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
When N talks about aristocrats, he means military. — Mongrel
Nietzsche is translating history. Why would you disagree with that?So yes, Nietzsche acknowledges and respects the providence of the terms, but his usage of them is philosophical and not historical — StreetlightX
"The I is not the attitude of one being to several (drives, thoughts, etc) but the ego is a plurality of personlike forces, of which now this one now that one stands in the foreground as ego and regards the others as a subject regards an influential and determining external world ... Within ourselves we can also be egoistic or altruistic, hard-hearted, magnanimous, just, lenient, insincere, can cause pain or give pleasure: as the drives are in conflict, the feeling of the I is always strongest where the preponderance is". — StreetlightX
And just exactly as the people separate the lightning from its flash, and interpret the latter as a thing done, as the working of a subject which is called lightning, so also does the popular morality separate strength from the expression of strength, as though behind the strong man there existed some indifferent neutral substratum, which enjoyed a caprice and option as to whether or not it should express strength. But there is no such substratum, there is no "being" behind doing, working, becoming; "the doer" is a mere appendage to the action. — Nietzsche, Geneology of Morals
But there is no such substratum, there is no "being" behind doing, working, becoming; "the doer" is a mere appendage to the action. — Nietzsche, Geneology of Morals
He's saying that the most ancient meaning for good is powerful. The ancient meaning of bad is enslaved. We're talking about physical power here. — Mongrel
I know this was an earlier remark but I've been away, pardon me. This (quote) is of course the view Thrasymachus expresses in Book 1 of the Republic, but which Socrates argues against. To me the 'noble', whether Platonic or Aristotelian, version of the good is not overtly that might is right. It may have an underlying assumption that the stratification of society is unquestioned, and the top layer are the most virtuous or 'good', but that would be different. — mcdoodle
I've been wondering whether the analytic distinction between power-over and power-to is at all useful in this debate. Slave morality seeks to overturn the power-over order of things. Master-morality seeks a space in which to exercise power-to. — mcdoodle
A subject is any actor (whether conscious or not). An object is acted upon. Cause and effect.. closely related situation. — Mongrel
Causes are not observed as such, though. Don't we understand causes to involve energy exchanges which can never be directly observed but can only be inferred? — John
So Kant's 'empirical', the 'for us', is for Schopenhauer 'representation' and Kant's 'transcendental, the 'in-itself' is for Schopenhauer 'will'? — John
But in lesser ways we can follow the course from thesis/antithesis to synthesis, right?So, I would say that we can determine what the world is, in the empirical sense, but we cannot determine what spirit is. — John
But in lesser ways we can follow the course from thesis/antithesis to synthesis, right? — Mongrel
If you say it expresses itself as the world, hasn't it been analyzed to speaker and expression? — Mongrel
Perhaps 'creator' and 'creation' would be closer, but the nature of the expression is a mystery, not something analyzable. Just as it is a mystery as to exactly what a work of art reveals about its creator, and also as to how it is even possible that it is an expression of her spirit (although I think we know it is). — John
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