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Notes -
Sorry. My phone ate a more thorough response twice, probably because I kept switching to a memory-hungry tab for the source. So I gave up and posted the short version. Let’s see if I can’t flesh it out.
I think your theory shares a lot with Nietzsche’s. First, that modern culture lacks an ethos present in older societies. Second, that this loss was driven by ideological colonization. Third, that the absence of this ethos cripples Western ability to organize.
Your description of Dante reminded me of this passage. He had his conviction and enacted it, critics be (literally) damned. While I concur with the other comments—Dante was not as authoritative as this portrayal—I see what you were intending. A man who either takes his psychosis seriously or never considers that it is psychotic at all.
Of course, Nietzsche labeled Christianity not as the moral authority, but as the “slave-revolt in morals.” He argued that Judeo-Christian aesthetics had colonized the aristocratic mindset. As Christianity grew, it taught would-be philosophers that ruling was actually cringe—they should renounce their worldly wealth, preach the gospel, et cetera. In other words, they should abandon their duty.
Nietzsche always sketches this subversion as an abuse of Rome’s cosmopolitan tolerance. By analogy, this would be the influence of liberalism and pluralism, methods by which our society demands public consideration of consequences. But Nietzsche perceived it as the hallmark of the Catholic Church.
Clearly, Luther gets some credit. I can’t say whether Nietzsche would have extended a grudging respect to Lenin. Those are the “sample ideologues” I had in mind, rather than Freud and Derrida. Speaking of philosophy-workers, you actually came to opposite conclusions regarding Kant.
Regardless, you and Nietzsche converged on skepticism towards a civilization which labors under slave morality.
He is very clear in condemning his Europe as slavish, utilitarian, masochistic and sometimes effeminate. If postmodernism were around, he’d have hated it too. Surely no culture, no empire can enact its will when hamstrung by a lust for suffering?
And yet.
The 20th century saw dictatorships and aristocracy on a never-before-seen scale. Unimaginable blood and treasure backed up the ambitions of a few men. Regimes warred against Christian thought, not to mention liberalism itself. “Will to power” in action. And what did it buy them? Most went out with a bang. The USSR, a whimper. Outcompeted by the essence of materialist pluralism.
In the end, we may lose out, too. Perhaps even to a certain allegedly socialist, decidedly authoritarian power. But it will not represent the triumphant return of master morality. Even if the wheel turns, Nietzsche missed his chance.
Sure, sure.
It was 'materialist pluralism' that outcompeted them, not a very large, very secure nation which had 40% of world's industrial base and threw its weight decisively against them.
It was pluralism, not the bombs, shells and associated hardware.
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War was certainly one factor Nietzsche thought would contribute to the realisation of the overman (I'll quibble on the point about this being the same as bringing back master morality, he says too many good things about slave morality for the overman to be a mere negation of the slave revolt), but if we're discussing how Nietzsche missed his chance - the wasted opportunity he saw in the Jews as a partial antidote to the nationalistic small-mindedness which was holding the Europeans back from truly becoming clay in the hands of a deserving ruling class should be mentioned. From Beyond Good and Evil 251 (bolding mine):
Yeah, BG&E has a number of interesting takes on Jews. A motivated antisemite could cherrypick any number of quotes to support his position. Same for a motivated philosemite!
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I've already had this problem many times, and even asked Zorba for a fix recently.
In the interim, I get around it by using the clipboard feature in SwiftKey to save the text of my comment as I write it, and that also makes it easier to juggle several links as necessary.
It's a pretty good keyboard, if that helps.
My solution was to finish drafting on a notes app. iPhone master race :P
I've used Google Keep in the past, but just using the clipboard is more convenient since I don't have to leave the website I'm browsing in the interim.
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That's not too surprising - he taught me everything I know! I'm incredibly indebted to him. I'm pretty sure I've read all of his published works (with the exception of WtP).
We do have points of disagreement though - I think he's probably friendlier to transhumanism than I am.
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