257
Every enhancement of the type
"man" has so far been the work of an aristocratic society - and it
will be so again and again - a society that believes in the long ladder of an
order of rank and differences in value between man and man, and that needs slavery
in some sense or other. Without that pathos of distance which grows out of the
ingrained difference between strata - when the ruling caste constantly looks
afar and looks down upon subjects and instruments and just as constantly practices
obedience and command, keeping down and keeping at a distance - that other,
more mysterious pathos could not have grown up either - the craving for an ever
new widening of distances within the soul itself, the development of ever higher,
rarer, more remote, further-stretching, more comprehensive states - in brief,
simply the enhancement of the type "man," the continual "self-overcoming
of man," to use a moral formula in a supramoral sense.
To be sure, one should not yield to humanitarian illusions about the origins
of an aristocratic society (and thus of the presupposition of this enhancement
of the type "man"): truth is hard. Let us admit to ourselves, without
trying to be considerate, how every higher culture on earth so far has begun.
Human beings whose nature was still natural, barbarians in every terrible sense
of the word, men of prey who were still in possession of unbroken strength of
will and lust for power, hurled themselves upon weaker, more civilized, more
peaceful races, perhaps traders or cattle raisers, or upon mellow old cultures
whose last vitality was even then flaring up in splendid fireworks of spirit
and corruption. In the beginning, the noble caste was always the barbarian caste:
their predominance did not lie mainly in physical strength but in strength of
the soul - they were more whole human beings (which also means, at every level,
"more whole beasts").
258
Corruption as the expression of a threatening anarchy among the instincts and of the fact that the foundation of the affects, which is called "life," has been shaken: corruption is something totally different depending on the organism in which it appears. When, for example, an aristocracy, like that of France at the beginning of the Revolution, throws away its privileges with a sublime disgust and sacrifices itself to an extravagance of its own moral feelings, that is corruption; it was really only the last act of that centuries-old corruption which had led them to surrender, step by step, their governmental prerogatives, demoting themselves to a mere function of the monarchy (finally even to a mere ornament and showpiece). The essential characteristic of a good and healthy aristocracy, however, is that it experiences itself not as a function (whether of the monarchy or the commonwealth) but as their meaning and highest justification-that it therefore accepts with a good conscience the sacrifice of untold human beings who, for its sake, must be reduced and lowered to incomplete human beings, to slaves, to instruments. Their fundamental faith simply has to be that society must not exist for society's sake but only as the foundation and scaffolding on which a choice type of being is able to raise itself to its higher task and to a higher state of being-comparable to those sun-seeking vines of ]ava - they are called Sipo Matador - that so long and so often enclasp an oak tree with their tendrils until eventually, high above it but supported by it, they can unfold their crowns in the open light and display their happiness.
259
Refraining mutually from injury
, violence, and exploitation and placing one's will on a par with that of someone
else - this may become, in a certain rough sense, good manners among individuals
if the appropriate conditions are present (namely, if these men are actually
similar in strength and value standards and belong together in one body). But
as soon as this principle is extended, and possibly even accepted as the fundamental
principle of society, it immediately proves to be what it really is - a will
to the denial of life, a principle of disintegration and decay.
Here we must beware of superficiality and get to the bottom of the matter, resisting
all sentimental weakness: life itself is essentially appropriation, injury ,
overpowering of what is alien and weaker; suppression, hardness, imposition
of one's own forms, incorporation and at least, at its mildest, exploitation-but
why should one always use those words in which a slanderous intent has been
imprinted for ages?
Even the body within which individuals treat each other as equals, as suggested
before - and this happens in every healthy aristocracy - if it is a living and
not a dying body, has to do to other bodies what the individuals within it refrain
from doing to each other: it will have to be an incarnate will to power, it
will strive to grow, spread, seize, become predominant - not from any morality
or immorality but because it is living and because life simply is will to power.
But there is no point on which the ordinary consciousness of Europeans resists
instruction as on this: everywhere people are now raving, even under scientific
disguises, about coming conditions of society in which "the exploitative
aspect" will be removed - which sounds to me as if they promised to invent
a way of life that would dispense with all organic functions. "Exploitation"
does not belong to a corrupt or imperfect and primitive society: it belongs
to the essence of what lives, as a basic organic function; it is a consequence
of the will to power, which is after all the will of life.
If this should be an innovation as a theory - as a reality it is the primordial
fact of all history: people ought to be honest with themselves at least that
far.
260
Wandering through the many subtler
and coarser moralities which have so far been prevalent on earth, or still are
prevalent, I found that certain features recurred regularly together and were
closely associated - until I finally discovered two basic types and one basic
difference.
There are master morality and slave morality - I add immediately that in all
the higher and more mixed cultures there also appear attempts at mediation between
these two moralities, and yet more often the interpretation and mutual misunderstanding
of both, and at times they occur directly alongside each other-even in the same
human being, with a single soul.
The moral discrimination of values has originated either among a ruling group
whose consciousness of its difference from the ruled group was accompanied by
delight-or among the ruled, the slaves and dependents of every degree.
In the first case, when the ruling group determines what is "good,"
the exalted, proud states of the soul are experienced as conferring distinction
and determining the order of rank. The noble human being separates from himself
those in whom the opposite of such exalted, proud states finds expression: he
despises them. It should be noted immediately that in this first type of morality
the opposition of "good" and "bad" means approximately the
same as "noble" and "contemptible." (The opposition of "good"
and "evil" has a different origin.) One feels contempt for the cowardly,
the anxious, the petty , those intent on narrow utility; also for the suspicious
with their unfree glances, those who humble themselves, the doglike people who
allow themselves to be maltreated, the begging flatterers, above all the liars:
it is part of the fundamental faith of all aristocrats that the common people
lie. "We truthful ones" - thus the nobility of ancient Greece referred
to itself.
It is obvious that moral designations were everywhere first\applied to human
beings and only later, derivatively, to actions. Therefore it is a gross mistake
when historians of morality start from such questions as: why was the compassionate
act praised? The noble type of man experiences itself as determining values;
it does not need approval; it judges, "what is harmful to me is harmful
in itself"; it knows itself to be that which first accords honor to things;
it is value-creating. Everything it knows as part of itself it honors: such
a morality is self-glorification. In the foreground there is the feeling of
fullness, of power that seeks to overflow, the happiness of high tension, the
consciousness of wealth that would give and bestow: the noble human being, too,
helps the unfortunate, but not, or almost not, from pity, but prompted more
by an urge begotten by excess of power. The noble human being honors himself
as one who is powerful, also as one who has power over himself, who knows how
to speak and be silent, who delights in being severe and hard with himself and
respects all severity and hardness. " A hard heart Wotan put into my breast,"
says an old Scandinavian saga: a fitting poetic expression, seeing that it comes
from the soul of a proud Viking. Such a type of man is actually proud of the
fact that he is not made for pity, and the hero of the saga therefore adds as
a warning: "If the heart is not hard in youth it will never harden."
Noble and courageous human beings who think that way are furthest removed from
that morality which finds the distinction of morality precisely in pity , or
in acting for others, or in desinteressement; faith in oneself, a fundamental
hostility and irony against "selflessness" belong just as definitely
to noble morality as does a slight disdain and caution regarding compassionate
feelings and a "warm heart."
It is the powerful who understand how to honor; this is their art, their realm
of invention. The profound reverence for age and tradition - all law rests on
this double reverence-the faith and prejudice in favor of ancestors and disfavor
of those yet to come are typical of the morality of the powerful; and when the
men of "modern ideas," conversely, believe almost instinctively in
"progress" and "the future" and more and more lack respect
for age, this in itself would sufficiently betray the ignoble origin of these
"ideas."
A morality of the ruling group, however, is most alien and embarrassing to the
present taste in the severity of its principle that one has duties only to one's
peers; that against beings of a lower rank, against everything alien, one may
behave as one pleases or ''as the heart desires," and in any case "beyond
good and evil" - here pity and like feelings may find their place. The
capacity for, and the duty of long gratitude and long revenge - both only among
one's peers-refinement in repaying, the sophisticated concept of friendship,
a certain necessity for having enemies (as it were, as drainage ditches for
the affects of envy , quarrelsomeness, exuberance-at bottom, in order to be
capable of being good friends): all these are typical characteristics of noble
morality which, as suggested, is not the morality of "modem ideas"
and therefore is hard to empathize with today, also hard to dig up and uncover
.
It is different with the second type of morality, slave morality. Suppose the
violated, oppressed, suffering, unfree, who are uncertain of themselves and
weary , moralize: what will their moral valuations have in common? Probably,
a pessimistic suspicion about the whole condition of man will find expression,
perhaps a condemnation of man along with his condition. The slave's eye is not
favorable to the virtues of the powerful: he is skeptical and suspicious, subtly
suspicious, of all the "good" honored there - he would like to persuade
himself that even their happiness is not genuine. Conversely, those qualities
are brought out and flooded with light which serve to ease existence for those
who suffer: here pity , the complaisant and obliging hand, the warm heart, patience,
industry , humility , and friendliness are honored - for here these are the
most useful qualities and almost the only means for enduring the pressure of
existence. Slave morality is essentially a morality of utility.
Here is the place for the origin of that famous opposition of "good"
and "evil": into evil one's feelings project power and dangerousness,
a certain terribleness, subtlety, and strength that does not permit contempt
to develop. According to slave morality, those who are "evil" thus
inspire fear; according to master morality it is precisely those who are "good"
that inspire, and wish to inspire, fear, while the "bad" are felt
to be contemptible.
The opposition reaches its climax when, as a logical consequence of slave morality,
a touch of disdain is associated also with the "good" of this morality
- this may be slight and benevolent-because the good human being has to be undangerous
in the slaves' way of thinking: he is good-natured, easy to deceive, a little
stupid perhaps, un bonhomme (meaning "a good human being). Wherever slave
morality becomes preponderant, language tends to bring the words "good"
and "stupid" closer together.
One last fundamental difference: the longing for freedom, the instinct for happiness
and the subtleties of the feeling of freedom belong just as necessarily to slave
morality and morals as artful and enthusiastic reverence and devotion are the
regular symptom of an aristocratic way of thinking and evaluating.
This makes plain why love as passion - which is our European specialty - simply
must be of noble origin: as is well known, its invention must be credited to
the Provencal knight-poets, those magnificent and inventive human beings of
the "gai saber" (meaning "gay science") to whom Europe owes
so many things and almost owes itself.
261
Among the things that may be hardest
to understand for a noble human being is vanity: he will be tempted to deny
it, where another type of human being could not find it more palpable. The problem
for him is to imagine people who seek to create a good opinion of themselves
which they do not have of themselves-and thus also do not "deserve"
- and who nevertheless end up believing this good opinion themselves. This strikes
him half as such bad taste and lack of self-respect, and half as so baroquely
irrational, that he would like to consider vanity as exceptional, and in most
cases when it is spoken of he doubts it.
He will say, for example: "I may be mistaken about my value and nevertheless
demand that my value, exactly as I define it, should be acknowledged by others
as well - but this is no vanity (but conceit or, more frequently, what is called
'humility' or 'modesty')." Or: "for many reasons I may take pleasure
in the good opinion of others: perhaps because I honor and love them and all
their pleasures give me pleasure; perhaps also because their good opinion confirms
and strengthens my faith in my own good opinion; perhaps because the good opinion
of others, even in cases where I do not share it, is still useful to me or promises
to become so - but all that is not vanity."
The noble human being must force himself, with the aid of history to recognize
that, since time immemorial, in all somehow dependent social strata the common
man was only what he was considered: not at all used to positing values himself
he also attached no other value to himself than his masters attached to him
(it is the characteristic right of masters to create values).
It may be understood as the consequence of an immense atavism that even now
the ordinary man still always waits for an opinion about himself and then instinctively
submits to that-but by no means only a "good" opinion; also a bad
and unfair one (consider, for example, the great majority of the self-estimates
and self-underestimates that believing women accept from their father confessors,
and believing Christians quite generally from their church).
In accordance with the slowly arising democratic order of things (and its cause,
the intermarriage of masters and slaves), the originally noble and rare urge
to ascribe value to oneself on one's own and to "think well" of oneself
will actually be encouraged and spread more and more now; but it is always opposed
by an older, ampler, and more deeply ingrained propensity - and in the phenomenon
of "vanity" this older propensity masters the younger one. The vain
person is delighted by every good opinion he hears of himself (quite apart from
all considerations of its utility, and also apart from truth or falsehood),
just as every bad opinion of him pains him: for he submits to both, he feels
subjected to them in accordance with that oldest instinct of submission that
breaks out in him.
It is "the slave" in the blood of the vain person, a residue of the
slave's craftiness--and how much "slave" is still residual in woman,
for example! - that seeks to seduce him to good opinions about himself; it is
also the slave who afterwards immediately prostrates himself before these opinions
as if he had not called them forth.
And to say it once more: vanity is an atavism.
Section 257 through
261 appear in Friedrich Nietzsche's Beyond Good and Evil, written in
1886. The above translation is by Walter Kaufmann, copyright 1966.