Nietzsche: The Will To Power
PREFACE
(Nov. 1887-March 1888)
1
Of what is great one must either be silent or speak with greatness.
With greatness-that means cynically and with innocence.
2
What I relate is the history of the next two centuries. I describe
what is coming, what can no longer come differently: the advent
of nihilism. This history can be related even now; for necessity
itself is at work here. This future speaks even now in a hundred
signs, this destiny announces itself everywhere; for this music
of the future all ears are cocked even now. For some time now,
our whole European culture has been moving as toward a catastrophe,
with a tortured tension that is growing from decade to decade:
restlessly, violently, headlong, like a river that wants to reach
the end, that no longer reflects, that is afraid to reflect.
3
He that speaks here, conversely, has done nothing so far but
reflect: a philosopher and solitary by instinct, who has found
his advantage in standing aside and outside, in patience, in
procrastination, in staying behind; as a spirit of daring and
experiment that has already lost its way once in every labyrinth
of the future; as a soothsayer-bird spirit who looks back when
relating what will come; as the first perfect nihilist of Europe
who, however, has even now lived through the whole of nihilism,
to the end, leaving it behind, outside himself.
4
For one should make no mistake about the meaning of the title
that this gospel of the future wants to bear. "The Will
to Power: Attempt at a Revaluation of All Values"-in this
formulation a countermovement finds expression, regarding both
principle and task; a movement that in some future will take
the place of this perfect nihilism-but presupposes it, logically
and psychologically, and certainly can come only after and out
of it. For why has the advent of nihilism become necessary? Because
the values we have had hitherto thus draw their final consequence;
because nihilism represents the ultimate logical conclusion of
our great values and ideals-because we must experience nihilism
before we can find out what value these "values" really
had.-We require, sometime, new values.
BOOK ONE
EUROPEAN NIHILISM
1 (1885-1886)
Toward an Outline
1. Nihilism stands at the door: whence comes this uncanniest
of all guests? Point of departure: it is an error to consider
"social distress" or "physiological degeneration"
or, worse, corruption, as the cause of nihilism. Ours is the
most decent and compassionate age. Distress, whether of the soul,
body, or intellect, cannot of itself give birth to nihilism (i.e.,
the radical repudiation of value, meaning, and desirability).
Such distress always permits a variety of interpretations. Rather:
it is in one particular interpretation, the Christian-moral one,
that nihilism is rooted.
2. The end of Christianity-at the hands of its own morality (which
cannot be replaced), which turns against the Christian God (the
sense of truthfulness, developed highly by Christianity, is nauseated
by the falseness and mendaciousness of all Christian interpretations
of the world and of history; rebound from "God is truth"
to the fanatical faith "All is false"; Buddhism of
action-).
3. Skepticism regarding morality is what is decisive. The end
of the moral interpretation of the world, which no longer has
any sanction after it has tried to escape into some beyond, leads
to nihilism. "Everything lacks meaning" (the untenability
of one interpretation of the world, upon which a tremendous amount
of energy has been lavished, awakens the suspicion that all interpretations
of the world are false). Buddhistic tendency, yearning for Nothing.
(Indian Buddhism is not the culmination of a thoroughly moralistic
development; its nihilism is therefore full of morality that
is not overcome: existence as punishment, existence construed
as error, error thus as a punishment-a moral valuation.) Philosophical
attempts to overcome the "moral God" (Hegel, pantheism).
Overcoming popular ideals: the sage; ~he saint; the poet. The
antagonism of "true" and "beautiful" and
"good"-
4. Against "meaninglessness" on the one hand, against
moral value judgments on the other: to what extent has all science
and philosophy so far been influenced by moral judgments? and
won't this net us the hostility of science? Or an antiscientific
mentality? Critique of Spinozism. Residues of Christian value
judgments are found everywhere in socialistic and positivistic
systems. A critique of Christian morality is still lacking
5. The nihilistic consequences of contemporary natural science
(together with its attempts to escape into some beyond). The
industry of its pursuit eventually leads to self-disintegration,
opposition, an antiscientific mentality. Since Copernicus man
has been rolling from the center toward X.*
6. The nihilistic consequences of the ways of thinking in politics
and economics, where all "principles" are practically
histrionic: the air of mediocrity, wretchedness, dishonesty,
etc. Nationalism. Anarchism, etc. Punishment. The redeeming class
and human being are lacking-the just)fiers-
7. The nihilistic consequences of historiography and of the "practical
historians," i.e., the romantics. The position of art: its
position in the modern world absolutely lacking in originality.
Its decline into gloom. Goethe's allegedly Olympian stance.
8. Art and the preparation of nihilism: romanticism (the conclusion
of Wagner's Nibelungen).
I. NIHILISM
2 (Spring-Fall 1887)
What does nihilism mean? That the highest values devaluate tiemselves.
The aim is lacking; "why?" finds no answer.
3 (Spring-Fall 1887)
Radical nihilism is the conviction of an absolute untenability
of existence when it comes to the highest values one recognizes;
plus the realization that we lack the least right to posit a
beyond or an in-itself of things that might be "divine"
or morality incarnate.
This realization is a consequence of the cultivation of "truthfulness"-thus
itself a consequence of the faith in morality.
4 (June 10, 1887)3
What were the advantages of the Christian moral hypothesis?
1. It granted man an absolute value, as opposed to his smallness
and accidental occurrence in the flux of becoming and passing
away.
2. It served the advocates of God insofar as it conceded to the
world, in spite of suffering and evil, the character of perfection-including
"freedom": evil appeared full of meaning.
3. It posited that man had a knowledge of absolute values and
thus adequate knowledge precisely regarding what is most important.
4. It prevented man from despising himself as man, from taking
sides against life; from despairing of knowledge: it was a means
of preservation.
In sum: morality was the great antidote against practical and
theoretical nihilism.
5 (June 10, 1887)
But among the forces cultivated by morality was truthfulness:
this eventually turned against morality, discovered its teleology,
its partial perspective-and now the recognition of this inveterate
mendaciousness that one despairs of shedding becomes a stimulant.
Now we discover in ourselves needs implanted by centuries of
moral interpretation-needs that now appear to us as needs for
untruth; on the other hand, the value for which we endure life
seems to hinge on these needs. This antagonism-not to esteem
what we know, and not to be allowed any longer to esteem the
lies we should like to tell ourselves-results in a process of
dissolution.
6 (-Spring-Fall 1887)
This is the antinomy:
Insofar as we believe in morality we pass sentence on exist
7 (Nov. 1887-March 1888)
The supreme values in whose service man should live, especially
when they were very hard on him and exacted a high puce-these
social values were erected over man to strengthen their voice,
as if they were commands of God, as 'reality," as the true"
world, as a hope and future world. Now that the shabby orlgln
of these values is becoming clear, the universe seems to have
lost value, seems "meaningless"-but that is only a
transitional stage.
8 (1883-1888)
The nihilistic consequence (the belief in valuelessness) as a
consequence of moral valuation: everything egoistic has come
to disgust us (even though we realize the impossibility of the
unegoistic); what is necessary has come to disgust us (even though
we realize the impossibility of any liberum arbitrium or ~ntelligible
freedom"). We see that we cannot reach the sphere m which
we have placed our values; but this does not by any means confer
any value on that other sphere in which we live: on the contrary,
we are weary because we have lost the ma~n stimulus "In
vain so far!"
9 (Spring-Fall 1887)
Pessimism as a preliminary form of nihilism.
10 (Spring-Fall 1887)
Pessimism as strength-in what? in the energy of its logic, as
anarchism and nihilism, as analytic.
Pessimism as decline-in what? as growing effeteness, as a sort
of cosmopolitan fingering, as "tout comprendre 6 and h~storicism.
The critical tension: the extremes appear and become predominant.
11 (Spring-Fall 1887, rev. Spring-Fall 1888)
The logic of pessimism down to ultimate nihilism: what is at
work in it? The idea of valuelessness, meaninglessness: to what
extent moral valuations hide behind all other high values.
Conclusion: Moral value judgments are ways of passing sentence,
negations; morality is a way of turning one's back on the will
to existence.
Problem: But what is morality?
12 (Nov. 1887-March 1888)
Decline of Cosmological Values
( A )
Nihilism as a psychological state will have to be reached, first,
when we have sought a "meaning" in all events that
is not there: so the seeker eventually becomes discouraged. Nihilism,
then, is the recognition of the long waste of strength, the agony
of the "in vain," insecurity, the lack of any opportunity
to recover and to regain composure-being ashamed in front of
oneself, as if one had deceived oneself all too long.-This meaning
could have been: the "furfillment" of some highest
ethical canon in all events, the moral world order; or the growth
of love and harmony in the intercourse of beings; or the gradual
approximation of a state of universal happiness; or even the
development toward a state of universal annihilation-any goal
at least constitutes some meaning. What all these notions have
in common is that something is to be achieved through the process-and
now one realizes that becoming aims at nothing and achieves nothing.-
Thus, disappointment regarding an alleged aim of becoming as
a cause of nihilism: whether regarding a specific aim or, universalized,
the realization that all previous hypotheses about aims that
concern the whole "evolution" are inadequate (man no
longer the collaborator, let alone the center, of becoming).
Nihilism as a psychological state is reached, secondly, when
one has posited a totality, a systematization, indeed any organization
in all events, and underneath all events, and a soul that longs
to admire and revere has wallowed in the idea of some supreme
form of domination and administration (-if the soul be that of
a logician, complete consistency and real dialectic are quite
sufficient to reconcile it to everything). Some sort of unity,
some form of "monism": this faith suffices to give
man a deep feeling of standing in the context of, and being dependent
on, some whole that is infinitely superior to him, and he sees
himself as a mode of the deity.-"The well-being of the universal
demands the devotion of the individual"-but behold, there
is no such universal! At bottom, man has lost the faith in his
own value when no infinitely valuable whole works through him;
i.e., he conceived such a whole in order to be able to believe
in his own value.
Nihilism as psychological state has yet a third and last form.
Given these two insights, that becoming has no goal and that
underneath all becoming there is no grand unity in which the
individual could immerse himself completely as in an element
of supreme value, an escape remains: to pass sentence on this
whole world of becoming as a deception and to invent a world
beyond it, a true world. But as soon as man finds out how that
world is fabricated solely from psychological needs, and how
he has absolutely no right to it, the last form of nihilism comes
into being: it includes disbelief in any metaphysical world and
forbids itself any belief in a true world.7 Having reached this
standpoint, one grants the reality of becoming as the only reality,
forbids oneself every kind of clandestine access to afterworlds
and false divinities -but cannot endure this world though one
does not want to deny it.
What has happened, at bottom? The feeling of valuelessness was
reached with the realization that the overall character of existence
may not be interpreted by means of the concept of "aim,"
the concept of "unity," or the concept of "truth."
Existence has no goal or end; any comprehensive unity in the
plurality of events is lacking: the character of existence is
not "true," is false. One simply lacks any reason for
convincing oneself that there is a true world. Briefly: the categories
"aim," "unity," "being" which we
used to project some value into the world-we pull out again;
so the world looks valueless.
( B )
Suppose we realize how the world may no longer be interpreted
in terms of these three categories, and that the world begins
to become valueless for us after this insight: then we have to
ask about the sources of our faith in these three categories.
Let us try if it is not possible to give up our faith in them.
Once we have devaluated these three categories, the demonstration
that they cannot be applied to the universe is no longer any
reason for devaluating the universe.
Conclusion: The faith in the categories of reason is the cause
1; of nihilism. We have measured the value of the world according
I to categories that refer to a purely fictitious world.
~ Final conclusion: All the values by means of which we have
tried so far to render the world estimable for ourselves and
which then proved inapplicable and therefore devaluated the world-all
these values are, psychologically considered, the results of
certain perspectives of utility, designed to maintain and increase
human constructs of domination-and they have been falsely projected
mto the essence of things. What we find here is still the hyperbolic
naivete of man: positing himself as the meaning and measure of
the value of things.
13 (Spring-Fall 1887)
Nihilism represents a pathological transitional stage (what is
pathological is the tremendous generalization, the inference
that there is no meaning at all): whether the productive forces
are not yet strong enough, or whether decadence still hesitates
and has not yet invented its remedies.
Presupposition of this hypothesis: that there is no truth, that
there is no absolute nature of things nor a "thing- in-itself."
This, too, IS merely nihilism-even the most extreme nihilism.
It places the value of things precisely in the lack of any reality
corresponding to these values and in their being merely a symptom
of strength on the part of the value-positers, a simplification
for the sake of life.
14 (Spring-Fall 1887)
Values and their changes are related to increases in the power
of those positing the values.
The measure of unbelief, of permitted "freedom of the spirit"
as an expression of an increase in power.
"Nihilism" an ideal of the highest degree of powerfulness
of splrlt, the over-richest life-partly destructive, partly ironic.
15 (Spring-Fall 1837)
What is a belief? How does it originate? Every belief is a cons~denugffomething-true.
The most extreme form of nihilism would be the view that every
be ef, every considering-something-true, is necessarily false
cause there simply is no true world Thus. a perspectival appearance
whose origin lies in us (in so far as we continually need a narrower,
abbreviated, simplified world).
-That it is the measure of strength to what extent we can admit
to ourselves, without perishing, the merely apparent character,
the necessity of lies.
To this extent, nihilism, as the denial of a truthful world,
of being, might be a divine way of thinking.
16 (Nov. 1887-March 1888)
If we are "disappointed," it is at least not regarding
life: rather we are now facing up to all kinds of "desiderata."
With scornful wrath we contemplate what are called "ideals";
we despise ourselves only because there are moments
when we cannot subdue that absurd impulse that is called "idealism."
The influence of too much coddling is stronger
than the wrath of the disappointed.
17 (Spring-Fall 1887; rev. 1888)
To what extent Schopenhauer's nihilism still follows from the
same ideal that created Christian theism.-One felt so certain
about the highest desiderata, the highest values, the highest
perfection that the philosophers assumed this as an absolute
certainty, as if it were a priori: "God" at the apex
as a given truth. "To become as God," "to be absorbed
into God"-for thousands of years these were the most naive
and convincing desiderata (but what convinces is not necessarily
true-it is merely convincing: a note for asses).
One has unlearned the habit of conceding to this posited ideal
the reality of a person; one has become atheistic. But has the
ideal itself been renounced?-At bottom, the last metaphysicians
still seek in it true "reality," the "thing- in-itself"
compared to which everything else is merely apparent. It is their
dogma that our apparent world, being so plainly not the expression
of this ideal, cannot be "true"-and that, at bottom,
it does not even lead us back to that metaphysical world as its
cause. The unconditional, representing that highest perfection,
cannot possibly be the ground of all that is conditional. Schopenhauer
wanted it otherwise and therefore had to conceive of this metaphysical
ground as the opposite of the ideal-as "evil, blind will":
that way it could be that "which appears," that which
reveals itself in the world of appearances. But even so he did
not renounce the absoluteness of the ideal-he sneaked by.-
(Kant considered the hypothesis of "intelligible freedom"
necessary in order to acquit the ens perfection of responsibility
for the world's being such-and-such-in short, to account for
evil and ills: a scandalous bit of logic for a philosopher.-)
18 (1883-1888)
The most universal sign of the modern age: man has lost dignity
in his own eyes to an incredible extent. For a long time the
center and tragic hero of existence in general; then at least
intent on proving himself closely related to the decisive and
essentially valuable side of existence-like all metaphysicians
who wish to cling to the dignity of man, with their faith that
moral values are cardinal values. Those who have abandoned God
cling that much more firmly to the faith in morality.
19 (1883-1888)
Every purely moral value system (that of Buddhism, for example)
ends in nihilism: this to be expected in Europe. One still hopes
to get along with a moralism without religious background: but
that necessarily leads to nihilism.-In religion the constraint
is lacking to consider ourselves as value-positing.
20 (Spring-Fall 1887)
The nihilistic question "for what?" is rooted in the
old habit of supposing that the goal must be put up, given, demanded
from outside-by some superhuman authority. Having unlearned faith
in that, one still follows the old habit and seeks another authority
that can speak unconditionally and command goals and tasks. The
authority of conscience now steps up front (the more emancipated
one is from theology, the more imperativistic morality becomes)
to compensate for the loss of a personal authority. Or the authority
of reason. Or the social instinct (the herd). Or history with
an immanent spirit and a goal within, so one can entrust oneself
to it. One wants to get around the will, the willing of a goal,
the risk of positing a goal for oneself; one wants to rid oneself
of the responsibility (one would accept fatalism). Finally, happiness-and,
with a touch of Tartuffe, the happiness of the greatest number.
One says to oneself:
1. a definite goal is not necessary at all,
2. cannot possibly be anticipated.
Just now when the greatest strength of will would be necessary,
it is weakest and least confident. Absolute mistrust regarding
the organizing strength of the will for the whole.
21 (Spring-Fall 1887; rev. 1888)
The perfect nihilist.-The nihilist's eye idealizes in the direction
of ugliness and is unfaithful to his memories: it allows them
to drop, lose their leaves; it does not guard them against the
corpselike pallor that weakness pours out over what is distant
and gone. And what he does not do for himself, he also does not
do for the whole past of mankind: he lets it drop.
22 (Spring-Fall 1887)
Nihilism. It is ambiguous:
A. Nihilism as a sign of increased power of the spirit: as active
nihilism.
B. Nihilism as decline and recession of the power of the spirit:
as passive nihilism.
23 (Spring-Fall 1887)18
Nihilism as a normal condition.
It can be a sign of strength: the spirit may have grown so strong
that previous goals ("convictions," articles of faith)
have become incommensurate (for a faith generally expresses the
constraint of conditions of existence, submission to the authority
of circumstances under which one flourishes, grows, gains power).
Or a sign of the lack of strength to posit for oneself, productively,
a goal, a why, a faith.
It reaches its maximum of relative strength as a violent force
of destruction-as active nihilism.
Its opposite: the weary nihilism that no longer attacks; its
most famous form, Buddhism; a passive nihilism, a sign of weakness.
The strength of the spirit may be worn out, exhausted, so that
previous goals and values have become incommensurate and no longer
are believed; so that the synthesis of values and goals (on which
every strong culture rests) dissolves and the individual values
war against each other: disintegration-and whatever refreshes,
heals, calms, numbs emerges into the foreground in various disguises,
religious or moral, or political, or aesthetic, etc.
24 (Nov. 1887-March 1888)
Nihilism does not only contemplate the "in vain!" nor
is it merely the belief that everything deserves to perish: one
helps to destroy.-This is, if you will, illogical; but the nihilist
does not believe that one needs to be logical.-It is the condition
of strong spirits and wills, and these do not find it possible
to stop with the No of "judgment": their nature demands
the No of the deed. The reduction to nothing by judgment is seconded
by the reduction to nothing by hand.
25 (Spring-Fall 1887)
On the genesis of the nihilist.-It is only late that one musters
the courage for what one really knows.'. That I have hitherto
been a thorough-going nihilist, I have admitted to myself only
recently: the energy and radicalism with which I advanced as
a nihilist deceived me about this basic fact. When one moves
toward a goal it seems impossible that "goal-lessness as
such" is the principle of our faith.
26 (Spring-Fall 1887)
The pessimism of active energy: the question "for what?"
after a terrible struggle, even victory. That something is a
hundred times more important than the question of whether we
feel well or not: basic instinct of all strong natures-and consequently
also whether others feel well or not. In sum, that we have a
goal for which one does not hesitate to offer human sacrifices,
to risk every danger, to take upon oneself whatever is bad and
worst: the great passion.
27 (Spring-Fall 1887)
Causes of nihilism: 1. The higher species is lacking, i.e., those
whose inexhaustible fertility and power keep up the faith in
man. (One should recall what one owes to Napoleon: almost all
of the higher hopes of this century.)
2. The lower species ("herd," "mass," "society")
unlearns modesty and blows up its needs into cosmic and metaphysical
values. In this way the whole of existence is vulgarized: in
so far as the mass is dominant it bullies the exceptions, so
they lose their faith in themselves and become nihilists.
All attempts to think up higher types failed ("romanticism";
the artist, the philosopher; against Carlyle's attempt to ascribe
to them the highest moral values).
The resistance to higher types as a result.
Decline and insecurity of all higher types. The fight against
the genius ("folk poetry," etc.). Pity for the lowly
and suffering as a measure for the height of a soul.
The philosopher is lacking who interprets the deed and does not
merely transpose it.
28 (Spring-Fall 1887)
Main proposition. How complete nihilism is the necessary consequence
of the ideals entertained hitherto.
Incomplete nihilism; its forms: we live in the midst of it.
Attempts to escape nihilism without revaluating our values so
far: they produce the opposite, make the problem more acute.
29 (1883-1888)
The ways of self-narcotization._ 16 Deep down: not knowing whither.
Emptiness. Attempt to get over it by intoxication intoxication
as music; intoxication as cruelty in the tragic enjoy ment of
the destruction of the noblest; intoxication as blind enthusiasm
for single human beings or ages (as hatred, etc.).-Attempt to
work blindly as an instrument of science: opening one's eyes
to the many small enjoyments; e.g., also in the quest of knowledge
(modesty toward oneself); resignation to generalizing about oneself,
a pathos; mysticism, the voluptuous enjoyment of eternal emptiness;
art "for its own sake" ("le fait") and "pure
knowledge" as narcotic states of disgust with oneself; some
kind or other of continual work, or of some stupid little fanaticism;
a medley of all means, sickness owing to general immoderation
(debauchery kills enjoyment).
1. Weakness of the will as a result.
2. Extreme pride and the humiliation of petty weakness felt in
contrast.
30 (Nov. 1887-March 1888; rev. 1888)
The time has come when we have to pay for having been Christians
for two thousand years: we are losing the center of gravity by
virtue of which we lived; we are lost for a while. Abruptly we
plunge into the opposite valuations, with all the energy that
such an extreme overvaluation of man has generated in man.
Now everything is false through and through, mere "words,"
chaotic, weak, or extravagant:
a. one attempts a kind of this-worldly solution, but in the same
sense-that of the eventual triumph of truth, love, and justice
(socialism: "equality of the person");
b. one also tries to hold on to the moral ideal (with the pre-eminence
of what is un-egoistic, self-denial, negation of the win);
c. one tries to hold on even to the "beyond"-even if
only as some antilogical "x,'-but one immediately interprets
it in such a way that some sort of old-fashioned metaphysical
comfort can be derived from it;
d. one tries to find in events an old-fashioned divine governance-an
order of things that rewards, punishes, educates, and betters;
e. one still believes in good and evil and experiences the triumph
of the good and the annihilation of evil as a task (that is English;
typical case: the flathead John Stuart Mill);
f. contempt for what is "natural," for desire, for
the ego: attempt to understand even the highest spirituality
and art as the consequence of depersonalization and as desinteressement;
g. the church is still permitted to obtrude into all important
experiences and main points of individual life to hallow
them and give them a higher meaning: we still have the "Christian
state," "Christian marriage"
31 (1884)
Philosophy
& Classics
The Uncle
Taz Library
