I agree. I think that people are incapable of thinking of nations or individuals as 'forces of nature' and they inevitably hold attitudes of blame for, and anger and desire for revenge on account of, actions that they think have injured them or their loved ones, their interests or even the interests of their society. — John
But why couldn't the stomach the alternative? What was so very bad about Clinton, — Marchesk
What were his father's convictions? My speculation has been that it was a massive emotional response to Schopenhauer's pessimism. But that can't be all..But Nietzsche himself seems trapped in ressentiment, shadowed by his own father's convictions, or why would he so have it in for gentle Jesus meek and mild? — mcdoodle
You nailed Nietzsche's view of it... that resentment is reactive. It's not a type of life that arises from within and expresses outward. It only responds to outward stimulation with "NO!"Then I agree with N, there is a terrible vacuity to the slave morality, what will it find of value beyond the overthrow of the supposed Master? — mcdoodle
But then, isn't there in what N says a strange yearning for the irretrievable noble, the knightly, like Raymond Chandler novels? I bring you, the Uber Detective who knows all, but has barely a personal answer. — mcdoodle
But I would not say I am beyond good and evil at all, — Moliere
So...no subject, no moral responsibility and no valid reason for resentment? — John
So in society, anyone is helpless before another or an institution, for it amounts to being subject to the freedom of other people. — TheWillowOfDarkness
So this is where I'm at. I'm frustrated that people don't understand the OP, the essay it draws from, or Un's response. I want to debate it, and I'm open to real debate, but no one seems to understand the ideas they're debating. There's a lot of posturing, mostly machismo, but no one, besides Un, seems to actually grasp the idea and argumentation involved. — csalisbury
5. The evidence that long-lasting institutions have avoided producing normatively intolerable outcomes in many kinds of unknown past circumstances is also evidence that they may avoid producing such outcomes in unknown future circumstances. — Kazuma
Again, the argument is blisteringly bad. — csalisbury