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Friedrich
Nietzsche
On the
Use and Abuse of History for Life
[Revised
Edition, 2010]
Translated
by Ian Johnston, Vancouver Island University, Nanaimo,
BC, Canada. For copyright information, please consult the following link: Copyright. For
comments or questions, please contact Ian
Johnston
In the
following text, the words within square brackets have been added by the
translator. The asterisks indicate links to explanatory endnotes.
ON THE USE AND ABUSE OF HISTORY FOR LIFE
PREFACE
“Incidentally,
I despise everything which merely instructs me without increasing or
immediately enlivening my activity.” These are Goethe’s words. With them, as
with a heartfelt expression of Ceterum
censeo, our consideration of the worth and the
worthlessness of history may begin.* For this work is to set down why, in the spirit of Goethe’s
words, we must in all seriousness despise instruction without vitality,
knowledge which enervates activity, and history as an expensive surplus of
knowledge and a luxury, because we still lack what is still most essential to
us and because what is superfluous is hostile to what is essential. To be sure,
we need history. But we need it in a manner different from the way in which the
spoilt idler in the garden of knowledge uses it, no matter how elegantly he may
look down on our coarse and graceless needs and distresses. That is, we need it
for life and for action, not for a comfortable turning away from life and from
action or for merely glossing over the egotistical life and the cowardly bad
act. We wish to serve history only insofar as it serves living. But there is a
degree of doing history and valuing it through which life atrophies and degenerates.
To bring this phenomenon to light as a remarkable symptom of our time is now
every bit as necessary as it may be painful.
I have
tried to describe a feeling which has often enough tormented me. I take my
revenge on this feeling when I expose it to the general public. Perhaps with
such a description someone or other will have reason to point out to me that he
also knows this sensation but that I have not felt it with sufficient purity
and naturalness and definitely have not expressed myself with the appropriate
certainty and mature experience. Perhaps one or two will respond in this way.
However, most people will tell me that this feeling is totally wrong, unnatural,
abominable, and absolutely forbidden, that with it, in fact, I have shown
myself unworthy of the powerful historical tendency of the times, as it has
been, by common knowledge, observed for the past two generations, particularly
among the Germans. Whatever the reaction, now that I dare to expose myself with
this natural description of my feeling, common decency will be fostered rather
than shamed, because I am providing an opportunity for many people to make
polite pronouncements about a contemporary trend, like the one just mentioned.
Moreover, I obtain for myself something of even more value to me than respectability:
I become publicly instructed and set straight about our times.
This
essay is also out of touch with the times because here I am trying for once to
see as a contemporary disgrace, infirmity, and defect something of which our age
is justifiably proud, its historical culture. For I believe, in fact, that we
are all suffering from a consumptive historical fever and at least should
recognize that we are afflicted with it. If Goethe with good reason said that
with our virtues we simultaneously cultivate our faults as well and if, as
everyone knows, a hypertrophic virtue (as the historical sense of our age appears
to me to be) can serve to destroy a people just as well as a hypertrophic vice,
then people may make allowance for me just this once. Also, in my defence I should not conceal the fact that the experiences
which aroused in me these feelings of torment in me I have derived for the most
part from myself and only from others only for the purpose of comparison and
that, insofar as I am a student of more ancient times, particularly the Greeks,
I come as a child of these present times to such anachronistic experiences
concerning myself. But I must be allowed to ascribe this much to myself on account
of my profession as a classical philologist, for I would not know what sense
classical philology would have in our age unless it is to be effective by its
inappropriateness for the times, that is, in opposition to the age, thus
working on the age, and, we hope, for the benefit of a coming time.
1
Observe
the herd which is grazing beside you. It does not know what yesterday or today
is. It springs around, eats, rests, digests, jumps up again, and so from
morning to night and from day to day, with its likes and dislikes closely tied
to the peg of the moment, and thus is neither melancholy nor weary. To witness
this is difficult for man, because he boasts to himself that his human
condition is better than the beast’s and yet looks with jealousy at its
happiness. For he wishes only to live like the beast, neither weary with things
nor in pain, and yet he wants it in vain, because he does not desire it as the
animal does. One day the man demands of the beast: “Why do you not talk to me
about your happiness and only gaze at me?” The beast wants to answer, too, and
say: “That comes about because I always immediately forget what I wanted to
say.” But by then the beast has already forgotten this reply and remains
silent, so that the man keeps on wondering about it.
But he
also wonders about himself, that he is not able to learn to forget and that he
always hangs onto the past. No matter how far or how fast he may run, the chain
runs with him. It is something amazing: the moment, in one sudden motion there,
in one sudden motion gone, before nothing, afterwards nothing, nevertheless
comes back again as a ghost and disturbs the tranquillity
of a later moment. A leaf is continuously released from the roll of time, falls
out, flutters away—and suddenly flutters back again into the man’s lap. For the
man says, “I remember,” and envies the beast, which immediately forgets and
sees each moment really perish, sink back in cloud and night, and vanish
forever. In this way the beast lives unhistorically.
For it goes into the present like a number without any odd fraction left over;
it does not know how to play a part, hides nothing, and appears in each moment
exactly and entirely what it is. Thus, a beast can be nothing other than
honest. The human being, by contrast, braces himself against the large and
ever-increasing burden of the past, which pushes him down or bows him over. It
makes his way difficult, like an invisible and dark weight, which he can for appearances’
sake at some point deny and which he is only too happy to deny in his interactions
with his peers, in order to awaken their envy. And so it moves him, as if he
imagined a lost paradise, to see the grazing herd or, something more closely
familiar, the child, which does not yet have a past to deny and plays in
blissful blindness between the fences of the past and future. Nonetheless, this
game must be upset for the child. It will be summoned all too soon out of its
forgetfulness. For it learns to understand the expression “It was,” that
password with which struggle, suffering, and weariness come over human beings,
so as to remind him what his existence basically is—a past tense that is never
over and done with. If death finally brings the longed-for forgetting,
nevertheless, in the process, at the same moment it destroys the present and
life and thus impresses its seal on that knowledge that existence is only an
uninterrupted living in the past [Gewesensein],
something which exists for the purpose of self-denial, self-destruction, and
self-contradiction.
If
happiness or a reaching out for new happiness is in some sense or other what
holds the living person onto life and pushes him forward into continued living,
then perhaps no philosopher has more justification than the cynic. For the
happiness of the beast, like that of the complete cynic, is the living proof of
the rightness of cynicism. The smallest happiness, if only it is uninterrupted
and makes one happy, is incomparably more happiness than the greatest which
comes only as an episode, as a mood, so to speak, as an amazing interruption
between nothing but boredom, desire, and deprivation. However, with the
smallest and with the greatest happiness there is always one way in which
happiness becomes happiness: through the ability to forget or, to express the
matter in a more scholarly fashion, through the capacity, for as long as the
happiness lasts, to sense things unhistorically.
Anyone who cannot set himself down on the crest of the moment, forgetting
everything from the past, who is not capable of standing on a single point,
like a goddess of victory, without dizziness and fear, will never know what
happiness is, and, even worse, he will never do anything to make other people
happy. Imagine the most extreme example, a person who did not possess the power
of forgetting at all, who would be condemned to see everywhere a coming into
being. Such a person no longer believes in his own being, no longer believes in
himself, sees everything in moving points flowing out of each other, and loses
himself in this stream of becoming. He will, like the true pupil of Heraclitus,
finally hardly dare any more to lift his finger.*Forgetting belongs to all
action, just as not only light but also darkness belong in the life of all
organic things. A person who wanted to feel utterly and only historically would
be like someone who had been forced to abstain from sleep or like the beast
that is to continue its life only from rumination to constantly repeated
rumination. Moreover, it is possible to live almost without remembering,
indeed, to live happily, as the beast demonstrates; however, it is completely
and utterly impossible to live at all without forgetting. Or, to explain myself
even more simply concerning my thesis: There is a degree of insomnia,
of rumination, of the historical sense, through which something living comes to
harm and finally perishes, whether it is a person or a people or a culture.
In order
to determine this degree of history and, through that, the borderline at which
the past must be forgotten if it is not to become the gravedigger of the
present, we would have to know precisely how great the plastic
force of a person, a people, or a culture is. I mean that force of
growing in a different way out of oneself, of reshaping and incorporating the
past and the foreign, of healing wounds, compensating for what has been lost,
rebuilding shattered forms out of one’s self. There are people who possess so
little of this force that they bleed to death incurably from a single experience,
a single pain, often even from a single tender injustice, as from a really
small bloody scratch. On the other hand, there are people whom the wildest and
most horrific accidents in life and even actions of their own wickedness injure
so little that right in the middle of these experiences or shortly after they
bring the issue to a reasonable state of well being and a sort of quiet
conscience. The stronger the roots which the innermost nature
of a person has, the more he will appropriate or forcibly take from the past.
And if we were to imagine the most powerful and most immense nature, then we
would recognize there that for it there would be no frontier at all over which
the historical sense would be able to grow or cause damage. Everything in the
past, in its own and in the most alien, this nature would draw upon, take it
into itself, and, as it were, transform into blood. What such a nature does not
subjugate it knows how to forget. It is there no more. The horizon is closed
and complete, and nothing can recall that there still are men, passions,
doctrines, and purposes beyond it. And this is a general principle: each living
being can become healthy, strong, and fertile only within a horizon. If it is
incapable of drawing a horizon around itself and too egotistical to enclose its
own view within an alien one, then it wastes away there, pale or weary, to an
early death. Cheerfulness, good conscience, joyful action, trust in what is to
come—all these depend, with the individual as with a people, on the following
facts: that there is a line which divides what is observable and bright from
what is unilluminated and dark, that we know how to
forget at the right time just as well as we remember at the right time, that we
feel with powerful instinct the time when we must perceive historically and
when unhistorically. This is the specific principle
which the reader is invited to consider: that for the health of a
single individual, a people, and a culture the unhistorical and the historical
are equally essential.
Now, at this
point everyone makes the initial observation that a person’s historical
knowledge and feeling can be very limited, his horizon hemmed in like that of
an inhabitant of an Alpine valley; in every judgment he might set down an
injustice and in every experience he may mistakenly assume he was the first to
have it, and nevertheless, in spite of all injustice and every mistake he
stands there in invincible health and vigour and
fills every eye with joy, while close beside him the far more just and
scholarly person grows ill and collapses, because the lines of his horizon are
always being shifted about restlessly once again, because he cannot wriggle out
of the much softer nets of his justices and truths to strong willing and desiring.
By contrast, we saw the beast, which is completely unhistorical and which lives
almost in the middle of a sort of horizon of points, and yet which exists with
a certain happiness, at least without weariness and pretense. Thus, we will
have to assess the capacity of being able to feel to a certain degree unhistorically as more important and more basic, to the
extent that in it lies the foundation above which
something right, healthy, and great, something truly human, can generally first
grow. The unhistorical is like an enveloping atmosphere in which alone life
generates itself, only to disappear again with the destruction of this
atmosphere. The truth is that, in the process by which the human being, in
thinking, reflecting, comparing, separating, and combining, first limits that unhistorical
element, the process by which inside that surrounding misty cloud a bright
gleaming beam of light first arises, only then, through the power of using the
past for living and making history again out of what has happened, does a
person first become a person. But in an excess of history the human being stops
once more; and without that cover of the unhistorical he would never have
started and dared to start. Where do the actions occur which human beings are
capable of doing without previously having gone into that misty patch of the
unhistorical? Or to set pictures to one side and to grasp an example for
illustration: imagine a man whom a violent passion, for a woman or for a great
idea, shakes up and draws forward. How his world is changed for him! Looking
backwards, he feels blind; listening to the side he hears the strangeness like
a dull sound empty of meaning. What he is generally aware of he has never yet
perceived as so true, so perceptibly close, coloured,
resounding, illuminated, as if he is comprehending with all the senses simultaneously.
All his estimates of worth are altered and devalued. He is unable any longer to
value so many things, because he can hardly feel them any
more. He asks himself whether he has been the fool of strange words and
strange opinions all this time. He is surprised that his memory turns
tirelessly in a circle but is nevertheless too weak and tired just to make a
single leap out of this circle. It is the most unjust condition of the world,
narrow, thankless with respect to the past, blind to dangers, deaf to warnings,
a small living vortex in a dead sea of night and forgetting. Nevertheless this
condition—unhistorical, thoroughly anti-historical—is the birthing womb not
only of an unjust deed but even more of every just deed. And no artist would
achieve his picture, no field marshal his victory, and no people its freedom,
without previously having desired and striven for them in that sort of
unhistorical condition. As the active person, according to
what Goethe said, is always without conscience, so he is also always without
knowledge. He forgets most things in order to do one thing; he is unjust
towards what lies behind him and knows only one right, the right of what is to
come into being now. So every active person loves his deed infinitely more than
it deserves to be loved, and the best deeds happen in such a excess of love
that they would certainly have to be unworthy of this love, even if their worth
were otherwise incalculably great.
Should a
person be in a position to sniff out and catch the fragrance in many examples
of this unhistorical atmosphere, in which every great historical event has
arisen, then such a person might perhaps be able, as a knowledgeable being, to
elevate himself to a superhistoricalstandpoint,
in the way Niebuhr once described it as a possible result of historical observations:
“In one thing at least,” he says, “is history, clearly and thoroughly grasped,
useful, the fact that one knows, as even the greatest and highest spirits of
our human race do not know, how their eyes have acquired by chance the way in
which they see and the way in which they forcefully demand that everyone see,
forcefully, that is, because the intensity of their awareness is particularly
great. Someone who has not, through many illustrations, precisely determined,
known, and grasped this point is overthrown by the appearance of a mighty
spirit who in a given shape presents the highest form of passionate dedication.”* We could call such a standpoint superhistorical,
because a person who assumes such a stance could feel no more temptation to
continue living and to participate in history, since he would have recognized
the single condition of every event, that blindness and injustice
in the soul of the man of action. He himself would have been cured from now on
of still taking history excessively seriously. But he would have learned, for
every person and for every experience, among the Greeks or Turks, from a moment
of the first or of the nineteenth century, to answer for himself the questions
how and why people lived. Anyone who asks his acquaintances whether they would
like to live through the last ten or twenty years over again will easily perceive
which of them has been previously educated for that superhistorical
point of view. For they will probably all answer “No!”, but they will
substantiate that “No!” differently. Some of them perhaps with the hope “But
the next twenty years will be better.” Those are the ones of whom David Hume
mockingly says:
And from the dregs of life
hope to receive,
What the first sprightly running could not give.*
We wish
to call these the historical people. The glance into the past pushes them into
the future, fires their spirit to take up life for a longer time yet, kindles
the hope that justice may still come and that happiness sits behind the
mountain up which they are tramping. These historical people believe that the
meaning of existence will come increasingly to light in the course of its
own process. Therefore, they look backwards only to understand the
present by considering the previous process and to learn to desire the future
more keenly. In spite of all their history, they do not understand at all how unhistorically they think and act and also how their
concern with history stands, not in service to pure knowledge, but to living.
But that
question whose first answer we have heard can be answered again in a different
way, that is, once more with a “No!” but with a “No!” that has a different
grounding. The denial comes from the super-historical person, who does not see
salvation in the process and for whom the world is much more complete and has attained
its end in every single moment. What could ten new years
teach that the past ten years have not been able to teach!
Now,
whether the meaning of the theory is happiness or resignation or virtue or
repentance, on that issue the superhistorical people
have never been united. But contrary to all the historical ways of considering
the past, they do come to full unanimity on the following principle: the past
and the present are one and the same, that is, in all their multiplicity
typically identical, and as unchanging types everywhere and always present,
they are a motionless picture of immutable values and an eternally similar
meaning. Just as the hundreds of different languages correspond to the same
typically permanent needs of people, so that someone who understood these needs
could learn nothing new from all the languages, in the same way the superhistorical thinker illuminates for himself all the
histories of people and of individuals from within, guessing like a clairvoyant
the original sense of the different hieroglyphics and gradually even growing
tired, avoiding the constantly new streams of written signals streaming forth.
For, in the endless excess of what is happening, how is he not to reach
saturation, supersaturation, and, yes, even revulsion,
so that the most daring one is perhaps finally ready, with Giacomo
Leopardi, to say to his heart:
Nothing
lives which would be worthy
of your striving, and the earth deserves not a sigh.
Pain and boredom is our being and the world is excrement,
—nothing
else.
Calm
yourself.*
However,
let us leave the superhistorical people to their
revulsion and their wisdom. Today for once we much prefer to become joyful in
our hearts with our lack of wisdom and to make the day a good one for ourselves
as active and progressive people, as those who revere the process. Let our
evaluation of the historical be only a western bias, if only from within this
bias we at least move forward and do not remain still! If only we always just
learn better to carry on history for the purposes of living! For we
wish happily to concede that the super-historical people possess more wisdom
than we do, if only, that is, we may be confident that we possess more life
than they do. For in this way, at any rate, our lack of wisdom will have more
of a future than their wisdom. Moreover, so as to remove the slightest doubt
about the meaning of this contrast between living and wisdom, I wish to
reinforce my argument with a method well established from time immemorial: I
will immediately establish a few theses.
A
historical phenomenon, purely and completely known and resolved into an object
of knowledge, is, for the person who has recognized it, dead. For in it that
person has perceived the delusion, the injustice, the blind passion, and in
general the entire dark temporal horizon of that phenomenon and, at the same
time, in the process he perceives its historical power. This power has now become
for him, as a knower, powerless, but perhaps not yet for him as a living person.
History,
conceived as pure science, once it became sovereign, would be a kind of
conclusion to living and a final reckoning for humanity.*The historical culture, by contrast, is something healthy which
bodes well for the future only when it comes with a powerful new stream of
life, a developing culture, for example, and thus only at those times when it
is ruled and led on by a higher power and does not itself govern and lead.
Insofar
as history stands in the service of life, it stands in the service of an
unhistorical power and will therefore, in this subordinate position, never be
able to (and should never be able to) become pure science, the way mathematics
is, for example. However, the problem to what degree living generally requires
the services of history is one of the most important questions and concerns
with respect to the health of a human being, a people, or a culture. For with a
certain excess of history, living crumbles away and degenerates, and through
this decay history itself also finally degenerates.
2
However,
the fact that living requires the services of history must be understood just
as clearly as the principle, which will be demonstrated later, that an excess
of history harms the living person. In three respects history belongs to the living
person: it belongs to him as an active and striving person; it belongs to him
as a person who preserves and reveres; it belongs to him as a suffering person
in need of emancipation. This trinity of relationships corresponds to a trinity
of methods for history, to the extent that one may make the distinctions,
a monumental method, an antiquarian method,
and a critical method.
History
belongs, above all, to the active and powerful man, the one who fights a great
battle, who needs the exemplary men, teachers, and comforters and cannot find
them among his contemporary companions. That is the way history belonged to
Schiller: for our age is so bad, said Goethe, that the poet no longer
encounters any useful nature in the human life surrounding him. In considering
the active men, Polybius, for example, calls political history the right preparation
for ruling a state and the most outstanding teacher, something which, through
the memory of other people’s accidents, advises us to bear changes in fortune
with resolution.* Anyone who has learned to recognize the sense of history in this
way must get annoyed to see inquisitive travellers or
painstaking micrologists clambering all over the pyramids
of the great things of the past. There, in the place where he finds the
stimulation to imitate and to make things better, he does not wish to come
across an idler who prowls around, greedy for distraction or sensation, as if
among the heaped-up art treasures of a gallery. In order not to despair and
feel disgust in the midst of weak and hopeless idlers, surrounded by apparently
active, but really only agitated and fidgeting companions, the active man looks
behind him and interrupts the path to his goal to take a momentary deep breath.
His purpose is some happiness or other, perhaps not his own, often that of a
people or of humanity collectively. He runs back away from resignation and uses
history as a way of fighting resignation. For the most part, no reward beckons
him on, other than fame, that is, becoming a candidate
for an honoured place in the temple of history, where
he himself can be, in his turn, a teacher, consoler, and advisor for those who
come later. For his orders state: whatever once was able to expand the idea of
“Human being” and to satisfy it more beautifully must constantly be present in
order that it remain eternally possible. That the great moments in the struggle
of single individuals make up a chain, that in them a range of mountains of
humanity are joined over thousands of years, that for me the loftiest thing of
such a moment from the distant past is still vital, bright, and great—that is
the basic idea of the faith in humanity which expresses itself in the demand
for a monumental history. However, with this very demand that
greatness should be eternal there is ignited the most dreadful struggle. For
everything else still living cries out “No!” The monumental should not be
created—that is the opposition’s slogan. The dull habit, the small and the
base, filling all corners of the world, like a heavy atmosphere clouding around
everything great, casts itself as a barrier, deceiving, dampening, and
suffocating along the road which greatness has to go towards immortality. This
way, however, leads through human brains! Through the brains of anxious and
short-lived animals, who always come back to the same needs and who with
difficulty fend off their destruction for a little while. For as a first priority
they want only one thing: to live at any price. Who might suppose among them
that difficult torch race of monumental history, through which alone greatness
lives once more! Nevertheless, a few of them always wake up again, those who,
by a look back at past greatness and strengthened by their observation, feel so
blessed, as if the life of human beings is a beautiful thing, as if it is
indeed the most beautiful fruit of this bitter plant to know that in earlier
times one man once went through this existence proud and strong, another with
profundity, a third with pity and a desire to help—all however leaving behindone teaching: that the person lives most
beautifully who does not think about existence. If the common man considers
this time span with such melancholy seriousness and longing, those men on their
way to immortality and to monumental history knew how to treat things with an
Olympian laughter or at least to a lofty scorn. Often they climbed with irony
into their graves, for what was there of them to bury! Surely only what had always
impressed them as cinders, garbage, vanity, animality
and what now sinks into oblivion, long after it was exposed to their contempt.
But one thing will live on, the monogram of their most essential individual
essence, a work, a deed, an uncommon inspiration, a creation. That will live,
because no later world can do without it. In this most blissful form fame is
indeed something more than the dearest piece of our amour propre, as Schopenhauer has called it. It is the belief
in the unity and continuity of the greatness of all times. It is a protest
against the changes of the generations and against transience!*
Now, what
purpose is served for contemporary man by the monumental consideration of the
past, by busying himself with the classical and rare person of earlier times?
He derives from that the fact that the greatness which was once there at all
events once was possible and therefore really will be possible
once again. He goes along his path more bravely, for now the doubt which falls
over him in weaker hours, that he might perhaps be wishing
for the impossible, is beaten back from the field. Let us assume that
somebody believes it would take no more than a hundred productive men, effective
people brought up in a new spirit, to get rid of what has become culturally
fashionable in German right now, how must it strengthen him to perceive that
the culture of the Renaissance raised itself on the shoulders of such a crowd
of a hundred men.
Nevertheless,
to learn right away something new from the same example, how fleeting and weak,
how imprecise that comparison would be! If the comparison is to carry out that
powerful effect, how much of the difference must be missed in the process. How
forcefully must the individuality of the past be wrenched into a general shape,
with all its sharp corners and angles broken off for the sake of the
correspondence! In fact, basically something that once was possible could
appear possible a second time only if the Pythagoreans were correct in thinking
that with the same constellations of the celestial bodies the same phenomenon
on the Earth also had to repeat itself, even in small single particulars, so
that when the stars have a certain position relative to each other, a Stoic and
an Epicurean will, in an eternal recurrence, unite and assassinate Caesar and,
with another stellar position, Columbus will eternally rediscover America.* Only if the earth were always to begin its theatrical performance
once again after the fifth act, if it were certain that the same knot of
motives, the same deus ex machina, the same catastrophe returned in determined
intervals, could the powerful man desire monumental history in complete
iconic truthfulness, that is, each fact in its precisely described
particularity and unity, and thus probably not before astronomers have once
again become astrologers.* Until that time monumental history will not be able to produce
that full truthfulness. It will always bring closer what is unlike, generalize,
and finally make things equal. It will always tone down the difference in motives
and events, in order to set down the monumental effectus
[effect], that is, the exemplary effect worthy of imitation, at the cost of
the causae [cause]. Thus, because
monumental history turns away as much as possible from the cause, we can call
it with less exaggeration a collection of “effects in themselves,” of events
which will have an effect on all ages. What is celebrated in folk festivals and
in religious or military remembrance days is essentially such an “effect in
itself.” It is the thing which does not let the ambitious sleep, which for
enterprising people lies like an amulet on the heart, but it is not the true
historical interconnection between causes and effects, which, fully recognized,
would only prove that never again could anything completely the same fall out
in the dice throw of future contingency.
As long
as the soul of historical writing lies in the great driving impulses which
a powerful man derives from it, as long as the past must be written about as
worthy of imitation, as capable of being imitated, with the possibility of a
second occurrence, history is definitely in danger of becoming somewhat
altered, reinterpreted into something beautiful, and thus coming close to free
poeticizing. Indeed, there are times when one cannot distinguish at all between
a monumental past and a mythic fiction, because exactly the same impulses can
be derived from one of those worlds as from the other. Thus, if the monumental
consideration of the past rules over the other forms of
analyzing it, I mean, over the antiquarian and the critical methods, then the
past itself suffers harm. Really large parts of it are forgotten,
despised, and flow off like an uninterrupted grey flood, and only a few
embellished facts raise themselves up above, like islands. Something unnatural
and miraculous strikes our vision of the remarkable people who become
especially visible, just like the golden hips which the pupils of Pythagoras
wished to attribute to their master. Monumental history deceives through its
analogies. With its seductive similarities, it attracts the spirited man to
daring acts and the enthusiastic man to fanaticism. If we imagine this history
really in the hands and heads of talented egoists and wild crowds of evil
rascals, then empires are destroyed, leaders assassinated, wars and revolutions
instigated, and the number of historical “effects in themselves,” that is,
effects without adequate causes, increased once more. So much for the reminders
of the injuries which monumental history can cause among great and active
people, whether they were good or evil. But look at what it brings about when
the impotent and inactive empower themselves with it and use it!
Let us
take the simplest and most frequent example. If we imagine to ourselves
uncultured and weakly cultured natures energized and armed by monumental
cultural history, against whom will they now direct
their weapons? Against their hereditary enemies, the strong cultural spirits
and thus against the only ones who are able to learn truly from that history,
that is, for life, and to convert what they have learned into a higher
practice [Praxis]. For them the path will be blocked and the air
darkened, if people dance around a half-understood monument of some great past
or other, like truly zealous idolaters, as if they wanted to state: “See, this
is the true and real culture. Why concern yourself with those who are
transforming themselves and wanting something new!” Apparently this dancing
swarm possesses even the privilege of “good taste.” For the creative person
always stands at a disadvantage with respect to someone who merely looks on and
does not put his own hands to work, just as, for example, the political
know-it-all has always been wiser, more just, and more considerate than the
ruling statesman. But if we want to transfer into the realm of art the use of
plebiscites and of the numerical majority and, as it were, require the artist
to stand in his own defence before the forum of
aesthetically inert types, then we can take an oath in advance that he will be
condemned, not in spite of but precisely because of the fact
that his judges have solemnly proclaimed the canon of monumental art (that is,
in accordance with the official explanation of art which in all ages “has had
effects”). Whereas, for the judges all art which is not yet monumental, because
it is contemporary, is always, first, unnecessary, second, without pure
tendencies, and, third, lacking that authority of history. On the other hand,
their instinct tells them that art can be struck dead by art. The monumental is
definitely not to rise up once more. And for that their instinct uses precisely
what has the authority of the monumental from the past. So they are
connoisseurs of art because they generally like to get rid of art. They behave
as if they were doctors, while basically they are concerned with mixing poisons.
Thus, they develop their languages and their taste, in order to explain in
their discriminating way why they so persistently disapprove of all the
nourishing artistic food offered to them. For they do not
want greatness to arise. Their method is to say: “See! Greatness is
already there!” In truth, this greatness that is already there is of as little
concern to them as what is emerging. Of that their life bears witness.
Monumental history is the theatrical costume in which they pretend that their
hate for the powerful and the great of their time is a fulfilling admiration
for the strong and the great of past times. In this, through disguise they
invert the real sense of that method of historical observation into its
opposite. Whether they clearly know it or not, they certainly act as if their
motto were: let the dead bury the living.
Each of
the three existing types of history is right only for a single soil
and a single climate; on every other one it grows up into a
destructive weed. If a man who wants to create greatness uses the past at all,
then he will empower himself through monumental history. On the other hand, the
man who wishes to emphasize what is customary and what is traditionally valued
cultivates the past as an antiquarian historian. Only the man whose breast is
oppressed by a present need and who wants to cast off his load at any price has
a need for critical history, that is, history which sits in judgment and passes
judgment. From the thoughtless transplanting of growing things stem many ills:
the critical man without need, the antiquarian without reverence, and the
authority on greatness without the ability for greatness are the sort who turn
into weeds estranged from their natural mother earth and therefore into
degenerate growths.
3
History
belongs secondly to the man who preserves and honours,
to the person who with faith and love looks back in the direction from which he
has come, where he has been. Through this reverence he, as it were, gives
thanks for his existence. While he nurtures with a gentle hand what has stood
from time immemorial, he wants to preserve the conditions under which he came
into existence for those who are to come after him. And so he serves life. The
possession of his ancestors’ household goods changes the ideas in such a soul,
for those goods are far more likely to take possession of his soul. The small,
limited, crumbling, and archaic keep their own worth and integrity, because the
conserving and honouring soul of the antiquarian
person settles on these things and there prepares for itself a secret nest. The
history of his city becomes for him the history of his own self. He understands
the walls, the turreted gate, the dictate of the city council, and the folk
festival like an illustrated diary of his youth, and he rediscovers for himself
in all this his force, his purpose, his passion, his opinion, his foolishness,
and his bad habits. He says to himself, here one could live, for here one can live,
and here one will be able to go on living, because we are tenacious and do not
collapse overnight. Thus, with this “We” he looks back over the amazing past
lives of individuals and feels himself as the spirit of the house, the family,
and the city. From time to time he personally greets from the distant, obscure,
and confused centuries the soul of his people as his own soul. Feeling his
way back, having a premonition of things, a scent of almost lost
tracks, an instinctively correct reading even of a past which has been written
over, a swift understanding of the erased and reused parchments, which have, in
fact, been erased and written over many times—these are his gifts and his
virtues. With them stands Goethe in front of the memorial to Erwin von Steinbach.* In the storm of his feeling the veil of the historical cloud
spread out between them was torn apart. He saw again the German work for the
first time, “appearing out of the strong, rough German soul.” Such a sense and
attraction led the Italians of the Renaissance and reawoke
in their poets the old Italian genius, to a
“wonderfully renewed sound of the ancient lyre,” as Jakob
Burckhardt says.* But that antiquarian historical sense of reverence has the
highest value when it infuses into the modest, raw, even meagre
conditions in which an individual or a people live a simple moving feeling of
pleasure and satisfaction, in the way, for example, Niebuhr admits with honest
sincerity he could live happily on moor and heath among free farmers who have a
history, without missing art. How could history better serve living than by the
fact that it thus links the less-favoured races and
populations to their home region and home traditions, keeps them settled there,
and prevents them from roaming around in foreign places looking for something
better and, in search of that, fighting competitive wars? Sometimes it seems as
if it is an obstinacy and lack of understanding which keeps individuals, as it
were, screwed tight to these companions and surroundings, to this arduous daily
routine, to these bare mountain ridges, but it is the most healthy lack of
understanding, the most beneficial to the community, as anyone knows who has
clearly experienced the frightening effects of an adventurous desire to wander
away, sometimes even among entire hordes of people, or who sees close up the
condition of a people which has lost faith in its ancient history and has
fallen into a restless cosmopolitan choice and a constant search for novelty
after novelty. The opposite feeling, the sense of well being of a tree for its
roots, the happiness to know oneself in a manner not entirely arbitrary and accidental,
but as someone who has grown out of a past, as an heir, flower, and fruit, and
thus to have one’s existence excused, indeed justified—this is what people nowadays
lovingly describe as the real historical sense.
Now, that
is naturally not the condition in which a person would be most capable of
dissolving the past into pure knowledge. Thus, we also perceive here what we
discerned in connection with monumental history, that the past itself suffers,
so long as history serves life and is ruled by the drive for living. To speak
with some freedom through an illustration, the tree feels its roots more than
it can see them. This feeling, however, measures their size by the size and
strength of its visible branches. If the tree makes a mistake here, then how
mistaken it will be about the entire forest around it! From that forest the
tree only knows and feels something insofar as this hinders or helps it, but
not otherwise. The antiquarian sense of a person, a civic community, or an
entire people always has a very highly restricted field of vision. It does not
perceive most things at all, and the few things which it does perceive it looks
at far too closely and in isolation. It cannot measure it and therefore takes
everything as equally important. Thus, for the antiquarian sense each single
thing is too important. For it assigns to the things of the past no differences
in value and proportions which would distinguish things from each other fairly,
but always measures the mass and proportions of things only with reference to
the antiquarian individual or people looking back into the past.
Here
there is always a very imminent danger: in the end everything old and past,
especially what still enters a field of vision, is simply taken as equally worthy
of reverence, but everything which does not fit this respect for ancient
things, like the new and the coming into being, is rejected and treated as
hostile. So even the Greeks tolerated the hieratic style of
their plastic arts alongside the free and the great styles. Indeed, they
not only later tolerated the pointed noses and the frosty smiles, but even made
them into an elegant fashion. When the sense of a people is hardened like this,
when history serves the life of the past in such a way that it buries further
living, especially higher living, when the historical sense no longer conserves
life, but mummifies it, then the tree dies unnaturally, from the top gradually
down to the roots, and at last even the roots are generally destroyed.
Antiquarian history itself degenerates in that moment when it no longer
inspires and fills with enthusiasm the fresh life of the present. Then
reverence withers away. The scholarly habit lives on without it and orbits in
an egotistical and self-satisfied manner around its own centre. Then we get a
glimpse of the wretched drama of a blind mania for collecting, a restless compiling
together of everything that ever existed. The man envelops himself in a mouldy smell. With the antiquarian style, he manages to
corrupt even a more significant talent, a nobler need, into an insatiable lust
for novelty, a desire for everything really old. Often he sinks so low that he
is finally satisfied with any nourishment and takes pleasure in gobbling up
even the dust of biographical rubbish.
But even
when this degeneration does not enter into it, when antiquarian history does
not lose the basis upon which it alone can take root as a cure for living,
enough dangers still constantly remain, especially if it becomes too powerful
and grows over the other ways of dealing with the past. Antiquarian history
knows only how to preserve life, not how to generate it.
Therefore, it always undervalues what is coming into being,
because it has no instinctive feel for it, the way, for example, monumental history
has. Thus, antiquarian history hinders the powerful willing of new things; it
cripples the active man, who always, as an active person, will and must set
aside reverence to some extent. The fact that something has become old now
gives birth to the demand that it must be immortal, for when a person reckons
what every such ancient fact—an old custom of his fathers, a religious belief,
an inherited political right—has undergone throughout its existence, what a sum
of reverence and admiration from individuals and generations ever since, then
it seems presumptuous or even criminal to replace such an antiquity with
something new and to set up in opposition to such a numerous cluster of revered
and admired things the single fact of what is coming into being and what is
present.
Here it
becomes clear how, often enough, a third method of analyzing
the past is necessary for human beings, alongside the monumental and the
antiquarian: the critical method. Once again this is in the
service of living. In order to be able to live, a person must have the power
and from time to time use it to break a past and to dissolve it. He manages to
do this by dragging the past before the court of justice, investigating it
meticulously, and finally condemning it. Every past is worthy of condemnation,
for that is how it stands with human things: in them human force and weakness
have always been strong. Here it is not righteousness which sits in the
judgment seat or, even less, mercy which announces judgment, but life alone,
that dark, driving, insatiable self-desiring force. Its sentence is always
unmerciful, always unjust, because it never flows out of a pure spring of
knowledge, but in most cases the sentence would be like that anyway, even if
righteousness itself were to utter it. “For everything that
arises is worthy of perishing. Therefore, it would be better
that nothing arose.” It requires a great deal of power to be able to live and
to forget just how much living and being unjust are one and the same. Luther
himself once voiced the opinion that the world only came into being through the
forgetfulness of God; for if God had thought about “heavy artillery,” he would
not have made the world. From time to time, however, this same life, which uses
forgetting, demands the temporary destruction of this forgetfulness. For it
should be made quite clear how unjust the existence of something or other is, a
right, a caste, a dynasty, for example, and how much this thing really merits
destruction. For if its past is analyzed critically, then
we grasp with a knife at its roots and go cruelly beyond all reverence. It is
always a dangerous process, that is, dangerous for life itself. And people or
ages serving life in this way, by judging and destroying a past, are always
dangerous and in danger. For since we are now the products of earlier
generations, we are also the products of their aberrations, passions, mistakes,
even crimes. It is impossible to loose oneself from
this chain entirely. When we condemn those mistakes and consider ourselves released
from them, then we have not overcome the fact that we
are derived from them. In the best case, we bring the matter to a conflict
between our inherited customary nature and our knowledge, in fact, even to a
war between a new strict discipline and how we have
been brought up and what has been congenital to us from time immemorial. We cultivate
a new habit, a new instinct, a second nature, so that the first nature
atrophies. It is an attempt to give oneself, as it were, a past a posteriori
[after the fact], out of which we may be descended in opposition to the one
from which we are descended, always a dangerous attempt, because it is so
difficult to find a borderline to the denial of the past and because the second
natures usually are weaker than the first. Too often what remains is a case of
someone who understands the good without doing it, because we also understand
what is better without being able to do it. But here and there victory is nevertheless
achieved, and for the combatants, for those who make use of critical history
for living, there is even a remarkable consolation, namely, they know that that
first nature was at one time or another once a second nature and that every
victorious second nature becomes a first nature.
4
These are
the services which history can carry out for living. Every person and every
people, according to its goals, forces, and needs, uses a certain knowledge of
the past, sometimes as monumental history, sometimes as antiquarian history,
and sometimes as critical history, but not as a crowd of pure thinkers merely
peering at life, not as people eager for knowledge, individuals only satisfied
by knowledge, for whom an increase of knowledge is the goal itself, but always
only for the purpose of living and, in addition, under the command and the
highest guidance of this purpose. This is the natural relationship to history
of an age, a culture, and a people: summoned up by hunger, regulated by the
degree of the need, held to limits by the plastic power within, the fact that
the understanding of the past is desired at all times only to serve the future
and the present, not to weaken the present, not to uproot a forceful living future.
All that is simple, as the truth is simple, and is also immediately convincing
even to someone who has not first been provided a historical proof of it.
And now
for a quick look at our time! We are frightened and run back. Where has all the
clarity gone, all the naturalness and purity of that connection between life
and history? How confusedly, excessively, and anxiously this problem now
streams before our eyes! Does the fault lie with us, the observers? Or has the
constellation of life and history truly altered, because a powerful and hostile
star has interposed itself between them? Other people might point out that we
have seen things incorrectly. We, however, wish to state what we think we see.
For it is true that such a star has come in between, an illuminating and
beautiful star. The constellation has truly changed—through science, through
the demand that history is to be a science. Now not only does life no
longer rule and control knowledge about the past, but also all
the border markings have been ripped up, and everything that used to exist
has come crashing down onto people. All perspectives have also been moved as
far back as there has been a coming into being, far back into the endless
depths. No generation ever saw such an incalculable spectacle as is shown now
by the science of universal becoming, by history. Of course, history even
demonstrates this with the dangerous boldness of its motto: Fiat veritas, pereat vita.*
Let us
now picture to ourselves the spiritual result produced by this process in the
soul of the modern man. Historical knowledge streams out of inexhaustible
sources in on him, always renewing itself with more. Strange and disconnected
things push forward. Memory opens all its gates and is nevertheless not open
wide enough. Nature strives its utmost to receive
these strange guests, to arrange and honour them. But
these are at war with each other, and it appears necessary to overcome and
forcibly restrain them all, in order not to destroy oneself in their conflict.
Habituation to such a disorderly, stormy, and warring household gradually
becomes a second nature, although it is immediately beyond question that this
second nature is much weaker, much more restless, and entirely less healthy
than the first. Modern man finally drags a huge crowd of indigestible rocks of
knowledge around with him, which then occasionally audibly bang
around in his body, as it says in fairy tales. Through this noise the most
characteristic property of this modern man reveals itself: the remarkable
contrast between an inside to which nothing on the outside corresponds and an
outside to which nothing inside corresponds, a
opposition of which ancient peoples were ignorant. Knowledge, taken up to
excess without hunger, even in opposition to any need, now works no longer as a
motive which reshapes and has a drive toward the outside. It stays hidden in a
certain chaotic inner world, which that modern man describes with a strange
pride as an “Inwardness” peculiar to him. Thus, people
say that we have the content and that only the form is lacking. But with
respect to every living person this is a totally improper contradiction. For
that very reason our modern culture is not something living, because it does
not let itself be understood at all without that
contradiction; that is, it is really no true culture, but only a way of knowing
about culture. There remain in it thoughts of culture, feelings of culture, but
no cultural imperatives come from it. In contrast to this, what then really
motivates and moves outward into visible action often amounts to not much more
than a trivial convention, a pathetic imitation, or even a crude grimace. At
that point the inner feeling is probably resting, like the snake which has
swallowed an entire rabbit and then lies down contentedly still in the sunlight
and avoids all movements other than the most essential. The inner process, that
is now the entire business, that essentially is
“culture.” Everyone who wanders by has only one wish, that such an culture does not collapse from indigestion. Think, for
example, of a Greek going past such a culture. He would perceive that for more
recent people “educated” and “historically educated” appear to belong together,
as if they were one and the same and distinguished only by the number of words.
If he talked of his own principle that it is possible for an individual to
be very educated and nevertheless not to be historically educated at all, then
people would think they had not heard him correctly and shake their heads. That
famous small nation from a not too distant past, I mean those very Greeks, in
the period of their greatest power protected an unhistorical sense tenaciously.
A contemporary man magically forced to return back into that world would presumably
find the Greeks very “uneducated.” In that reaction, of course, the secret of
modern culture, so painstakingly disguised, would be exposed to public
laughter. For we modern people have nothing at all
which comes from us. Only because we fill and overfill ourselves with foreign
ages, customs, arts, philosophies, religions, and discoveries do we become
something worthy of consideration, that is, like wandering encyclopaedias,
as some ancient Greek who strayed into our age would perhaps put it. However, people
encounter the entire value of encyclopaedias only in
what is inside, in the contents, not in what is on the outside or in the
binding and on the cover. Thus, all modern culture is essentially inner. The bookbinder has printed on the outside a phrase he
knows by heart, something to this effect: Handbook of inner culture for external
barbarians. In fact, this contrast between inner and outer makes the outer even
more barbaric than it would have to be, if a rough people were evolving out of
themselves only according to their basic needs. For what means does nature
still have at its disposal to overcome the super-abundance forcing itself on
it? Only one means, to take it as lightly as possible in order to shove it
aside again quickly and dispose of it. From that arises a habit of not taking
real things seriously any more. From that arises the “weak personality,” as a
result of which reality, what exists, makes only an insignificant impression.
Finally on the outside people become constantly more negligent and more
comfortable and widen the disturbing gulf between content and form until they
are insensitive to the barbarism, so long as the memory is always newly
stimulated, so long as constantly new things worthy of knowledge flow by, which
can be neatly packaged in the compartments of memory. The culture of a people,
as the contrast to that barbarism, was once described (with some justice, in my
view) as a unity of the artistic style in all expressions of the life of the
people. This description must not be misunderstood, as if the issue were an opposition
between barbarism and a beautiful style. The people to whom we
ascribe a culture should in everything real only exist in a vital unity and not
be split apart so miserably into inner and outer, into content and form. Anyone
who wants to strive after and foster the culture of a people should strive
after and foster this higher unity and, for the sake of a true culture, work to
destroy the modern notion of being cultured. He dares to consider how the
health of a people which has been disturbed by history could be restored, how a
people could find its instinct once again and with that its integrity.
Now I
want to speak bluntly about us Germans of the present day. It is our lot to
suffer more than other people from that weakness of the personality and from
the contradiction between content and form. Form is commonly accepted by us
Germans as a convention, as a disguise and a pretence,
and is thus, when not hated, then at any rate not loved. It would be even more
just to say that we have an extraordinary anxiety about the word convention and
probably about the fact of convention as well. In this anxiety, the German
abandoned the French school, for he wanted to become more natural and thereby
more German. Now, however, with this “thereby” he seems to have made a
miscalculation: having run off away from the school of convention, he now let
himself go how and where he had the mere desire to go, and basically imitated
haphazardly whatever he wanted in semi-forgetfulness of what in earlier times
he imitated meticulously and often happily. Thus, measured against earlier
times, even nowadays people still live according to a slipshod, incorrect
French convention, as all our moving, standing, conversing, clothing, and
dwelling demonstrate. While people believe they are escaping back to the
natural, they think only about letting themselves go, about comfort, and about
the smallest possible amount of self-control. Wander through a German city:
everything is conventional, compared to the particular national characteristics
of foreign cities. This shows itself in negatives: all is colourless,
worn out, badly copied, apathetic. Each man goes about as he wishes, but not in
response to a forceful desire rich in ideas, but following the laws which the
general haste, along with the general desire for comfort, establish. A piece of
clothing, whose invention required no brain power, whose production took no
time, an article of clothing derived from foreigners and imitated as casually
as possible, instantly counts among the Germans as a contribution to German
national dress. The sense of form they disavow with perfect irony, for indeed
they do have the sense of the content: after all, they are the renowned
people of the inward life.
However,
there is now a well-known danger with this inwardness: the content itself,
which people assume they cannot see at all from the outside, may at some point
disappear. From the outside, however, people would not notice either its
absence or its earlier presence. But even if people think that, in any case,
the German people are as far as possible from this danger, the foreigner will
always have a certain justification when he levels the accusation at us that
our inner life is too weak and unorganized to be effective on the outside and
to give itself a shape. This inward life can to a rare degree well prove
delicately sensitive, serious, strong, and sincere, and perhaps even richer
than the inner lives of other peoples. But as a totality it remains weak,
because all the beautiful threads are not tied together into a powerful knot.
Thus, the visible act is not the total action and self-revelation of this
inwardness, but only a weak or crude attempt of a few strands or other to will
something whose appearance might for once pass muster as the totality. And so one cannot judge the German at all according to a single
action. As an individual he is still completely hidden after the action.
As is well known, he must be measured by his thoughts and feelings, and he
expresses these nowadays in his books. If only these very books did not awaken,
in recent times more than ever, a doubt about whether the famous inwardness is
really still sitting in its inaccessible little temple. It would be a horrible
idea that one day it may have disappeared and now the only thing still left
behind is the externality, that arrogant, clumsy, and respectfully unkempt
externality, as the hallmark of the German. Almost as terrible as if that
inwardness, without people being able to see it, sat inside, counterfeit, coloured, painted over, and had become an actress, if not
something worse, as, for example, Grillparzer, who stood on the sidelines as a
quiet observer, appears to assume about his experience as a dramatist in the
theatre: “We feel with abstractions,” he says; “we hardly know any more how
feeling expresses itself among our contemporaries. We let our feelings jump
about in ways they no longer do nowadays. Shakespeare has destroyed everything
for us moderns.”*
This is a
single example, perhaps too quickly generalized. But how fearful would his
justified generalization be if the individual cases should force themselves
upon the observer far too frequently; how despairingly the statement would
echo: “We Germans feel with abstractions; we have all been corrupted by
history,” a statement which would destroy at the root every hope for a national
culture still to come, for every hope of that kind grows out of the faith in the
authenticity and the immediacy of German feeling, from the belief in the
undamaged inner life. What is there still to be hoped for or still believed, if
the wellspring of believing and hoping has deteriorated, if the inner life has
learned to leap about, to dance, to put on make up,
and to express itself with abstraction and calculation and gradually to lose
itself? And how is the great productive spirit still to maintain himself among
a people which is no longer sure of its unified inner life and which falls
apart into sections, with a miseducated and seduced
inner life among the cultured and an inaccessible inner life among the
uneducated? How is he to keep going if the unity of the people’s feeling gets
lost, if, in addition, he knows that the very part which calls itself the
cultured portion of the people and which arrogates to itself a right to the
national artistic spirit has false and dyed feeling.
Here and there the judgment and taste of individuals may themselves have become
finer and more sublimated, but that is no compensation for him. It torments the
productive spirit to have to speak, as it were, only to one sect and no longer
to be necessary within his own people. Perhaps he would now sooner bury his
treasure, since it disgusts him to be exquisitely patronized by one sect, while
his heart is full of pity for all. The instinct of the people no longer comes
to meet him. It is useless to stretch out one’s arms toward it in yearning.
What now still remains for him, other than to turn his enthusiastic hate
against that restricting prohibition, against the barriers erected in the
so-called culture of his people, in order at least, as a judge, to condemn what
for him, the living person and the producer of life, is destruction and degradation?
Thus, he exchanges the deep understanding of his own fate for the divine
pleasure of the creator and helper and finishes up a lonely man of knowledge, a
supersaturated wise man. It is the most painful spectacle. Generally whoever
sees it will recognize a holy need here. He tells himself: here it is necessary
to give assistance; that higher unity in the nature and soul of a people must
be established once more; that gulf between the inner and the outer must
disappear again under the hammer blows of necessity. What means should he now
reach for? But what remains for him now other than his deep understanding? By
speaking out on this and spreading awareness of it, by sowing from his full
hands, he hopes to plant a need. And out of the strong need will one day arise
the strong deed. And so that I leave no doubt where I derive the example of
that need, that necessity, that knowledge, here my testimony should stand
explicitly, that it is German unity in that highest sense
which we are striving for and striving for more passionately than for political
reunification, the unity of the German spirit and life after the destruction
of the opposition of form and content, of inwardness and convention.
5
In five
respects the supersaturation of an age in history
seems to me hostile and dangerous to life. Through such an excess that hitherto
mentioned contrast between inner and outer is produced and, in the process, the
personality is weakened; through this excess an age is caught up in the fantasy
that it possesses the rarest virtue, justice, in a higher degree than any other
time; through this excess the instincts of a people are disrupted, and the
individual no less than the totality is hindered from developing maturely;
through this excess the always dangerous belief in the old age of humanity
takes root, the belief that we are late arrivals and epigones; through this
excess an age attains the dangerous mood of irony about itself and, from that,
an even more dangerous mood of cynicism. In this, however, it increasingly
ripens towards a cleverly egotistical practice, through which the forces of
life are crippled and finally destroyed.
And now
back to our first statement: modern man suffers from a weakened personality.
Just as the Roman in the time of the Caesars became un-Roman with regard to the
area of the earth standing at his disposal, as he lost himself among the
foreign things streaming in and degenerated with the cosmopolitan carnival of
gods, customs, and arts, so matters must go with the modern person who
continually allows his historical artists to prepare the celebration of a world
market fair. He has become a spectator, enjoying himself and wandering around,
converted into a condition in which even great wars and huge revolutions are
hardly able to change anything momentarily. The war has not yet ended, and already
it is transformed on printed paper a hundred thousand times over; it is already
being promoted as the newest stimulant for the exhausted palate of those greedy
for history. It appears almost impossible that a strong and full tone will be
produced even by the most powerful plucking of the strings. It dies away again
immediately; in the next moment it is already growing fainter, softly
evaporating without force into history. To state the matter in moral terms: you
do not manage to hold onto what is noble any more;
your deeds are sudden bangs, not rolling thunder. If the very greatest and most
wonderful thing is accomplished, it must nevertheless move to Hades silently
without any fuss. For art runs away when you instantly throw
over your actions the roof of the historical marquee. The person who
wants to understand, calculate and grasp in an instant, where he should in an
enduring shock hang onto the unknowable as something sublime, may be called
intelligent, but only in the sense in which Schiller speaks of the
understanding of the intelligent person: he does not see some things which even
the child sees; he does not hear some things which even the child hears; these
“things” are precisely the most important thing. Because he does not understand
this, his understanding is more childish than the child and more simplistic
than simple mindedness, in spite of the many shrewd wrinkles on his
parchment-like features and the virtuoso practice of his fingers unraveling
complexities. The reason is that he has destroyed and lost his instinct. Now he
can no longer let the reins hang loose, trusting the “divine animal,” when his
understanding wavers and his road leads through deserts. Thus, the individual becomes
timid and unsure and can no longer believe in himself. He sinks into himself,
into the inner life. That means here only into the piled-up jumble of scholarly
data which does not work towards the outside, instruction which does not become
living. If we look for a moment from outside, then we notice how the expulsion
of instinct by history has converted people almost into nothing but abstractis [abstractions] and shadows.
No one gambles his identity on that instinct any more. Instead he masks himself
as cultured man, as scholar, as poet, as politician. If we seize such masks
because we believe the matter is something serious and not merely a puppet show
play (for they all paper themselves over with seriousness), then we suddenly
have only rags and bright patches in our hands. Therefore, we should no longer
allow ourselves to be deceived and should yell at them, “Strip off your jackets
or be what you seem.” No longer should everyone with seriousness in his blood
turn into a Don Quixote, for he has something better to do than to keep getting
into fights with such illusory realities. In any case, however, he must keenly
inspect each mask, cry “Halt! Who goes there?” and pull the mask down onto its
neck. Strange! We should have thought that history encouraged human beings
above all to be honest, even if only an honest fool. This has
always been its effect. But nowadays it is no longer that! Historical culture
and the common uniform of the middle class both rule at the same time. While
never before has there been such sonorous talk of the “free personality,” we
never once see personalities, to say nothing of free people, but only anxiously
disguised universal people. The individual has drawn himself back into the
inner life: on the outside we no longer observe any of him. This being the case,
we might not be certain whether, in general, there could be causes without
effects. Or should a race of eunuchs be necessary as a guard over the great
historical harem of the world? For them, of course, pure objectivity is well
and truly established on their faces. However, it does seem almost as if it was
their assignment to stand guardian over history, so that nothing comes out of
it other than just histories, but without events, to ensure that through it no
personalities become “free,” that is, true to themselves and true with respect
to others in word and deed. Only through this truthfulness will the need, the
inner misery of the modern man, see the light of day, and in place of that
anxiously concealed convention and masquerade, art and religion will be able to
enter as true helpers, in order to cultivate a common culture corresponding to
real needs, culture which does not, like the present universal education, just
teach one to lie to oneself about these needs and thus to become a wandering
lie.
In what
an unnatural, artificial, and definitely unworthy position must the most
sincere of all sciences, the truly naked goddess Philosophy, be in a time which
suffers from universal education. In such a world of compulsory external uniformity
she remains the learned monologue of the solitary stroller, an individual’s
accidental hunting trophy, a hidden parlour secret,
or harmless prattle between academic old men and children. No one is allowed to
venture on fulfilling the law of philosophy in himself.
No one lives philosophically, with that simple manly truth, which acted
forcefully on a man in ancient times, wherever he was and whatever he did, to
behave as a Stoic if he had once promised to be true to the Stoa.
All modern philosophy is political and police-like, restricted to the
appearance of learning through the ruling powers, churches, academies, customs,
and human cowardice. What remains in it are sighs of “If only” or the knowledge
of “Once upon a time.” If philosophy wants to be more than an inner knowledge
which holds one back and has no active effect, then it has no rights in the
heart of historical education. If only the modern human being were, in general,
courageous and decisive, if he were even in his hostility not just an inner
being, he would banish philosophy. Thus, he contents himself by modestly
covering up her nudity. Yes, people think, write, print, speak, and teach philosophically;
to this extent almost everything is allowed. Only in action, in so-called
living, are things otherwise. There only one thing is always allowed, and
everything else is simply impossible. So historical culture
wills it. Are they still human beings, we ask ourselves then, or perhaps
only thinking, writing, and speaking machines?
Of
Shakespeare Goethe once said, “No one hated the material costume more than he.
He understood really well the inner costume of human beings, and here all
people are alike. People say he presented the Romans excellently. I do not find
that. They are nothing but inveterate Englishmen, but naturally they are human
beings, people from the ground up, and the Roman toga suits them well enough.”
Now, I ask if it might also be possible to lead out our contemporary men of
letters, men of the people, officials, and politicians as Romans. It will not
work at all, because they are not human beings, but only physical compendia
and, as it were, concrete abstractions. If they should have character and their
own style, this is all buried so deep that it has no power whatsoever to
wriggle out into the daylight. If they are to be human beings, then they are
that only for the man “who tests the kidneys.” For everyone else they are
something other, not human beings, not gods, not animals, but historically educated
pictures, completely and utterly education, picture, form without demonstrable
content, unfortunately only bad form and, in addition, uniform. And in this
sense may my claim be understood and considered: History is borne only
by strong personalities; the weak personalities it obliterates completely.
It comes down to this: history bewilders feeling and sensing where these are
not strong enough to measure the past against themselves. Anyone who does not
dare any longer to trust himself but who involuntarily seeks advice from
history about his feeling by asking “What should I feel here?” in his timidity
gradually becomes an actor and plays a role, usually, in fact, many roles, and
therefore he plays each badly and superficially. Little by little all
congruence between the man and his historical sphere fails. We see small pushy
young men associating with the Romans as if they were their equals. They
rummage around and dig away in the remnants of the Greek poets, as if even
these were corpora [bodies] ready for their
post-mortem examination and were as vilia
[vile] as their own literary corpora might be.
Suppose there is a concern in one man’s case with Democritus, then the question
always on my lips is this: Why not Heraclitus? Or Philo?
Or Bacon? Or Descartes? and so on to one’s heart’s content. And then, why just a
philosopher? Why not a poet, an orator? And why particularly
a Greek? Why not an Englishman, a Turk? Is the past then not large
enough to find something, so that you do not make yourself look so gratuitously
ridiculous by comparison? But, as I have mentioned, it is a race of eunuchs;
for a eunuch one woman is like another, in effect, merely a woman, the
woman-in-itself, the eternally unapproachable, and so what drives them is
something indifferent, so long as history itself remains splendidly “objective”
and, of course, protected by precisely the sort of people who could never
create history themselves. And since the eternally feminine will never draw you
upward, then you pull her down to yourselves and assume, since you are neuters,
that history is also a neuter.* However, so that people do not think that I am serious in comparing
history with the eternally feminine, I wish to express myself much more
clearly: I consider that history is the opposite of the eternally masculine,
but for those who are “historically educated” through and through it must be
quite unimportant whether history is one or the other. But whatever the case,
such people are themselves neither male nor female, not something common to
both, but always only neuter or, to express myself in a more educated way, they
are just the eternally objective.
If
personalities are, first of all, as has been described, deflated to an eternal
loss of subjectivity or, as people say, to objectivity, then nothing more can
work on them. Let something good and right come about, in action, poetry, or
music. Immediately the person emptied out by his education looks out over the
work and asks about the history of the author. If this author has already
created a number of things, immediately the person must allow himself to point
out the earlier and the presumed future progress of the author’s development;
right away he will bring in others for comparative purposes, he will dissect
and rip apart the choice of the author’s material and his treatment, and will,
in his wisdom, fit the work together again anew, in general giving him advice
and setting him right about everything. Let the most astonishing thing occur;
the crowd of historical neutrals is always in place ready to assess the author
even from a great distance. Momentarily the echo resounds, but always as
“Criticism.” A short time before, however, the critic did not permit himself to
dream that such an event was possible. The work never achieves an effect, but
only more “Criticism,” and the criticism itself, in its turn, has no effect,
but leads only to further criticism. In this business people have agreed to consider
a lot of criticism as an effect and a little criticism or none as a failure.
Basically, however, everything remains as in the past, even with this “effect.”
True, people chat for a while about something new, and then about something
else new, and in between do what they always have done. The historical
education of our critics no longer permits an effect on our real understanding,
namely, something that produces an effect on life and action. On the blackest
writing they impress immediately their blotting paper, to the most delightful
drawing they apply their thick brush strokes, which are to be considered corrections.
And then everything is over once again. However, their critical pens never
cease flying, for they have lost power over them and are led on by them rather
than leading them. It is precisely in this excess of their critical
ejaculations, in the lack of control over themselves, in what the Romans
call impotentia [impotence], that
the weakness of the modern personality reveals itself.
6
But let us
leave this weakness. Let us rather turn to a much-praised strength of the
modern person, with the truly awkward question whether, on account of his
well-known historical “Objectivity,” he has a right to call himself strong,
that is, just, and just to a higher degree than the people of other
times. Is it true that this objectivity originates from a heightened need and
demand for justice? Or does it, as an effect with quite different causes,
merely create the appearance that justice might be its real cause? Does this
objectivity perhaps tempt one to a bias concerning the virtues of modern man, a
bias which is detrimental because it is far too flattering? Socrates considered
it an illness close to insanity to imagine oneself in possession of a virtue
and not to possess it. Certainly such conceit is more dangerous than the
opposite delusion, suffering from a mistake or vice. For through the latter
delusion it is perhaps still possible to become better. The former conceit,
however, makes a person or a time daily worse, and thus, in this case, less
just.
It is
true that no one has a higher claim on our veneration than the man who
possesses the drive and the power for justice. For in justice
are united and hidden the highest and rarest virtues, as in a bottomless sea
that receives streams from all sides and absorbs them into itself. The
hand of the just man authorized to sit in judgment no longer trembles when it
holds the scales. Unsparingly he puts on weight after weight even against
himself. His eye does not become dim when the scale pans rise and fall, and his
voice rings out neither hard nor broken when he delivers the verdict. If he
were a cold daemon of knowledge, then he would spread out around him the
ice-cold atmosphere of a terrifying superhuman majesty, which we would have to
be afraid of and not revere. But since he is a human being and yet is trying to
rise above venial doubt to a strong certainty, above a patient leniency to an
imperative “You must,” above the rare virtue of magnanimity to the rarest virtue
of all, justice, since he now is like this daemon, but from the very beginning
without being anything other than a poor human being, and above all, since in
each moment he has to atone for his humanity and be tragically consumed by an
impossible virtue, all this places him on a lonely height, as the example of
the human race most worthy of reverence. For he wants truth, not
merely as cold knowledge without consequences, but as the ordering and
punishing judge, truth not as a selfish possession of the individual but as the
sacred entitlement to shift all the boundary stones of egotistical possessions,
in a word, truth as the Last Judgment and not at all as something like the captured
trophy desired by the individual hunter. Only insofar as the truthful man has
the unconditional will to be just is the striving after truth, which is so
thoughtlessly glorified everywhere, something great. By contrast, in the case
of duller eyes, a large number of very different sorts of drives (like
curiosity, the flight from boredom, resentment, vanity, playfulness), which
have nothing at all to do with the truth, blend in with that striving for
truth, which has its roots in justice. So the world does indeed seem to be full
of such people who “serve the truth,” and yet the virtue of justice is very
seldom present, even more rarely recognized, and almost always hated to the
death; whereas, the crowd of the apparently virtuous in every age marches
around with honour and a great public display. In
truth, few people serve truthfulness, because only a few have the purity of
will to be just, and even among these, the fewest have the strength to be capable
of being just. It is certainly not enough to have only the will for justice.
And the most horrible sufferings among human beings have come directly from the
drive for justice without the power of judgment. For this reason the general
welfare would require nothing more than to scatter the seeds
of the power of judgment as widely as possible, so that the fanatic remained
distinguishable from the judge and blind desire to be a judge distinguishable
from the conscious power to be able to judge. But where would one find a means
of cultivating the power of judgment! Thus, when there is talk of truth and
justice, people will remain in an eternal wavering hesitation whether a fanatic
or a judge is talking to them. Hence, we should forgive those who have welcomed
with special kindness these “servers of the truth” who possess neither the will
nor the power to judge and who set themselves the task of searching for
knowledge which is “pure and without consequences” or, more clearly, of
searching for the truth from which nothing emerges. There are a great many
trivial truths; there are problems that never require effort, let alone any
self-sacrifice, in order for one to judge them correctly. In this realm of the
trivial and the safe, a person indeed succeeds in becoming a cold daemon of
knowledge. And yet! When, in especially favourable
times, whole cohorts of learned people and researchers are turned into such
daemons, it always remains unfortunately possible that the time in question
suffers from a lack of strict and great justice, in short, of the noblest
kernel of the so-called drive to the truth.
Let us
now place before our eyes the historical virtuoso of the present age. Is he the
most just man of his time? It is true that he has cultivated in himself such a
tenderness and sensitivity of feeling that for him nothing human is far
distant. The most different times and people ring out at once from his lyre in
harmonious tones. He has become a tuneful passive thing, which through its
resounding tone also works on other passive things of the same type, until finally
the entire air of an age is full of such delicate reverberations, twanging away
in concord. But, in my view, in every original historical major chord we hear
only its overtone, so to speak: the sturdiness and power of the original can no
longer be sensed in the celestially thin and sharp sound of the strings.
Whereas the original tone usually aroused actions, needs, and terrors, this
lulls us to sleep and makes us weak hedonists. It is as if we have arranged
the Eroica Symphony for two
flutes and use it for dreamy opium smokers. By that we may now measure among
the virtuosi how things will stand concerning the highest demands of modern man
for a loftier and purer justice; this virtue never has anything pleasant, knows
no attractive feelings, and is hard and terrifying. Measured by that, how low
even magnanimity stands now on the ladder of virtues, magnanimity, the characteristic of a few rare historians! But for many
more it is a matter only of tolerance, of allowing to remain valid what cannot
be once and for all denied, of editing and glossing over in a moderate and
benevolent way, of an clever acceptance of the fact that the inexperienced man
interprets it as a virtue of justice if the past is generally explained without
harsh accents and without an expression of hatred. But only the superior power
can judge. Weakness must tolerate, unless it wishes to feign strength and turn
justice on the judgment seat into a performing actress. Now, there still
remains one fearful species of historian: efficient, severe, and honest
characters, but with narrow heads. Here good will to be just is present, together
with strong feeling in the judgments. But all their judicial pronouncements are
false, roughly for the same reasons that the judgments of the ordinary sworn
juries are false. And so how unlikely the frequency of historical talent is! To
say nothing at all here about the disguised egoists and fellow travellers, who adopt a thoroughly objective demeanour for the insidious games they play. And by the
same token to say nothing of the entirely unthinking people who write as
historians in the naive belief that their own age is exactly right in all its
popular views and that to write by the standards of this age generally amounts
to being right, a faith in which each and every religion lives and about which,
in the case of religions, there is nothing more to say. Those naive historians
call “Objectivity” the process of measuring past opinions and deeds by the
universal public opinions of the moment. Here they find the canon of all
truths. Their work is to adapt the past to contemporary triviality. By contrast,
they call “subjective” all history writing which does not take those popular
opinions as canonical.
And might
not an illusion have crept into even the highest interpretation of the word
objectivity? For with this word, people understand a condition in the historian
in which he looks at an event in all its motives and consequences with such
purity that they have no effect at all on his subject. People mean that
aesthetic phenomenon, that state of being detached from one’s personal
interests, with which the painter in a stormy landscape, under lightning and
thunder, or on the moving sea looks at his inner picture and, in the process,
forgets his own person. Thus, people also demand from the historian the
artistic tranquillity and the complete immersion in things.
However, it is a myth that the picture which things bring out in a person
constituted in this way reflects the empirical essence of things. Or is it the
case that through their own activity, as it were, at these times things depict
themselves, draw a good likeness of themselves, or
photograph themselves on a purely passive medium?
This
would be a mythology and, on top of that, a bad one. In addition, people might
forget that that very moment is the most powerful and most spontaneous creative
moment in the inner life of the artist, a moment of composition of the very
highest order, whose result may well be a true artistic picture, not a
historically true one. To think of history as objective in this way is the
silent work of the dramatist, that is, to think of everything one after the
other, to weave the isolated details into a totality, always on the condition
that a unity of the plan in the material has to be established, if it is not
inherent in it. Thus, man spins a web over the past and tames it; in this way
he expresses his artistic impulse, but not his drive for truth, his drive for
justice. Objectivity and justice have nothing to do with each other. One might
imagine a historical writing which had no drop of the common empirical truth in
it and yet which might be entitled to claim the highest rating on a scale of
objectivity. Indeed, Grillparzer ventures to clarify this point. “What is
history then other than the way in which the spirit of man takes in the events
which are impenetrable to him, something in which only God knows
whether there is a relationship holding it together, in which that spirit replaces
an incomprehensible thing with something comprehensible, from the outside
underwrites with his ideas of purposefulness a totality which really can be
known only from within, and also assumes chance events, where a thousand small
causes were at work. At any one time everyone has his own individual necessity
so that millions of trends run next to each other in parallel, crooked, and
straight lines, intersect each other, help, hinder, flow forward and backwards,
thus taking on in relation to each other the character of chance and, to say
nothing of the effects of natural events, thus render it impossible to prove a
compelling, all-encompassing necessity for events.” However, it is precisely
such necessity, the result of that “objective” look at the matter at hand,
which is supposed to be revealed! This is an assumption which, when it is
voiced as dogma by the historian, can only assume an odd form. Schiller, in
fact, is completely clear concerning the essential subjectivity of this assumption,
when he says of the historian: “One phenomenon after another begins to liberate
itself from blind contingency and lawless freedom and to become joined as a
coordinated link into a harmonious totality,which, of course, is present only in its
depiction.” But how should we consider the claim made in good faith by a
famous historical virtuoso, a claim hovering artificially between tautology and
absurdity: “The fact is that all human action and striving are subordinate to
the light and often unnoticed but powerful and irresistible progress of
things”? In such a statement we do not feel any enigmatic wisdom expressing
itself as obvious illogic, as in the saying of Goethe’s
gardener, “Nature may let itself be forced but not compelled,” or in the
inscription on a booth in a fair ground, as Swift tells it, “Here you can see
the largest elephant in the world except itself.” For what is, in fact, the
difference between the actions and the drives of men and the process of things?
Besides, it strikes me that such historians, like that one from whom we quoted
a sentence, cease to instruct as soon as they generalize and then reveal a
sense of their own weakness in their obscurities. In other sciences
generalizations are the most important thing, insofar as they contain laws.
However, if statements like the one we quoted were to serve as valid laws, one
would have to reply that then the work of the writer of history is changed, for
what remains generally true in such statements, once we remove the
irreconcilably dark remainder we spoke about, is well known and even trivial.
For it will be visibly apparent to everyone in the smallest area of experience.
However, for that reason to inconvenience entire peoples and to spend wearisome
years of work on the subject amounts to nothing more than, as in the natural sciences,
to pile experiment on experiment long after the law can be inferred from the
present store of experiments. Incidentally, according to Zoellner,
natural science nowadays allegedly suffers from a senseless excess of
experimentation.* If the value of a drama is to lie only in the main and concluding
ideas, then drama itself would be the furthest possible route to the goal,
crooked and laborious. And thus I hope history can realize that its
significance is not in universal ideas, like some sort of blossom or fruit, but
that its value comes directly from reworking a well-known, perhaps habitual
theme, a daily melody, in a stimulating way, elevating it, intensifying it to
an inclusive symbol, and thus allowing one to make out in the original theme an
entire world of profundity, power, and beauty.
What is
appropriate, however, in this process, before everything else,
is a great artistic potential, a creative hovering above and a loving immersion
in the empirical data, a further poetical composing on the given types—to this
process objectivity certainly belongs, but as a positive quality. But too often
objectivity is only a phrase. Instead of that innerly
flashing, externally unmoving and mysterious composure in the artist’s eyes,
the affectation of composure emerges, just as the lack of pathos and moral power
habitually disguises itself in a biting coldness of expression. In certain
cases, the banality of the conviction ventures to appear, that wisdom of every
man, which merely because of its tediousness creates the impression of a calm,
unexcited person, in order to pass muster as that artistic condition in which
the subject is silent and becomes completely imperceptible. So everything which
generally does not rouse emotion is sought out, and the driest expression is
precisely the correct one. Indeed, people go as far as to assume that the
person whom a moment in the past does not affect in the slightest is
competent to present it. Philologists and Greeks frequently behave towards each
other in this way. They do not concern themselves with each other in the least.
And people also call this “objectivity”! Now, it is precisely in those places
where the highest and rarest matter is to be presented, that it is absolutely
outrageous to find the deliberate state of indifference, something put on for
show, the acquired flat and sober art of seeking out motives, especially when
the vanity of the historian drives toward this objective behaviour of indifference. Incidentally, with such authors
people should base their judgment more closely on the principle that each man’s
vanity is inversely proportional to his understanding. No, at least be honest!
Do not seek the appearance of the artistic power truly called objectivity, and
do not seek the appearance of justice, if you have not been ordained for the
fearful vocation of the just man. As if it also were the work of every age to
have to be just in relation to everything that has ever been! As a matter of fact, times and generations never have the right to
be the judges of all earlier times and generations. Such a troublesome
task always falls only to individuals, indeed, to the rarest people. Who
compels you then to judge? And so, just test yourselves, whether you could be
just, if you wanted to! As judges you would have to stand higher than what is
being judged, whereas, you have only come later. The guests who come last to
the table should in all fairness receive the last places. And you wish to have
the first? Then at least do something of the highest and best order. Perhaps
people will then really make a place for you, even if you come at the end.
You can
interpret the past only on the basis of the highest power of the present. Only in
the strongest tension of your noblest characteristics will you surmise what
from the past is great and worth knowing and preserving. Like by like! Otherwise
you drag the past down to your level. Do not believe a piece of historical
writing if it does not spring out of the head of the rarest of spirits. You
will always perceive the quality of its spirit if it is forced to express
something universal or to repeat once more something universally known. The
true historian must have the power of reshaping the universally known into what
has never been heard and to announce what is universal so simply and deeply
that people overlook the simplicity in the profundity and the profundity in the
simplicity. No person can be simultaneously a great historian, an artistic
person, and a numskull. On the other hand, people should not rate as
insignificant the workers who go around with a cart, shaking things and sifting
through them, on the ground that they will certainly not be able to become
great historians. Even less should we confuse these workers with great historians. Instead, we should see them as the necessary
colleagues and manual labourers in the service of the
master, in something like the way the French, with greater naiveté than is possible
among the Germans, were accustomed to speak of the historians of
Monsieur Thiers.* These workers should gradually become great scholars, but
for that very reason cannot ever become masters. An eminently learned man and a
great numskull—those go together more easily under a single hat.
Thus, the
person of experience and reflection writes history. Anyone who has not lived
through something greater and higher than everyone else will not know how to
interpret anything great and lofty from the past. The utterance of the past is
always an oracular pronouncement. You will understand it only as a master
builder of the future and as a person who knows about the present. People now
explain the extraordinarily deep and far-reaching effect of Delphi by the particular
fact that the Delphic priests had precise knowledge about the past.*It is appropriate now to understand that only the man who builds
the future has a right to judge the past. In order to look ahead, set
yourselves an important goal, and at the same time control that voluptuous
analytical drive with which you now lay waste the present and render almost
impossible all tranquillity, all peaceful growth and
maturing. Draw around yourself the fence of a large and extensive hope, an
optimistic striving. Create in yourselves a picture to which the future is to
correspond, and forget the myth that you are epigones. You have enough to plan
and to invent when you ponder that future life. But in considering history do
not ask that she show you the “How?” and the “With what?” If, however, you live
your life in the history of great men, then you will learn from her the supreme
command: to become mature and to flee away from that paralysing
and restricting upbringing of the age, which sees advantages for itself in not allowing you to become mature, in order to
rule and exploit you, the immature. And when you ask after biographies, then do not ask for those with the refrain “Mr. Soandso and His Age” but for those whose title page must
read “A Fighter Against His Age.” Fill your souls with Plutarch, and dare to
believe in yourselves when you have faith in his heroes.* With a hundred people raised in such an unmodern
way, that is, people who have become mature and familiar with the heroic, one
could permanently silence the entire noisy pseudo-culture of this age.
7
When the
historical sense reigns unchecked and drags along with it all its
consequences, it uproots the future, because it destroys illusions and takes
from existing things the atmosphere in which they alone can live. Historical
justice, even if it is practised truly and with a
purity of conviction, is therefore a fearful virtue, because it always
undermines what is living and brings about its downfall. Its judgment is always
an annihilation. If behind the historical drive no
constructive urge is at work, if things are not destroyed and cleared away so
that a future, something already alive in hope, builds its dwelling on the
liberated ground, if justice alone rules, then the creative instinct is
enfeebled and disheartened. For example, a religion which is to be turned into
historical knowledge under the power of pure justice, a religion which is to be
scientifically understood through and through, is by the end of this process
immediately destroyed. The reason for this is that in the historical method of
reckoning so many false, crude, inhuman, absurd, and violent things always
emerge that the pious atmosphere of illusion in which alone everything that
wants to live can live necessarily disappears. But only in love, only in a love
overshadowed by illusion, does a person create, that is, only in the unconditional
belief in what is perfect and right. Anything which compels a person no longer
to love unconditionally cuts away the roots of his power. He must wither up,
that is, become dishonest. In effects like this, history is opposed by art. And
only when history undertakes to be turned into an art work and thus to become a
purely artistic picture can it perhaps maintain the instincts or even arouse
them. Such historical writing, however, would go completely against the
analytical and inartistic trends of our time; indeed, they would consider it
counterfeit. But history which only destroys, without an inner drive to build
guiding it, in the long run makes its implements blasé and unnatural. For such
people destroy illusions, and “whoever destroys illusions in himself
and others is punished by the sternest tyrant, nature.” True, for a fairly long
time one can keep oneself really busy with history completely harmlessly and
thoughtlessly, as if it were an occupation as good as any other. The newer
Theology, in particular, seems to have become involved with history purely
harmlessly, and now it will hardly notice that, in doing so, it stands,
probably very much against its will, in the service of Voltaire’s écrasez.* No one should assume that behind this there is a new
powerfully constructive instinct. For that we would have to let the so-called
Protestant Union be considered the maternal womb of a new religion and someone
like lawyer Holtzendorf (the editor of and chief
spokesman for the even more questionable Protestant Bible) as John at the River
Jordan. For some time perhaps the Hegelian philosophy still clouding the brains
of older people will help to promote that harmlessness, somewhat in the way
that people differentiate the “Idea of Christianity” from its manifold
incomplete “apparent forms” and convince themselves it is really just a matter
of the “preferred tendency of the idea” to reveal itself in ever purer forms,
and finally as certainly the purest of all and most transparent, that is, the
hardly visible form in the brain of the present theologus
liberalis vulgaris [liberal
theologian for the rabble]. However, if we listen to this purest of all
Christianities expressing itself concerning the earlier impure forms of
Christianity, then the uninvolved listener often has the impression that the
talk is not about Christianity at all, but of—now, what are we to think if we
find Christianity described by the “greatest theologian of the century” as the
religion which makes the claim that “it can be felt in all true and even in a
few other barely possible religions” and when the “true church” is to be the
one which “becomes a flowing mass, where there is no outline, where each part
finds itself sometimes here, sometimes there, and everything mingles peacefully
with everything else.” Once again, what are we to think?*
What we
can learn from Christianity, how under the effect of a historicizing treatment
it has become blasé and unnatural, until finally a fully historical, that is,
an impartial treatment dissolves it into pure knowledge about Christianity and
thereby destroys it, that fact we can study in everything which has life. It
ceases to live when it is completely dissected, and it exists in pain and
sickness, if we start to practice historical dissection on it. There are people
who believe in a revolutionary and reforming art of healing in German music
among German people. They get angry and consider it an injustice committed
against the most living aspect of our culture when even such men as Mozart and
Beethoven are inundated nowadays with the entire scholarly welter of
biographical detail and are compelled through the systematic torture of
historical criticism to answer to a thousand importunate questions. Through
this method, is it not the case that something which has definitely not yet
exhausted its living effects is dismissed as irrelevant or at least paralyzed,
because we direct our curiosity at countless microscopic details of the life
and the work and seek problems of knowledge in places where we should learn to
live and to forget all problems? Think about a pair of such modern biographers
set in the birth place of Christianity or of Luther’s Reformation. Their
dispassionate pragmatic curiosity would immediately manage to make every
spiritual actio in distans
[action at a distance] impossible, just as the most wretched animal
can prevent the origin of the most powerful oak by gobbling down the acorn. All
living things need an atmosphere around them, a secret circle of darkness. If
this veil is taken from them, if people condemn a religion, an art, a genius to
orbit like a star without an atmosphere, then they should no longer wonder
about their rapid decay and the way they become hard and barren. That is the
way it is now with all great things “which never succeed without some delusion,”
as Hans Sachs says in the Meistersinger.*
But every
people, indeed every person, who wishes to become mature, needs
such an enveloping delusion, such a protecting and veiling cloud. Today,
however, people generally despise becoming mature, because they honour history more than living. In fact, people exult over
the fact that now “science is beginning to rule over living.” It is possible
that people will attain that goal, but it is certain that a life so governed is
not worth much, because it is much less living and it establishes
a life for the future far less than does the previous life governed, not by
knowledge, but by instinct and powerful illusory images. But, as stated, it is
clearly not to be the era of people who have become fully developed and mature,
of harmonious personalities, but the era of common work which is as useful as
possible. That, however, amounts simply to the fact that people are to be
trained for the purposes of the time, in order to get to work with their hands
as promptly as possible. They are to labour in the
factories of universal utilities before they are mature, indeed, so that in the
process they really no longer become mature, because this would be a luxury
which would deprive the “labour market” of a lot of
power. We blind some birds, so that they sing more beautifully. I do not think
that today’s people sing more beautifully than their grandfathers, but I do
know this: we blind them early. But the method, the disreputable method which
people use to blind them, is excessively bright, excessively
sudden, andexcessively changing light.
The young person is whipped through all the millennia. Youngsters who
understand nothing about a war, a diplomatic action, or a trade policy are
considered worthy of being introduced to political history. But then, just as
the young person races through history, so we moderns race through the store
rooms of art and listen to concerts. We really do feel that something sounds
different from something else, that something has a different effect from
something else. Constantly losing this feeling of surprise
and dislike, becoming excessively astonished no longer about anything, finally
allowing oneself to enjoy everything—people really call that the historical
sense, historical culture. Without saying anything to gloss over what I
am saying: the mass of stuff streaming in is so great, what is strange, barbaric,
and forceful, “concentrated in a dreadful cluster,” presses so overpoweringly
on the young soul that it knows how to rescue itself only with a deliberate
apathy. Where a keener and stronger consciousness is firmly
established, then indeed a very different feeling appears: disgust. The
young man has become so homeless and has doubts about all customs and ideas.
Now he knows this fact: in every age times things have been different, and what
you are like is irrelevant. In melancholy absence of feeling he lets opinion
after opinion flow past him and understands the feeling in Holderlein’s
words in response to his reading of Diogenes Laertius
concerning the life and teaching of the Greek philosophers: “Here I have also
experienced more of what I have already come across sometimes, that what passes
temporarily by and what comes and goes in human thoughts and systems strike me
as almost more tragic than the fates which we usually call the only realities.”* No, such an overwhelming, anaesthetizing, and powerful
historicizing is certainly not required for the young, as the ancients
demonstrate, and is, indeed, dangerous in the highest degree, as more recent
people reveal. But now let us really look at the historical student, the
inheritor of a blasé attitude, already apparent all too early, almost in
childhood. Now the “method” in personal work, the right grip and the elegant
tone of the master’s manner, have become his own. An
entire isolated little chapter of the past has fallen victim to his keen mind
and the method he has learned. He has already produced, indeed, in prouder language, he has “created.” He has now become a servant of
truth through his actions and a master in the world empire of history. If, as a
child, he was already “prepared,” now he is already over-prepared. One needs
only to shake him for wisdom to fall into one’s lap with a rattle. But the
wisdom is rotten, and each apple has its own worm. Believe me on this point:
when people work in the scientific factory and are to become useful before they
are mature, then science itself is quickly ruined, just as the slaves used too
early nowadays in this factory are ruined. I regret that we even find it necessary
to use the verbal jargon of the slave holder and employer to describe such
relationships, which should be thought of as free from utility, free from
life’s needs, but the words “Factory, labour market,
bargain, exploitation,” uttered like all the words assisting egoism,
spontaneously press themselves on the lips when we want to describe the
youngest generation of scholars. The stolid mediocrity becomes ever more
mediocre, science becomes ever more practical economically. Essentially all the
most recent scholars are wise in only a single point, and in
that naturally wiser than all people of the past. In all other points they are,
to speak with care, only infinitely different from all the scholars of the old
stamp. Nevertheless they demand respect and perquisites for themselves, as if
the state and public opinion were under an obligation to consider the new coins
just as valuable as the old. The labourers have made
a working compact among themselves and decreed that
genius is superfluous because each labourer is
stamped as a genius. Presumably a later time will consider how they have piled
up a structure, not built it together. To those who tirelessly proclaim the
modern cry of combat and sacrifice “Division of labour!
In rows and tiers!” we can once and for all say clearly and firmly: If you want
to advance science as quickly as possible, you will destroy it as quickly as
possible, just as you destroy hens, which you artificially compel to lay eggs
much too quickly. Well, in the last decades science has been promoted at an
astonishing rate. But take a look now at the scholars, the exhausted hens.
There are in truth no “harmonious” natures. They can only cackle more than
before, because they lay eggs more often. Naturally, however, the eggs have
become constantly smaller (although the books have become constantly thicker).
As the final natural result, things resign themselves to the commonly loved
“Popularizing” of science (in addition to the “Feminization” and “Infantization”), that is, the notorious tailoring of the
scientific coat to the body of the “motley public” (I am attempting here to
cultivate a type of cutting German to describe an activity appropriate to
tailors). Goethe saw an abuse in this and demanded that sciences should have an
effect on the external world only through an enhanced praxis.
Besides, to the older generations of scholars such an abuse appeared for good
reasons difficult and tiresome. For similarly good reasons it comes easily to
the younger scholars, because they themselves, with the exception of a really
small corner of knowledge, are very much the motley public and carry its needs
in themselves. They only need to settle themselves down comfortably for once in
order for them to succeed in opening up even their own small area of study to
the miscellaneous needs of popular curiosity. People pretend that behind this
action of making themselves comfortable stands the title “the modest
condescension of the scholar for his people”; while at bottom the scholar, to
the extent that he is not a learned man but a member of the rabble, is only
descending into himself. If you create for yourself the idea of a “people,”
then you can never think sufficiently nobly and highly of it. If you thought
highly of a people, then you would also be compassionate towards them and would
be on your guard against offering them your historical nitric acid as a living
and refreshing drink. But at the deepest level you think little of the people,
because you are permitted to have no true and confidently based respect for
their future, and you operate as practical pessimists, I mean as people led by
the premonition of destruction, people who thus become indifferent and
permissive towards the welfare of others, in fact, even towards their own. If
only the soil still supports us! And if it no longer carries us,
then that is also all right. In this way they feel and live an ironic
existence.
8
In fact,
it should seem odd, although not contradictory, when to the age which so
audibly and insistently is in the habit of bursting out in the most carefree
exultation over its historical culture, I nevertheless ascribe a kind of ironical
self-consciousness, a presentiment which hovers all around it that here is
nothing to rejoice about, a fear that perhaps soon all the celebrations over
historical knowledge will be gone. Goethe proposed to us a similar enigma with
respect to a single personality in his remarkable characterization of Newton:
he found at bottom (or more correctly, at the top) of his being “a dark
premonition of his own error,” something like the expression, noticeable in
solitary moments, of a consciousness with a superior power of judgment, which
had gained a certain ironical perspective over the essential nature dwelling
inside him. Thus we find, particularly in the greater and more highly developed
historical people, a consciousness, often toned down to a universal skepticism,
of how much folly and superstition are in the belief that the education of a
people must be so overwhelmingly historical as it is now, but it has been
precisely the most powerful people, that is, powerful in deeds and works, who
have lived differently and have raised their young people differently. However,
that folly and that superstition suit us—so runs the skeptical objection—us,
the late comers, the faded last shoots of more powerful and more happily
courageous generations, us, in whom one can see realized Herod’s prophecy that
one day people would be born with instant grey beards and that Zeus would
exterminate this generation as soon as that sign became visible to him. But
historical culture is really a kind of congenital grey-haired condition, and
those who bear its mark from childhood on would have to come to the instinctive
belief in the old age of humanity. However, in old age what is
suitable now is an old person’s occupation, that is, looking back, tallying the
accounts, balancing the books, seeking through memories consolation in what
used to be—in short, a historical culture. The human race, however, is a tough
and persistent thing and does not wish to have its steps forward and backwards
viewed according to millennia, or indeed hardly according to hundreds of
thousands of years. That is, it does not at all wish to be viewed
as a totality by the infinitely small atomic point of the individual person.
Then what will a couple of thousand years signify (or, put another way, the
time period of thirty-four consecutive human lives, reckoned at sixty years
each) so that we can still speak of the beginning of such a time as still the
“Youth of Mankind” and the end of it as already the “Old Age of Mankind”? Is it
not much more the case that in this paralyzing belief in an already faded
humanity there sticks the misunderstanding of an idea of Christian theology
inherited from the Middle Ages, the idea of the
imminent end of the world, of the nervously awaited judgment? Has that idea put
on new clothes through the intensified need of history to judge, as if our
time, the last of all possible, has been authorized to consider itself the
universal court room for everything in the past, something which Christian
belief awaited, not in any way from human beings, but from the “Son of Man”? In
earlier times this was, for humanity as well as for the individual, a loudly
proclaimed “memento mori,” an always
tormenting barb and, so to speak, the summit of
medieval knowledge and conscience. The phrase of more recent times, called out
in a contrasting response, “memento vivere,”
sounds, to speak openly, still quite timid, is not a full-throated cry, and has
something almost dishonest about it.* For humanity still sits firmly on the memento mori and betrays the fact through its universal
need for history. In spite of the most powerful beating of its wings, knowledge
cannot tear itself loose in freedom. A deep feeling of hopelessness is left
over and has taken on that historical colouring,
because of which all higher education and culture are now melancholy and dark.
A religion which of all the hours of a person’s life considers the last the
most important, which generally predicts the end of earthy life and condemns
all living people to live in the fifth act of the tragedy, certainly arouses
the deepest and noblest forces, but it is hostile to all new cultivation,
daring undertakings, and free desiring. It resists every flight into the
unknown, because there it does not love and does not hope. It lets what is
coming into being push forward only unwillingly, so that at the right time it
can force it to the side or sacrifice it as a seducer
of being, as a liar about the worth of existence. What the Florentines did
when, under the influence of Savonarola’s sermons calling for repentance, they
organized those famous sacrificial fires of paintings, manuscripts, mirrors,
and masks, Christianity would like to do with every culture which rouses one to
renewed striving and which leads to that slogan memento vivere.* And if it is not possible to achieve this directly, without
a digression (that is, through superior force), then it attains its goal
nonetheless if it unites itself with historical culture, for the most part even
without its knowledge, and now, speaking out through historical knowledge, with
a shrug of its shoulders, rejects all becoming and thus disseminates the
feeling of the person who has come much too late and who has the characteristics
of an epigone, in short, of the person born with grey hair. The stringent and
profoundly serious consideration of the worthlessness of everything which has
happened, of the way in which the world in its maturity is ready for judgment,
has evaporated to a skeptical consciousness that it is in any case good to know
everything that has happened, because it is too late to do anything better.
Thus the historical sense makes its servants passive and retrospective. It is
almost the case that only in momentary forgetfulness, when that very sense is
intermittent, does the patient suffering from the historical fever become
active, so that, as soon as the action is over and done with, he may dissect
his deed, through analytical consideration prevent any further effects, and
finally flay it for “History.” In this sense, we are still living in the Middle Ages, and history is still a disguised theology, in
exactly the same way that the reverence with which the unscientific laity treat
the scientific caste is a reverence inherited from the clergy. What people in
earlier times gave the church, people now give,
although in scantier amounts, to scientific knowledge. However, the fact that
people give was something the church brought about in earlier times, not something
first done by the modern spirit, which, along with its other good
characteristics, instead has something stingy about it, as is well known, and
is, so far as the preeminent virtue of generosity is concerned, a miser.
Perhaps
this observation is not pleasant, perhaps no more pleasant than that derivation
of the excess of history from the medieval memento mori and
from the hopelessness which Christianity carries in its heart concerning all
future ages of earthly existence. But at any rate people should replace the
explanation which I have put down only hesitantly with better explanations. For
the origin of historical culture and its inherent and totally radical
opposition to the spirit of a “new age,” of a “modern consciousness”—this
origin must itself, in its turn, be understood historically.
History must itself resolve the problem of history.
Knowledge must turn its barbs against itself. This
triple Must is the spiritual imperative of the “new age,” if
there is in it truly something new, powerful, vital, and original. Or could it
be the case that, to leave the Romance peoples out of consideration, it should
be the case that we Germans, in all higher matters of culture, have always had
to be merely “followers” just because that is the only thing we could be,
as William Wackernagel once expressed it in a
statement well worth thinking about: “We Germans are a nation of followers.
With all our higher knowledge and even with our faith, we are still only
successors of the old world. Even those who are certainly hostile to this and
do not want it are constantly breathing the spirit of Christianity along with
the immortal spirit of old classical culture, and if anyone were to succeed in
separating out these two elements from the living air which envelops the inner
man, then not much would be left over with which one might still eke out a
spiritual life.”* But even if we wanted to reassure ourselves happily about
this calling to be the followers of antiquity, even if we would only make up
our minds to take the calling as something right, urgent, serious, and great,
and would recognize in this urgency our designated and unique privilege,
nonetheless we would find it necessary to ask whether it must always be our
purpose to be pupils of a declining antiquity. At some time or
other we might be permitted gradually to set our goal somewhat higher and
further, at some time or other we might be permitted to praise ourselves for
having reworked so fruitfully and splendidly the spirit of Alexandrian-Roman
culture in ourselves also through our universal history, so that now, as the
most noble reward we might be allowed to set ourselves the still more monumental
task of getting back behind and above this Alexandrian world and seeking out
our models of the courageous gaze in the ancient Greek original world of the
great, the natural, and the human. But that is the place where we find
the reality of an essentially unhistorical culture, a culture nevertheless or
rather therefore unspeakably rich and vital. Even if we Germans were
nothing but followers, then if we looked at such a culture as a legacy we had
appropriated, there could be nothing greater or prouder than for us to be
followers.
As a
result we should say only this and nothing but this: that even the often
distressingly strange thought that we are epigones, nobly thought out, can
guarantee important effects and a richly hopeful desire for the future, both
for the individual and for a people, to the extent that we understand ourselves
as the heirs and followers of astonishing classical powers and see in that our
legacy and our spur, and thus not as pale and withered late arrivals of
powerful races, who scrape out a cold living as antiquarians and gravediggers
of those races. Such late arrivals naturally live an ironic existence. Destruction
follows closely on the heels of their limping passage through life. They
shudder in the face of that, when they derive enjoyment from the past, for they
are living memories, and yet their thoughts are senseless without someone to
inherit them. Thus, the dark premonition envelops them that their life may be
an injustice, for no future life can justify it.
However,
if we were to imagine such antiquarian late comers suddenly exchanging that
painfully ironic moderation for impudence, and if we imagine them to ourselves
as if they were reporting with a ringing voice: “The race is at its peak,
because now for the first time it has the knowledge of itself and has become clear
to itself,” then we would have a performance in which, as in an allegory, the
enigmatic meaning of a certain very famous philosophy is deciphered for German
culture. I believe that there has been no dangerous variation or change in
German culture in this century which has not become more dangerous through the
monstrous influence of this philosophy of Hegel, an influence which continues
to flow right up to the present.* The belief that one is a late comer of the age is truly
crippling and disorienting, but it must appear fearful and destructive when
such a belief one day with a bold reversal idolizes this late comer as the true
meaning and purpose of everything which has happened before, when his
knowledgeable misery is equated to the completion of world history. Such a way
of thinking has made the Germans accustomed to talk about the “World Process”
and to justify their own time as the necessary result of this World Process. Such
a way of thinking has set up history as the single sovereign, in the
place of the other spiritual powers, culture and religion, insofar as history
is “the self-realizing idea” and “the dialectic of the spirits of peoples” and
the “Last Judgment.”
People
have scornfully called this Hegelian understanding of history God’s stroll on
the earth; but this God for His part was first created by history. However,
this God became intelligible and comprehensible to himself
inside Hegelian brain cases and has already ascended all the dialectically
possible steps of His being right up to that self-revelation, so that for Hegel
the summit and end point of the World Process coincided with his own individual
existence in Berlin. In fact, he ought to have said that everything coming
after him should, in fact, be valued only as a musical coda of the world historical
rondo, or even more truly, as superfluous. He did not say that. Instead, he
planted in the generations leavened by him that admiration for the “Power of
History,” which transforms practically every moment into a naked admiration of
success and leads to idolatrous worship of the factual. For this service people
nowadays commonly repeat the very mythological and, beyond that, truly German expression
“to take the facts into account.” But once a person has learned to stoop down
and to bow his head before the “Power of History,” he finally nods his “Yes”
mechanically, in the Chinese fashion, to every power, whether it is a
government or public opinion or a numerical majority, and moves his limbs
precisely to the rhythm of strings pulled by some “power” or other. If every
success contains within itself a rational necessity, if every event is the
victory of the logical or the “Idea,” then just get down quickly and kneel now
before the entire ladder of “success”! What? Are there no ruling mythologies any more? Religions are dying out? Just look at the religion
of the power of history; pay attention to the priests of the mythology of the
Idea and their knees all covered in cuts! Surely all the virtues come only in
the wake of this new faith? Is it not unselfishness when the historical person
lets himself be blown into an objective glass mirror? Is it not generosity to
dispense with all the force in heaven and on earth, so that in every power
people worship pure force in itself? Is it not justice to have a scale balance
of powers always in one’s hands and to watch closely what sinks down as the
stronger and heavier? And what a school of respectability such a consideration
of history is! To take everything objectively, to get angry about nothing, to
love nothing, to understand everything, how gentle and flexible that makes
people. And even if one man brought up in this school becomes publicly angry at
some point and gets annoyed, we can enjoy that, for we know it is really only
intended as an artistic expression; it is ira and studium, and yet entirely sine ira et studio.*
What
antiquated thoughts I have in my heart about such a complex of mythology and
virtue! But they should come out for once, even if people may just go on
laughing all the time. Therefore, I would say this: history constantly
impresses on us “It was once” and the moral “You should not” or “You ought not
to have.” So history turns into a compendium of what is actually immoral. How
seriously mistaken would the person be who also considered history the judge of
this factual immorality! For example, it is offensive to morality that a Raphael
had to die at thirty-six years of age; such a being should not have died.* Now, if you want to come to the help of history, as the
apologist for what actually happened, then you will say that Raphael expressed
everything that was in him; with a longer life he would have been able to create
something beautiful only as a similar beauty, and not as something newly
beautifully, and so on. In so doing, you would be the devil’s advocate for the
very reason that you make success, the fact, your idol; whereas, the fact is
always dumb and at all times has looked more like a calf than a god. Besides,
as apologists for history, you are prompted by ignorance. Simply because you do
not know what such anatura naturans like Raphael is, it does not make you hot
to hear that such a person was and will never be again.* In Goethe’s case, recently someone wanted to teach us that
with his eighty-two years he had lived a full life, and yet I would happily
trade a couple of years of the “washed up” Goethe for an entire cart full of
fresh ultra-modern lifetimes, in order still to share in conversations like the
ones Goethe conducted with Eckermann and in this way
remain protected from all the contemporary teachings of the legionaries of the
moment. In comparison with such dead people, how few living people generally
have any right to live! That the many live and that those few are no longer
alive is nothing but a brutal truth, that is, an
incorrigible stupidity, a blatant “That is the case,” in contrast to the moral
“It should not have been so.” Yes, in contrast to the moral! For let people
speak about whatever virtue they want, about righteousness, generosity,
courage, wisdom, and human sympathy—it is always virtuous precisely because it
rebels against that blind power of the factual, against the tyranny of the
real, and submits itself to laws which are not the laws of that historical
fluctuation. It constantly swims against the historical waves, whether fighting
its passions as the closest stupid facts of its existence or whether committing
itself to truthfulness, while the lies spin around it their glittering webs. If
history were in general nothing more than “the world system of passion and
error,” then human beings would have to read it in the way Goethe summoned us
to read Werther, exactly as if it cried
out “Be a man and do not follow me!”*Fortunately history also preserves the memory of the great
fighters against history, that is, against the blind force of the
real and thus puts itself right in the pillory, because it brings out directly
as the essential historical natures those who worried so little about the “Thus
it is,” in order instead to follow with a more cheerful pride a “So it should
be.” Not to drag their race to the grave but to found a new race—that drives
them ceaselessly forwards, and even if they were born latecomers, there is an
art of living which makes them forget this. The generations to come will know
them only as first comers.
9
Is our
age perhaps such a first comer? In fact, the vehemence of its historical sense
is so great and expresses itself in such a universal and simply unlimited way
that at least in this the coming ages will assess its quality as a first comer,
if in fact there are going to be coming agesat all, understood in the sense of
culture. But right here there remains a serious doubt. Close by the pride of
the modern man stands his irony about his very self, his consciousness that he
must live in a historicizing and, as it were, a twilight mood, his fear that in
future he will be totally unable to rescue any more of his youthful hopes and
youthful powers. Here and there people go even further, into cynicism,
and justify the passage of history, indeed, of the whole development of the
world, as essentially for the use of modern man, according to the cynical rule
that things had to turn out just as they are going right now, that man had to
be nothing other than what people now are, and that against this “had to” no
one is entitled to rebel. A person who cannot maintain an ironical stance takes
refuge in the sense of well being which comes from this sort of cynicism. In
addition, the last decade offers him as a gift one of its most beautiful
inventions, a rounded and sonorous phrase for such cynicism: it calls his style
of living totally mindlessly and in keeping with the times, “the full
dedication of the personality to the World Process.” The personality and the
World Process! The World Process and the personality of the turnip flea! If
only people did not have to hear all the time the hyperbole of all hyperboles,
the word World, World, World, when really each person should speak in all
honesty only of Men, Men, Men! Heirs of the Greeks and
Romans? Of Christianity? All
that appears as nothing to those cynics. But heirs of the World Process!
High points and targets of the World Process! Sense and solution of all riddles
of becoming in general expressed in the modern man, the ripest fruit of the
tree of knowledge!—I call that a swollen feeling of elation. By this symbol are
the first comers of all ages known, even if they have come along right at the
end. Historical considerations have never flown so far afield, not even in
their dreams. For now the history of human beings is only the continuation of
the history of animals and plants. Indeed, even in the furthest depths of the
sea the historical universalist still finds the traces of himself, as living
slime; he gazes in astonishment, as if at a miracle, at the immense route which
human beings have already passed through and trembles at the sight of the even
more astonishing miracle, at modern man himself, who has the ability to survey
this route. He stands high and proud on the pyramid of the World Process. As he
sets down on the top of it the keystone of his knowledge, he appears to call
out to nature listening all around, “We are at the goal; we are the goal; we
are the perfection of nature.”
Arrogant
European of the nineteenth century, you are raving! Your knowledge does not
complete nature, but only kills your own. For once just measure your height as
a knower against your depth as a person who can do something. Of course, you
clamber on the solar rays of knowledge upward towards heaven, but you also
climb downward to chaos. Your way of going, that is, clambering about as a knower, is your fate. The ground and floor move back away
from you into the unknown; for your life there are no supports any more, but
only spider’s threads, which every new grasp of your knowledge rips apart.
But no
more serious talk about this, for it is possible to say something more
cheerful.
The
incredibly thoughtless fragmenting and fraying of all the fundamentals, their
disintegration into a constantly flowing and dissolving becoming, the
inexhaustible spinning away and historicizing of all that has come into being
because of modern men, the great garden spiders in the knots of the entire
cosmic net, that may keep the moralists, the artists, the devout, as well as
the statesman, busy and worried. Today it should for once cheer us up, because
we see all this in the gleaming magical mirror of a philosophical
writer of parodies, in whose head the age has come to an ironical consciousness
of itself, a consciousness clear “all the way to wickedness” (to speak in
Goethe’s style). Hegel once taught us, “when the
spirit makes a sudden turn, then we philosophers are also there.” Our age has
made a turn into self-irony, and, lo and behold, E. von Hartmann was also at
hand and had written his famous Philosophy of the Unconscious, or,
to speak more clearly, his philosophy of unconscious irony. Rarely have we read
a more amusing invention and a more philosophically roguish prank than
Hartmann’s.* Anyone who is not enlightened by him concerning Becoming,
who is not really set right on the inside, is truly ripe for the state of
existing in the past. The start and the goal of the World Process, from the
first motions of consciousness right to the state of being hurled back into nothingness,
together with the precisely defined task of our generation for the World
Process, all presented from such a wittily inventive font of inspiration of the
unconscious and illuminated with an apocalyptic light, with everything so
deceptively imitative of an unsophisticated seriousness, as if it were really
serious philosophy and not merely a philosophical joke, such a totality makes
its creator one of the preeminent writers of philosophical parody of all times.
So let us sacrifice on his altar, sacrifice to him, the
inventor of a truly universal medicine, a lock of hair, to steal an expression
of admiration from Schleiermacher. For what medicine would be healthier against
the excess of historical culture than Hartmann’s parody of all world history?
If we
wanted a truly matter-of-fact account of what Hartmann is telling us from his
smoky tripod stool of unconscious irony, then we would say that he is telling
us that our age would have to be just the way it is if humanity is ever going
to get seriously fed up with this existence. That is what we believe in our
hearts. That frightening fossilizing of the age, that anxious rattling of the
bones, which David Strauss has described for us in his naive way as the most
beautiful reality, is justified in Hartmann not only retrospectively ex
causis efficientibus,
but even looking ahead, ex causa finali.* The joker lets the light of the Day of Judgment stream over
our time and finds that our age is very good, especially for the person who
wants to suffer as strongly as possible from the indigestible nature of life
and who cannot wish that Doomsday comes quickly enough. True, Hartmann calls
the age which humanity is now approaching the “maturity of humanity.” But that
maturity is, according to his own description, the fortunate condition where
there is still only “pure mediocrity” and art is “some evening farce for the
Berlin stockbroker,” where “geniuses are no longer a requirement of the age, because
that means casting pearls before swine or because the age has progressed to a
more important level, beyond the stage for which geniuses are appropriate,”
that is, to that stage of social development in which each worker “with a period
of work which allows him sufficient leisure for his intellectual development
leads a comfortable existence.” You rogue of all rogues, you speak of the
yearning of contemporary humanity, but you also know what sort of ghost will
stand at the end of this maturity of humanity as the result of that
intellectual development to solid mediocrity—disgust. Things stand in a state
of visible wretchedness, but they will still get much more wretched, “before
our eyes the Antichrist reaches out further and further around him”—but
things must be so, things must come about
this way, because for all that we are on the best route—to disgust with all
existing things. “Thus, go forward vigorously into the World Process as a
worker in the vineyard of the Lord, for the process is the only thing which can
lead to redemption.”
The
vineyard of the Lord! The process! For redemption! Who does not see and hear in
this the historical culture which knows only the word “becoming” as it
intentionally disguises itself in a misshapen parody, as it expresses through
the grotesque grimacing mask held up in front of its face the most willful
things about itself! For what does this last mischievous summons to the workers
in the vineyard essentially want from them? In what work are they to strive
vigorously forwards? Or, to ask the question another way, what has the
historically educated man, the modern fanatic of the process swimming and
drowning in the flood of becoming, still left to do, in order at some point to
reap that disgust, the expensive grapes of that vineyard? He has to do nothing
other than continue living as he has been living, to continue loving what he
has been loving, to continue hating what he has been hating, and to continue
reading the newspapers which he has been reading. For him there is only one sin,
to live differently from the way he has been living. But we are told the way he
has been living with the excessive clarity of something written in stone by
that famous page with the sentences in large print, thanks to which the entire
kingdom of the contemporary cultural rabble is caught up in a blind rapture and
frenzy of delight, because they believe that in these sentences they read their
own justification, indeed, their own justification in the light of the
apocalypse. For the unconscious writer of parody has required of each one of
them “the complete dedication of his personality to the World Process in
pursuit of its goal, for the sake of the redemption of the world,” or still
more clearly and brightly, “for the time being the affirmation of the will to
live is proclaimed as the only correct way, for only in the full dedication to
life and its pains, not in cowardly personal renunciation and drawing back, is
there something to achieve for the World Process,” “the striving for individual
denial of the will is just as foolish and useless, in fact even more foolish,
than suicide.” “The thinking reader will also understand without further
suggestions how a practical philosophy built on these principles would look and
that such a philosophy cannot contain any divisiveness but only the full
reconciliation with life.”
The
thinking reader will understand it. And people could misunderstand Hartmann!
How unspeakably amusing it is that people misunderstand him! Could contemporary
Germans be very sensitive? A trusty Englishman finds them lacking a delicacy of
perception and even dares to say “in the German mind there does seem to be something
splay, something blunt-edged, unhandy and infelicitous.”* Would
the great German writer of parodies really contradict him? In fact, according
to Hartmann’s explanation, we are approaching “that ideal condition, where the race
of mankind consciously makes its own history.” But obviously we are quite far
from that state, perhaps even more ideal, where humanity reads Hartmann’s book
with awareness. If that state ever arrives, then no person will let the word
“World Process” pass his lips any more, without these lips breaking into a
smile. For with that phrase people will remember the time when Hartmann’s
parodying gospel was listened to, absorbed, disputed, honoured,
publicized, and canonized with the stolidly middle-class probity of that
“German mind,” in fact, with “the strained seriousness of the owl,” as Goethe
puts it. But the world must go forward. That ideal condition cannot be dreamed
up; it must be fought for and won. Only through joy does the way go to
redemption, to redemption from that misunderstood owlish seriousness. The time
will come in which people wisely refrain from all constructions of the World
Process or even of the history of mankind, a time in which people in general no
longer consider the masses but individuals once again, who construct a sort of
bridge over the desolate storm of becoming. These individuals do not set out
some sort of process, but live timelessly and contemporaneously; thanks to the
history which permits such a combination, they live like the republic of
geniuses, about which Schopenhauer once explained that one giant shouts out to
another across the barren intervals of time and, undisturbed by the wanton and
noisy midgets who creep around underneath them, continues their lofty spiritual
conversation. The task of history is to be a mediator between them and thus
always to provide opportunities and lend energy for the development of
greatness. No, the goal of humanity cannot lie in its ending,
but only in its highest examples.
By
contrast, of course, our comic person states, with that wonderful dialectic,
which is just as genuine as its admirers are worthy of admiration, “With the
idea of evolution it would be inconsistent to ascribe to the World Process an
infinite length of time in the past, because then each and every imaginable
development must have already been gone through; that, however, is not the
case” (O you rascal!) “and we are no more able to
assign to the process an infinite future period. Both of these would repudiate
the idea of evolution towards a final goal” (O, once again, you rascal!) “and would make the World Process like the water drawing of
the Danaids. The complete victory
of the logical over the illogical” (O, you rascal of all rascals!) “must, however, coincide with the temporal end of the World
Process, the Day of Judgment.” No, you lucid and mocking spirit, as long as the
illogical still prevails to the extent it does today, as long as people can,
for example, still talk of the “World Process” with general approval, the way
you talk, Judgment Day is still a long way off. For it is still too joyful on
this earth; many illusions are still blooming—for instance, the illusion of
your contemporaries about you—we are not yet sufficiently ripe to be flung back
into your nothingness, for we believe that things here will get even more
amusing when people first have started to understand you, you misunderstood man
of the unconscious. However, if in spite of this, disgust should come with
power, just as you have predicted to your readers, if you should be right in
your description of your present and future (and no one has hated both and
hated with such disgust as you have) then I am happily prepared to vote with
the majority, in the way you have proposed, that next Saturday evening at
twelve o’clock precisely your world will go under, and our decree may conclude
that from tomorrow on there will be no more time and no newspaper will appear
any more. However, perhaps the result will fail to materialize, and we will
have made our decree in vain. But then at any rate we will not lack the time
for a beautiful experiment. We take a balance scale and put in one scale pan
Hartmann’s unconscious and in the other Hartmann’s World Process. There are
people who think that they will both weigh exactly the same, for in each scale
pan would lie an equally poor word and an equally good
jest. When people first come to understand Hartmann’s joke, then no one will
use Hartmann’s talk of “World Process” any more as anything but a joke. In
fact, it is high time we moved forward with the entire army of satirical malice
against the excesses of the historical sense, against the overindulgent
pleasure in the process at the expense of being and living, against the
senseless shifting of all perspectives. And in praise of the author of Philosophy
of the Unconscious it should always be repeated that he was the first
to succeed in registering keenly the ridiculousness of the idea of the “World
Process” and to allow an even keener appreciation of that ridiculousness through
the particular seriousness of his treatment. Why the “world” is there, why
“humanity” is there—these should not concern us at all for the time being,
unless we want to make a joke. For the presumptuousness of the small human worm
is simultaneously the funniest and the most joyful thing on this earthly stage,
but why you, as an individual, are there, that is something I am asking you,
and if no one else can say it for you, then at least try for once to justify
the sense of your existence, as it were, a posteriori by
establishing for yourself a purpose, a final goal, a “To this end,” a high and
noble “To this end.” If you are destroyed by this, well, I know no better
purpose for life than to die in service of the great and the impossible, animae magnae prodigus.* If, by contrast, the doctrines of the sovereign becoming, of
the fluidity of all ideas, types, and styles, of the lack of all cardinal
differences between man and animal (doctrines which I consider true but deadly)
are still foisted on the people for another generation with the frenzy of instruction
which is now customary, then it should take no one by surprise if people
destroy themselves in egotistical trifles and misery, through ossification and
self-absorption, initially falling apart and ceasing to be a people. Then, in
place of this condition, perhaps systems of individual egotism, alliances for
the systematic larcenous exploitation of those non-members of the alliance and
similar creations of utilitarian nastiness will step forward onto the future
scene. Let people just proceed to prepare these creations, to write history
from the standpoint of the masses and to seek for those laws
in it which are to be inferred from the needs of these masses as well as for
the laws of motion of the lowest clay and loam layers of society. To me, the
masses seem to be worth a glance only in three respects: first as blurred
copies of great men, presented on bad paper with worn out printing plates, then
as the resistance against the great men, and finally as working implements of
the great. For the rest, let the devil and statistics carry them off! How’s
that? Might statistics demonstrate that there could be laws in history? Laws? Yes, statistics prove how coarse and disgustingly
uniform the masses are. Are we to call the effects of the force of gravity,
stupidity, mimicry, love, and hunger—laws? Now, we are willing to concede that
point, but by the same token the principle is then established that, as far as
there are laws in history, they are worth nothing and history is worth nothing.
However, precisely this sort of history nowadays is generally esteemed, the
history which takes the large mass tendencies as the important and principal
thing in history and considers all great men merely their clearest expression,
like bubbles, as it were, which become visible in the watery flood. Thus, the
mass is to produce greatness out of itself, and chaos is also to produce order
from itself as well. At the end, of course, the hymn is sung to the productive
masses. Then, everything which has prevailed upon such masses for a long time
and, as people say, has been “a historical power” is called “Great.” But is
that not a case of quite deliberately exchanging quantity and quality? When the
podgy masses have found some idea or other (for example, a religious idea)
quite adequate, has tenaciously defended it, and dragged it along for
centuries, then, and only then, the discoverer and founder of that idea is to
be great. But why? The most noble and highest things
have no effect at all on the masses. The historical success
of Christianity, its historical power, tenacity, and duration, all that fortunately
proves nothing with respect to the greatness of its founder. Basically,
that would act as a proof against him. But between him and that historical
success lies a very earthly and dark layer of passion, error, greed for power
and honour, the persisting powers of the imperium romanum, a
layer from which Christianity acquired that earthy taste and scrap of ground
which made possible its continued presence in this world and, as it were, gave
it its durability.* Greatness should not depend upon success. Demosthenes had
greatness, although at the same time he had no success.* The purest and most genuine followers of Christianity were
always more likely to put their worldly success, their so-called “historical
power,” into question and to restrict it rather than to promote it, for they
trained themselves to stand outside “the world” and did not worry themselves
about the “process of the Christian idea.” That is the reason why they are also
for the most part entirely unknown to history and have remained unnamed. To
state the issue in a Christian manner: in this way the devil is the regent of
the world and the master of success and progress. He is in all historical powers
the essential power, and so it will substantially remain, although it may for
some time sound quite embarrassing to ears which have become accustomed to the
idolatry of success and historical power. For in this matter our age has practised giving things new names and has even
re-christened the devil. It is certainly a time of great danger: human beings
seem to be close to discovering that the egoism of the individual, the group,
or the masses was the lever of historical movements at all times. However, at
the same time, people are not at all worried by this discovery. On the
contrary, people declaim: Egoism is to be our God. With this new faith people
are on the point of building, with the clearest of intentions, future history
on egoism. Only it is to be a clever egoism subject to a few limitations, in
order that it may consolidate itself in an enduring way. It is the sort of
egoism which studies history just in order to acquaint itself with foolish
egoism. Through this study people have learned that the state has received a
very special mission in the established world system of egoism: the state is to
become the patron of all clever egoism, so that, with its military and police
forces, it may protect against the frightening outbreak of foolish egoism. For
the same purpose history, that is, the history of animals and human beings, is
also carefully stirred into the popular masses and working classes, who are
dangerous because they are not clever, for people know that a small grain of
historical education is capable of breaking the rough and stupefied instincts
and desires or diverting them into the path of refined egoism. In summa:
people are paying attention now, to use E. von Hartmann’s words, “to deliberate
looking around for a practical domestic structure in their earthly homeland,
considering the future with care.” The same writer calls such a period the
“manhood of mankind” and makes fun about what is now called “Man,” as if with
that term one is to understand only the sober selfish person; just as in the
same way he also prophecies that after such a period of adulthood there comes
an appropriate old age, but apparently only with this idea to vent his ridicule
on our contemporary old men. For he speaks of the mature tranquillity with which they “review all the chaotic stormy
suffering of their past lives and understand the vanity of the previously
assumed goals of their striving.” No, a maturity of this sly and
historically educated egoism is appropriate for an old age of hostile craving
and disgraceful clinging to life and then a final act, with its
last scene of all
That ends this strange eventful history,
Is second childhood and mere oblivion,
Sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans everything.*
Whether
the dangers to our life and our culture now come from these desolate,
toothless, and tasteless old men, whether they come from those so-called “Men”
of Hartmann’s, in opposition to both we wish to hold on with our teeth to our
right to our youth and not to grow tired of defending, in our youth, the future
against those who strike against images of that future. In this fight, however,
we would have to acknowledge a particularly unpleasant perception: that
people intentionally promote the excesses of the historical sense from which
the present time suffers, they encourage them, and they use them.
However,
people use history against the young, in order to train them for that maturity
of egoism which is striven for everywhere; people use it to break the natural
aversion of youth through a transfiguring, that is to say, a magically scientific
illumination of that manly-unmanly egoism. Yes, people know what a certain
predominance of history is capable of; people know it only too well: to uproot
the strongest instincts of youth—fire, defiance, forgetting of the self, and
love—to dampen down the heat of their sense of justice, to hold back or repress
the desire to mature slowly with the contrary desire to be finished quickly, to
be useful quickly, and to be productive quickly, to infect the honesty and
boldness of feeling with doubts. Indeed, history is itself capable of deceiving
the young about their most beautiful privilege, about their power to cultivate
in themselves with complete conviction a great idea and to allow an even
greater idea to grow forth out of it. A certain excess of history is capable of
all this. We have seen it. And this is the reason: through its incessant shifting
of the horizons of significance, through the elimination of a surrounding
atmosphere, it no longer allows a person to perceive and to actunhistorically.
He then draws himself from the infinity of his horizon back into himself, into
the smallest egoistic region and there must wither away and dry up; he probably
achieves cleverness, but never wisdom. He permits himself inner conversations,
calculates, and gets along well with the facts, does not boil over, winks, and
understands how to seek out his own advantage or that of his party amid the
advantages and disadvantages of strangers; he forgets superfluous modesty and
thus step by step becomes a “Man” and an “Old Man” on the Hartmann model. But
he should become this—that is precisely the meaning of the cynical
demand nowadays for “the complete dedication of the personality to the World
Process,” so far as his goal is concerned, for the sake of the redemption of
the world, as that rascal E. von Hartmann assures us. Now, the will and goal of
those Hartmann “men” and “old men” is indeed hardly the very redemption of the
world. Certainly the world would be more redeemed if it were redeemed from
these men and old men. For then the kingdom of youth would come.
10
Thinking
of this position youth finds itself in, I cry out “Land, land!
Enough and more than enough of the passionate seeking and the
wandering of the voyage on dark alien seas!” Now finally a coast reveals
itself. Whatever it may be, we must land on it. The worst emergency port is
better than returning once more to plunging around in hopeless infinite
skepticism. If at first we only hold onto the land, we will soon afterwards
find the good havens and ease the approach for those who come later.
This
journey has been dangerous and exciting. How far we are now from the calm
contemplation with which we first saw our ship set out to sea. By investigating
the dangers of history, we have found ourselves exposed to all these dangers in
the strongest possible way. We ourselves manifestly bear the traces of that
suffering which has come over humanity in more recent times as a result of an excess
of history. It is on display. This very treatise shows its modern character,
the character of the weak personality, which I will not conceal from myself, in
the intemperance of its criticism, in the immaturity of its humanity, in the
frequent transitions from irony to cynicism, from pride to skepticism.
Nevertheless I trust in the inspiring power which, in the place of genius,
controls the vessel for me: I trust in youth, that it has led me
correctly when it requires from me now a protest against the recent
historical education of modern people and when the protester demands
that the human being above all learn to live and to use history only in
the service of the life which he has learned to live. One must
be young to understand this protest. In fact, among the contemporary
grey-haired types of our present youth, one can hardly be young enough still to
feel what is here essentially being protested against. To help people
understand this point I will use an example. In Germany it is not much longer
than a hundred years ago that a natural instinct for what people call poetry
arose in a few young people. Do people think that the previous generations up
to that time would never have spoken at all of that art, however inwardly
strange and unnatural to them? We know the opposite is true: they thought about
“poetry” with loving passion, wrote and argued about it with words about words,
words, words. The appearance of that revival of words for living was not the
immediate death of those word makers. In a certain sense, they are still alive
nowadays, because if, as Gibbon says, for a world to go under only takes time
but plenty of time, then in Germany, too, the “land of gradual change,” for a
false idea to be destroyed takes nothing but time, but it takes even a great
deal more time.* Nevertheless, today there are perhaps a hundred people more than
a hundred years ago who know what poetry is; perhaps one hundred years from now
there will be another hundred people more who in the meantime have also learned
what culture is and that the Germans up to this point have had no culture, no
matter how much they may talk and boast about it. For them the very general contentment
of the Germans with their “culture” would seem just as incredible and stupid as
the formerly acclaimed classicism of Gottsched or the
appraisal of Ramler as a German Pindar seem to us.* They will perhaps judge that this culture has been only a
sort of knowledge about culture and, in addition, a completely false and
superficial knowledge. I say false and superficial because people endured the
contradiction of life and knowledge, for they did not see anything
characteristic of the education of a truly cultured people: that the culture
can only grow up and blossom forth out of living. By contrast, with the Germans
culture is put up like a paper flower or poured over things like a coating of
sugar and therefore it must always remain untruthful and infertile. The German
education of the young, however, begins directly from this false and barren
idea of culture. Its end goal, imagined in all purity and loftiness, is not at
all the freely educated man, but the scholar, the scientific person, indeed,
the scientific person who is useful as early as possible, the person who sets
himself apart from life in order to understand it really clearly. The product
of this education, considered in a properly empirical and general way, is the
historically and aesthetically educated Philistine, the precocious and freshly
wise chatterer about state, church, and art, the sensorium
for thousands of sensations, the inexhaustible stomach which nevertheless does
not know what honest hunger and thirst are. The fact that an education with
this goal and result is an unnatural education is felt only by the person who is not yet completely developed in it; that is
felt only by the instinct of the young, because they still have the instinct of
nature, which is first artificially and powerfully broken through that education.
But the person who wants to break this education in its turn must assist the
young in expressing themselves. He must shine the bright light of ideas to
illuminate their unconscious resistance and turn that into an aware
consciousness with a powerful voice. How is he to reach such a strange goal?
Above all through the fact that he destroys a superstition, the
faith in the necessity of that method of education. But
people think that there could be no other possibility than our contemporary
highly tiresome reality. Just let someone examine the literature of the last
decades about the nature of higher schools and education precisely on this
point. For all the varieties of proposals and for all the intensity of the
opposition, the examiner will to his astonishment and dismay realize how
uniform the thinking is about the entire purpose of education, how
thoughtlessly people assume that the present result, the “educated person,” as
the term is now understood, is a necessary and reasonable fundamental basis for
all further education. That monotonous orthodoxy would sound something like this:
the young person has to begin with a knowledge of
culture, not at first with a knowledge of life, and even less with life and
experience themselves. Moreover, this knowledge about culture is poured over or
stirred into the youth as historical knowledge; that is, his head is filled up
with a monstrous number of ideas derived from extremely indirect knowledge of
past times and peoples, not from the immediate contemplation of living. His
desire to experience something for himself and to feel growing in him a
coordinated and living system of his own experiences—such a desire is
narcotized and, as it were, made drunk through opulent deceptions, as if it
were possible in a few years to sum up in oneself the highest and most
remarkable experiences of older times, especially of the greatest ages. It is
precisely this insane procedure which leads our young developing artists into
the halls of culture and galleries instead of into the workshop of a master
and, above all, into the unique workshops of the unique master craftswoman
Nature. Yes, as if people were able to acquire their ideas and arts, their
actual life’s work, as cursory strollers in the history of past times. Yes, as
if life itself were not a craft which must be learned continuously from the
ground up and practised diligently, if we are not to
let it produce bunglers and chatterers!
Plato
considered it necessary that the first generation of his new society (in the
perfect state) would be brought up with the help of a powerful necessary
lie. The children were to learn to believe that they had all already lived
a long time dreaming under the earth, where they had been properly kneaded and
formed by nature’s master worker. It was impossible to rebel against this past!
Impossible to have any effect against the work of the gods! It is to stand as
an inviolable law of nature that the person who is born a philosopher has gold
in his body, whoever is born as a guard has only silver, and whoever is born as
a worker has iron and bronze. Since it is not possible to mix these metals,
Plato explains, then it should not be possible ever to
overthrow or mix up the order of classes. The faith in the aeterna veritas
[eternal truth] of this order is the basis of the new education and
thus of the new state. Now, the modern German similarly has faith in theaeterna veritas of
his education, of his style of culture. Nevertheless, this faith would
collapse, as the Platonic state would have collapsed, if in opposition to the
necessary lie there was for once set up a necessary truth: that the
German has no culture, because he can have nothing whatsoever on the basis of
his education. He wants the flowers without roots and stalk. So he wants them
in vain. That is the simple truth, one that is unpleasant and gross, a correct
necessary truth.
In this
necessary truth, however, our first generation must be educated.
Certainly they will suffer the greatest difficulties from it, for they must
educate themselves through it, in fact, divided against themselves, to new
habits and a new nature derived out of an old and first nature and habits, so
that they may be able to say with the ancient Spaniards: “Defienda
me Dios de my,” God, defend me from myself, that is, from the nature
already instilled into me. They must taste that truth drop by drop, as if
sampling a bitter and powerful medicine, and each individual of this generation
must overcome himself, so as to make a judgment on himself which he might more
easily endure as a general judgment concerning an entire age: we are without
culture, even more, we are ruined for living, for correct and simple seeing and
hearing, for the fortunate grasping of what is closest at hand and natural, and
we have up to this moment not yet even the basis of a culture, because we
ourselves are not convinced that we have a genuine life within us. Fractured
and fallen apart, in everything carved up mechanically into an inner and an
outer half, saturated with ideas like dragons’ teeth producing dragon ideas,
thus suffering from the sickness of words and without trust in any unique
sensation which is not yet franked with words, as such a non-living and yet
uncannily lively factory of ideas and words, I still perhaps have the right to
say about myself cogito, ergo sum, but not vivo, ergo
cogito.* That empty “Being,” not that full and green “Living,” is
ensured for me. My original feeling guarantees only that I am a thinking being,
not that I am a living essence, that I am no animal, but at most
a cogital. First give me life; then I
will make a culture out of it for you!—so shouts each individual of this first
generation, and all these individuals will recognize each other from this call.
Who will make a present of this life to them?
No god
and no human being: only their own youth: unleash this, and with it
you will have liberated life. For it only lay hidden in prison. It has not yet
withered away and died—inquire of yourself!
But this
unbridled life is sick and must be healed. It is ailing from many ills. Not
only does it suffer from the memory of its fetters—it suffers from what is here
our principal concern, from the historical sickness. The excess of history has
seized the plastic force of life. It no longer understands how to make use of
the past as a powerful nourishment. The evil is
fearsome, and yet! If youth did not have the clairvoyant gift of nature, then
no one would know that that is an evil and that a paradise of health has been
lost. This same youthfulness surmises, however, also with the healing instinct
of this same nature, how this paradise can be won back. It knows the juices for
wounds and the medicines to combat the historical sickness, to combat the
excess of the historical. What are they called?
Now,
people should not be surprised that they are the names of poisons: the
antidotes against the historical are called the unhistorical and the superhistorical. With these names we turn back to the
start of our examination and its quiet composure.
With the
phrase “the unhistorical” I designate the art and the power of being able
to forget and to enclose oneself in a horizon with
borders; “superhistorical” I call the powers which
divert the gaze from what is developing back to what gives existence an eternal
and unchanging character, to art and religion. Science—for
it is science which would talk about poisons—sees in that force, in these powers,
opposing forces, for it maintains that only the observation of things is true
and right, the scientific way of considering things, which everywhere sees what
has come into being as something historical and never as something that exists,
something eternal. Science lives in an inner contradiction with the eternalizing
powers of art and religion, just as much as it hates forgetfulness, the death
of knowledge, when it seeks to remove all limitations of horizons and to hurl
human beings into an infinite sea of light without frontiers, a sea bright with
waves of acknowledged becoming.
If only a
person could live there! Just as the cities collapse in an earthquake and
become desolate and the human being, trembling and in haste, erects his house
only on volcanic ground, so life itself breaks apart and becomes weak and dispirited
when the earthquake of ideaswhich science arouses takes from a person the basis
of all his certainty and rest, his faith in what is stable and permanent. Is
life to rule over knowledge now, over science, or is knowledge to rule over
life? Which of the two forces is the higher and decisive one? No one will have
any doubt: life is the higher, the ruling power, for knowledge which destroyed
life would in the process have destroyed itself. Knowledge presupposes life and
has the same interest in preserving life which every being has in its own
continuing existence. So science needs a higher supervision and control.
A doctrine of healthy life is positioned close beside science,
and a principle of this doctrine of health would sound like this: the
unhistorical and the superhistorical are the natural
counter-measures against the excessive growth of history on life, against the
historical sickness. It is probable that we, the historically ill, also have to
suffer from the countermeasures. But the fact that we suffer from them is no
proof against the correctness of the course of treatment we have chosen.
And here
I recognize the mission of that youth, that first generation of
fighters and dragon slayers, which brings forth a more fortunate and more
beautiful culture and humanity, without having more of this future happiness
and beauty still to come than a promise-filled premonition. This youth will
suffer from the evil and the counter-measures simultaneously, and nevertheless
it believes it may boast of a more powerful health and in general a more
natural nature than the generations before it, the educated “Men” and “Old Men”
of the present. However, their mission is to shake the ideas which this present
holds about “health” and “culture” and to develop contempt and hatred against
such hybrid conceptual monsters. The guaranteed mark of their own stronger
health is to be precisely the fact that they, I mean these young people,
themselves can use no idea, no party slogan, from the presently circulating
currency of words and ideas as a designation of their being, but are convinced
only by a power acting in it, a power which fights, eliminates, and cuts into
pieces, and by a constantly heightened sense of life in every good hour. People
may dispute the fact that these youth already have culture, but for what young
person would this be a reproach? People may speak against their crudeness and
immoderation, but they are not yet old and wise enough to make do with less;
above all, they do not need to feign and to defend any ready-made culture, and
they enjoy all the comforts and rights of youth, especially the privilege of a
braver spontaneous honesty and the energizing consolation of hope.
Of these
hopeful people I know that they understand all these generalities at close hand
and in their own most personal experience will translate them into a personally
thought-out teaching for themselves. The others may for the time being perceive
nothing but covered over bowls, which could also really be empty, until,
surprised one day, they see with their own eyes that the bowls are full and
that attacks, demands, living impulses, passions lay mixed in and impressed
into these generalities, which could not lie hidden in this way for a long
time. I refer these doubters to time, which brings all things to light, and, in
conclusion, I turn my attention to that society of those who hope, in order to
explain to them in an allegory the progress and outcome of their healing, their
salvation from the historical sickness, and thus their own history, up to the
point in time where they will be again healthy enough to take up history once
more and to make use of the past under the control of life in that threefold
sense, that is, monumental, or antiquarian, or critical. At that point of time
they will be less knowledgeable than the “educated” of the present, for they
will have forgotten a good deal and even have lost all pleasure of still
looking for what those educated ones wish above all to know. Their
distinguishing marks, from the point of view of those educated ones, are
precisely their “lack of culture,” their indifference and reserve with respect
to many famous things, even with respect to many good things. But they have
become, at that final point of their healing, once again human beings and
have ceased to be human-like aggregates—that is something! That is still something
to hope for! Are you not laughing at that in your hearts, you hopeful ones!
And, you
will ask, “How do we come to that end point?” The Delphic god shouts out to
you, at the very start of your trek to that goal, his aphorism: “Know thyself.”
It is a difficult saying, for that god “hides nothing and announces nothing,
but only points the way,” as Heraclitus has said. But what direction is he
indicating to you?
There
were centuries in which the Greeks found themselves in a danger similar to the
one in which we find ourselves, that is, the danger of destruction from being
swamped by what is foreign and past, from “history.” The Greeks never lived in
proud isolation; their “culture” was for a long time much more a chaos of
foreign, Semitic, Babylonian, Lydian, and Egyptian forms and ideas, and their
religion a real divine struggle of the entire Orient, something similar to the
way “German culture” and religion are inherently now a struggling chaos of all
foreign lands and all previous ages. Nevertheless Hellenic culture did not
become an aggregate, thanks to that Apollonian saying. The Greeks learned gradually to
organize the chaos because, in accordance with the Delphic teaching,
they directed their thoughts back to themselves, that is, to their real needs,
and let the apparent needs die off. So they seized possession of themselves
again. They did not remain long the over-endowed heirs and epigones of the
entire Orient. After an arduous battle with themselves, through the practical
interpretation of that saying, they became the most fortunate enrichers and increasers of the treasure they had inherited
and the firstlings and models for all future national cultures.
This is a
parable for every individual among us. He must organize the chaos in himself by
recalling in himself his own real needs. His honesty, his more courageous and
more genuine character, must at some point or other struggle against what will
only be constantly repeated, relearned, and imitated. He begins then to grasp
that culture can still be something other than a decoration of life,
that is, basically always only pretence and disguise; for all ornamentation covers
over what is decorated. So the Greek idea of culture reveals itself to him, in
opposition to the Roman, the idea of culture as a new and improved nature,
without inner and outer, without pretence and convention, culture as a
unanimous sense of living, thinking, appearing, and willing. Thus, he learns
out of his own experience that it was the higher power of moral nature
through which the Greeks attained their victory over all other cultures and
that each increase of truthfulness must also be a demand preparing for true culture,
even if this truthfulness may also occasionally seriously harm the idea of
culture esteemed at the time, even if it is capable of assisting a totally
decorative culture to collapse.
NOTES
Goethe: Johann
Wolfgang von Goethe (1739-1842), Germany’s most famous literary genius; Ceterum censeo: “I judge
otherwise,” a Latin expression made famous by Cato the Elder (c. 200 BC) in his attacks on Carthage. [Back to Text]
Heraclitus:
pre-Socratic Greek philosopher (c. 500 BC). [Back to Text]
Niebuhr: Georg
Niebuhr (1776-1831), a prominent German statesman and historian. [Back to Text]
David
Hume (1711-1776), a very famous Scottish philosopher. The quotation
comes from John Dryden’s play Aurengzebe,
4.1. Nietzsche offers the quotation in English. [Back to Text]
Giacomo Leopardi (1798-1837)
a famous Italian poet. Nietzsche quotes the lines in German. [Back to Text]
Here and
throughout this book, Nietzsche uses the word Wissenschaft (translated
as science) to denote all modern scholarship based on research into
the facts. The word is not by any means confined to those subjects we commonly
designate as science in the educational curriculum (i.e., natural science
subjects, like physics, chemistry, and biology). [Back to Text]
Schiller:
Friedrich von Schiller (1759-1805), well known German dramatist, poet, and
philosopher. Polybius (203-120 BC), Greek historian.[Back to Text]
amour propre: vain
self esteem. Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860), an important German philosopher
immediately before Nietzsche. [Back to Text]
Pythagoreans:
follower of Pythagoras, a 6th century Greek philosopher. The phrase “a
Stoic and an Epicurean” is a reference to Brutus and Cassius who led the
conspiracy to murder Julius Caesar in 44 BC. [Back to Text]
deus ex machina (meaning god from
the machine) is a phrase denoting an improbable conclusion to a drama,
often involving theatrical machinery (e.g., a god descending from on high). [Back to Text]
Erwin von
Steinbach (1244-1318), a famous medieval German architect who built
Strasburg Cathedral. [Back to Text]
Jacob
Burckhardt (1818-1897), Swiss historian of art and culture. [Back to Text]
The Latin
reads “Let the truth be done, and let life perish.” This is a reworking of the
well known Latin saying, “Fiat justitia ruat caelum” meaning “Let
justice be done though the heavens fall” (i.e., justice at all costs). [Back to Text]
Grillparzer: Franz
Grillparzer (1791-1872), Austrian dramatist. [Back to Text]
The
reference here is to the closing lines of Goethe’s Faust, Part 2, “the eternal feminine draws us upward.” [Back to Text]
Zoellner: Johann Karl Friedrich Zoellner (1834-1882), a well-known German astonomer. [Back to Text]
Thiers: Adolphe Thiers (1797-1877), well-known French historian. [Back to Text]
Delphi
was the site of the most famous oracle in ancient Greece, where for centuries
people went to obtain advice on personal and political matters. [Back to Text]
Plutarch c. 46-77, Greek historian famous for his celebration of
great men’s lives. [Back
to Text]
Voltaire (1694-1778), very famous French essayist,
playwright, and man of letters. His slogan “écrasez l’infame” [crush
the infamy] became a famous rallying cry against religious
superstition and the abuses carried out by the church. [Back to Text]
The
“greatest theologian of the century” is Friedrich
Schleiermacher (1768-1834), an important Protestant thinker. [Back to Text]
Hans
Sachs (1494-1576) was the most famous of the medieval German
master singers and a character in Richard Wagner’s opera Die
Meistersinger. [Back
to Text]
Holderlein (1770-1843), important German Romantic poet. Laertius Diogenes, a biographer of the Greek
philosophers in the third century.[Back to Text]
Memento mori: a reminder that one will die; memento vivere: a reminder to live. [Back to Text]
Savonarola: Girolama Savonarola (1452-1498), an Italian religious reformer
hostile to the Renaissance. [Back to Text]
Wilhelm Wackernagel (1806-1869), German
philologist. [Back
to Text]
Georg
Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770-1831), German philosopher who saw history as the
progressive realization of an idea. [Back to Text]
Ira: the
Latin word for anger; studium: the Latin
word for study. The expression sine ira
et studio (without anger and without partiality)
originates with the Roman historian Tacitus (60-120 AD) and is frequently used
to describe an “objective” (i.e., emotion free) style of writing history. [Back to Text]
Raphael (1483-1520), one of the greatest Italian painters of the Renaissance. [Back to Text]
Natura naturans: This
Latin phrase means literally “nature naturing.” The
phrase is a term for an essential creative or divine force. [Back to Text]
Goethe’s
novel The Sorrows of Young Werther (1774)
helped to define the Romantic hero and brought Goethe great early
success. [Back
to Text]
Karl
Robert Eduard von Hartmann (1842-1906), German philosopher, who published his
first book, The Philosophy of the Unconscious, in 1869. [Back to Text]
David
Strauss (1808-1874), German theologian and writer who wrote on the historical
Jesus; ex causis efficientibus:
from efficient causes, i.e., as the result of certain mechanical
processes; ex causa finali:
from a final cause, i.e., as having a higher moral purpose. [Back to Text]
animae magnae prodigus: filled
with a great spirit. [Back to Text]
The
quotation is from Walter Bagehot. Nietzsche offers the quotation in
English. [Back to
Text]
imperium romanum: imperial power of Rome. [Back to Text]
Demosthenes (384-322 BC), famous Greek orator who spoke
out against the growing power of Macedonia. [Back to Text]
. . . sans everything: The quotation is from
Shakespeare’s As You Like It. Nietzsche quotes the lines in German.
I have used Shakespeare’s lines, rather than a translation of the German. [Back to Text]
Edward
Gibbon (1737-1794), famous English historian. [Back to Text]
Johann Christoph Gottsched
(1700-1766), German author and critic; Karl Wilhelm Ramler
(1725-1798), German poet; Pindar (518-438 BC), one of the most famous of the
ancient Greek poets. [Back to Text]
Cogito,
ergo sum: “I think, therefore I am,” a sentence made famous by
Descartes; vivo, ergo cogito: “I live, therefore I think.” [Back to Text]
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