden, as we do, who avoids all evil and demands little from life in
general—like us, the patient, humble, and upright”—what that amounts to,
coolly expressed and without bias, is essentially nothing more than “We weak
people are merely weak. It’s good if we do nothing, because we are not strong
enough.”
But this bitter state, this
shrewdness of the lowest ranks, which even insects possess (when in great
danger they stand as if they were dead in order not to do “too much”), has,
thanks to the counterfeiting and self-deception of powerlessness, dressed itself
in the splendour of a self-denying, still, patient virtue, just as if the
weakness of the weak man himself—that means his essence, his actions, his
entire single, inevitable, and irredeemable reality—is a voluntary
achievement, something willed, chosen, an act, something of merit. This kind
of man needs to believe in the disinterested, freely choosing “subject” out
of his instinct for self-preservation, self-approval, in which every
falsehood is habitually sanctified. The subject (or, to use a more popular
style, the soul) has up to now probably been the best principle for belief on
earth, because, for the majority of the dying, the weak, and the downtrodden
of all sorts, it makes possible that sublime self-deception which establishes
weakness itself as freedom and their being like this or that as something
meritorious.

14
Is there anyone who would like to
take a little look down on and under that secret how man fabricates an ideal
on earth? Who has the courage for that? Come on, now! Here is an open glimpse
into this dark workshop. Just wait a moment, my dear Mr. Presumptuous and
Nosy: your eye must first get used to this artificial flickering light. . .
So, enough! Now speak! What’s going on down there? Speak up. Say what you
see, man of the most dangerous curiosity—now I’m the one who’s listening.—
—”I see nothing, but I hear all the
more. It is a careful and crafty light rumour-mongering and whispering from
every nook and cranny. It seem to me that people are lying; a sugary mildness
clings to every sound. Weakness is going to be falsified into something of
merit. There’s no doubt about it—things are just as you said they were.”
—Keep talking!
“And powerlessness which does not
retaliate is being falsified into ‘goodness,’ anxious baseness into
‘humility,’ submission before those one hates to ‘obedience’ (of course,
obedience to the one who, they say, commands this submission—they call him
God). The inoffensiveness of the weak man, even cowardice, in which he is
rich, his standing at the door, his inevitable need to wait around—here these
acquire good names, like ‘patience’ and are called virtue. That incapacity
for revenge is called the lack of desire for revenge, perhaps even
forgiveness (‘for they know not what they do—only we know what they do!’).
And people are talking about ‘love for one’s enemy’—and sweating as they say
it.”
—Keep talking!
“They are miserable—there’s no
doubt about that—all these rumour mongers and counterfeiters in the corners,
although crouched down beside each other in the warmth—but they are telling
me that their misery is God’s choice, His sign. One beats the dog one loves
the most. Perhaps this misery may be a preparation, a test, an education,
perhaps it is even more—something that will one day be rewarded and paid out
with huge interest in gold, no, in happiness. They call that ‘blessedness’.”
—Go on!
“Now they are letting me know
that they are not only better than the powerful, the masters of the earth,
whose spit they have to lick (not out of fear, certainly not out of fear, but
because God commands that they honour those in authority)—they are not only
better than these, but they also are ‘better off,’ or at any rate will one
day have it better. But enough! Enough! I can’t endure it any more. Bad air!
Bad air! This workshop where man fabricates ideals—it seems to me it stinks
from nothing but lies.”
—No! Just wait one minute more!
So far you haven’t said anything about the masterpiece of these black
magicians who know how to make whiteness, milk, and innocence out of every
blackness. Have you not noticed the perfection of their sophistication, their
most daring, refined, most spiritual, most fallacious artistic attempt. Pay
attention! These cellar animals full of vengeance and hatred—what are they
making right now out of that vengeance and hatred? Have you ever heard these
words? If you heard only their words, would you suspect that you were
completely among men of resentment?
—”I understand. Once again I’ll
open my ears (oh! oh! oh! and hold my nose). Now I’m hearing for the first
time what they’ve been saying so often: ‘We good men—we are the
righteous’—what they demand they don’t call repayment but ‘the triumph of
righteousness.’ What they hate is not their enemy. No! They hate ‘injustice,’
‘godlessness.’ What they believe and hope is not a hope for revenge, the
intoxication of sweet vengeance (something Homer called ‘sweeter than
honey’), but the victory of God, the righteous God, over the godless. What
remains for them to love on earth are not their brothers in hatred but their
‘brothers in love,’ as they say, all the good and righteous people on the
earth.”
—And what do they call what
serves them as a consolation for all the suffering of life—their
phantasmagoria of future blessedness which they are expecting?
—”What that? Am I hearing
correctly? They call that ‘the last judgment,’ the coming of their kingdom,
the coming of ‘God’s kingdom’—but in the meanwhile they live ‘in faith,’ ‘in
love,’ ‘in hope.’”
—Enough! Enough!

15
Belief in what? Love for what?
Hope for what? There’s no doubt that these weak people at some time or
another also want to be the strong people, some day their “kingdom” is
supposed to arrive—they call it simply “the kingdom of God,” as I mentioned.
People are indeed |