Nietzsche
While the noble man lives for himself with trust and candor... The man of resentment is neither upright nor naive, nor honest and direct with himself. His soul squints. His spirit loves hiding places, secret paths, and back doors." Nietzsche's noble man affirms life with a clear conscience, unhindered by the fetters of moral righteousness. Throughout the unabashedly irreverent Genealogy of Morals, the German philosopher describes how human beings are enslaved by moral systems that are proscribed by church, state or both. The moral systems that create complex legal and political systems also lead to spiritual disenfranchisement. The more a person remains cut off from his or her true nature and true instincts, the more likely he or she is to develop resentment, guilt, and a bad conscience. Resentment, guilt, and a bad conscience are by-products of human social evolution. Nietzsche's genealogy of morals reflects the development of social norms, codes of ethics, and morals throughout human history. Moral codes stem not from a reason or even from God. Rather, human societies use morals as a means of social control.
As a result, human social, legal, and political institutions reflect arbitrary moral codes. Nietzsche harshly criticizes religious and political systems because of their unnatural restrictions of free will and genuine happiness. Resentment, according to Nietzsche, is far more than holding a grudge against one's older brother for stealing a girlfriend. Resentment is a state of being for entire human cultures. Resentment entails the creation of scapegoats, targets of human aggression. That which is deemed evil is labeled as such. The noble man does not bother him- or herself by building up resentments. The noble consciousness is not consumed with hatred for the Other. The noble person might feel sympathy, empathy, pity, or pride, but he or she does not become preoccupied with the negative mind-state that is obsessed with hating the enemy. Nietzsche suggests that the root cause of many human social ills can be directly traced to resentment. Similarly, guilt and bad conscience evolved as a process of human social and political evolution, and Nietzsche portrays both guilt and bad conscience as hindrances to human happiness. The root problem with bad conscience and guilt is that it helps create a state of irrational yet perpetual indebtedness. Debt evolved from economic and judicial pragmatism into an abstract, pointless form of social control. Moreover, people begin to internalize their culture's overarching messages, turning negativity, resentment, guilt, and bad conscience inward.
Nietzsche's Genealogy of Morals remains a pertinent text of general and political philosophy. His explication of resentment, guilt, and bad conscience primarily promotes awareness, stimulating critical inquiry into human sociology and psychology. Therefore, we have much to gain from critiquing our world as Nietzsche does. In order to become Nietzsche's noble man, we must each strive to dispel the myths handed to us by our religious and political institutions and by our social norms. Nietzsche's deconstruction of social and political realities enables all of us to dispel ignorance and illusion. From the moment we are born, we are subject to the types of social programming that create states of resentment, guilt, and bad conscience. We learn primarily to stifle our lust for life. An arbitrary and authoritarian system of morals is imprinted on us from childhood, stamped on our consciousness by parents, peers, teachers, and the media. None of us is immune from such programming, although the implications vary greatly from culture to culture. Each culture and each individual will have a particular strength and weakness, but all of us can learn from Nietzsche's teachings.
The implications of Nietzsche's writings extend into nearly every realm of human life, but can be best understood macrocosmically in current world affairs as well as specifically in the arena of the American media. Nietzsche would easily note that in the decades since he wrote the Genealogy of Morals, moral codes have continued to evolve, propelled particularly by the will to power. The theme of resentment can be easily witnessed in the rabid state of international affairs that keeps our world teetering nearly on the brink of self-destruction. The slave mentality clings to a notion of a solid enemy. Throughout human history, individuals and societies have viewed their enemies with resentment, as the embodiment of evil. Nietzsche notes that the person enslaved by resentment will view any opposing viewpoint as inherently evil. The strong dualism evident during the Cold War and now in the War on Terrorism is a prime example of the primacy of resentment in guiding world affairs toward dangerous and destructive ends. Less fearsome examples of the evolution of resentment in human consciousness include simple everyday affairs, such as the preference for certain foods. For example, the noble vegan will look the other way when someone in their family eats meat. Self-contained and self-confident, the noble vegan does not need to defend his or her food choices by launching into a diatribe about animal rights or cholesterol. The noble vegan can engage in fruitful discussions about the merits of a vegan lifestyle without labeling meat, eating meat, or producing meat as being evil.
The resentment-filled vegan, on the other hand, is the shrill person at the table, the one who refuses to cohabit with anyone who eats cheese, the one who won't out at restaurants that do not have separate vegetarian kitchens. His or her resentment against the meat industry transforms into a more generalized resentment that damages his or her social life. By applying Nietzsche's teachings to this example, we can see how easily any moral system becomes stifling and dogmatic. The evolution of Christian morality, which Nietzsche describes in the Genealogy of Morals, followed a similar tract: label all pagan gods, pagan rituals, and pagan ways of life as evil, and then create a systematic set of morals that perpetuates obsessive resentment. In this case, morals that relate to the treatment of animals become codified in similar ways as Church doctrine.
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