The Younger Generation
GA 217
6 October 1922, Dornach
Lecture IV
Today I shall begin with a review of ethics up to the end of the nineteenth century. I do not wish to convey that philosophical expositions can give rise to an impulse for the renewal of the moral life, but rather to show that forces which work from other sources to determine the moral life are symptomatically expressed in the philosophical expositions of ethics.
We must give up the view that systems of philosophy which start from the intellect can give a sound direction. Yet the whole impulse of the age expresses itself in what the philosophers say. No one will declare that our reaction to the temperature of a room is influenced by the thermometer; what the thermometer registers is dependent upon the temperature of the room. In the same way we can gauge, from what philosophers write about morality, the condition of morals in general.
You see, I treat philosophical expositions of ethics in rather a different way, merely as a kind of thermometer for registering conditions. Just as we know the temperature of a room by reading the thermometer, so we can find out a great deal about the undercurrents of the life of humanity in a particular region or period by knowing what the philosophers express in their writings.
Consider the following only from this point of view as I read you a passage printed in 1893 in the periodical Deutsche Literaturzeitung that deals with Spencer's Principle of Ethics. The reviewer says: “It contains, as I think, the most complete argument, supported by a crushing weight of material, that there is absolutely no such thing as one universal morality for all mankind, nor is there an unchangeable Moral Law: that there exists only one norm which underlies all judgments of human characteristics and actions, namely, the practical fitness or unfitness of a character or action for the given state of the society in which the judgment is made. On this account the same things will be very differently judged according to the different cultural conditions in which they occur. The view of the present writer is that this masterpiece (Spencer's Principles of Ethics) must, from a scientific point of view at least, strike dumb any recent attempts to base ethical judgments upon intuition, inborn feelings, or the most evident of axioms and the like.”
This passage is characteristic of the attitude of most of the civilized world at the end of the nineteenth century, so that it could be expressed in philosophical terms.
Let us be clear as to what is said. The attempt is made in this very important work, Spencer's Principles of Ethics, to prove—as the reviewer rightly says—with crushing weight of material, that it is impossible to draw forth from the human soul moral intuitions, moral axioms, and that we must stop talking about moral intuitions. We can only say with certainty that man acts according to his natural endowments. Any action is judged by a man's social environment; he is forced to bring his action into line with the judgment of this social environment. Hence conventional moral judgments are modified as human society changes from century to century. And a reviewer in the nineties of last century says that it is at last possible to silence, so far as science is concerned, all attempts to speak of ethics and moral views in such a way that moral intuitions arise out of the soul.
I have chosen this example because it characterizes what faced one when one thought about ethics and moral impulses.
Into this mood of the age, my dear friends, I sent my Philosophy of Spiritual Activity which culminates in the view that the end of the nineteenth century makes it eminently necessary that men, as time goes on, will only be able to find moral impulses in the very essence of the soul; that even for the moral impulses of everyday life, they will be obliged to have recourse to moral intuitions. All other impulses will become gradually less decisive than the moral intuitions laid bare in the soul. In view of the situation which I faced, I was obliged to say, “The future of human ethics depends upon the power of moral intuition becoming stronger; advance in moral education can only be made as we strengthen the force of moral intuition within the soul, when the individual becomes more and more aware of the moral intuitions which arise in his soul.”
Over against this stood the judgment—a universal one, for we only speak here of what holds good universally—that it is proven with overwhelming evidence that all moral intuitions must be silenced. It was therefore necessary to attempt to write a book that would present in a virile way the very point of view which, with equal vigor, science declared should be forever silenced.
This example shows clearly that the turning-point of the nineteenth century was a time of tremendous significance for the spiritual evolution of the West. It goes to show those who have been growing up since the end of the last century are faced with quite a different situation in the life of soul from that of previous centuries. And I said with regard to the Spiritual, that at the end of the nineteenth century, man stood, in his soul-being, face to face with “Nothingness”. It was necessary to emphasize, because of man's deeper spiritual nature, that for the future, moral intuition is confronted with what had come from the past, with the Nothingness. This turning-point of the nineteenth century revealed itself in German culture in a most tragic way. We need only mention the name of Nietzsche.
For those who lived through the transition from the nineteenth to the twentieth century with alert and wide-awake consciousness, Nietzsche represents an experience of real tragedy. Nietzsche was a personality who through the successive periods of his life poignantly experienced that he was faced with the Nothingness, that Nothingness which he had at first assumed to be a “something,” a reality.
It will not be superfluous for our study during the next few days to say a few words about Friedrich Nietzsche. In a certain respect Nietzsche, through his tragic destiny, clearly indicates the twilight in the spiritual evolution of mankind at the end of the nineteenth century, making a new dawn necessary for the century just beginning.
Nietzsche started from a mature scientific standpoint; this he first met in philology in the middle of the nineteenth century. With a mind of extraordinary inner flexibility Nietzsche assimilated the philological standpoint of the middle of the nineteenth century and with it he absorbed the whole spirit of Greek culture.
Nietzsche was not a personality to shut himself off from the general culture. The very reverse of a theoretical scholar, he accepted naturally what he found in the middle of the nineteenth century, namely, Schopenhauer's philosophical pessimism. This made a profound impression upon him, because he realized more deeply than Schopenhauer the decline of the spiritual life in the midst of which he was living.
The only form in which the light that pointed towards the future came to him was in Richard Wagner's music. As you know, Wagner was a follower of Schopenhauer at the time he made Nietzsche's acquaintance.
Thus, towards the beginning of the last third of the nineteenth century, Nietzsche developed the view that was no theory but the very substance of life to him—that already in Greek culture there had dawned the age in which the full human content was being crushed by intellectualism. Nietzsche was not correct in regard to the complete development of intellectualism, for in the form in which Nietzsche experienced intellectualism as an all-destroying spirit, it had, as I said yesterday, come upon the scene only since the fifteenth century. What Nietzsche experienced was the intellectualism of the immediate present. He dated it back to the later age of Greek culture, and held that the influence working so destructively upon what was livingly spiritual began with Socrates. And so Nietzsche became anti-Socratic in his philosophy. With the advent of Socrates in the spiritual life of Greece he saw intellectualism and the faculty of understanding driving away the old spirituality.
Not many have grasped with such innate power the contrast between the character of Greek culture as it appears in the writings of Aeschylus, of Sophocles, in the early sculpture and in the mighty philosophies of men like Heraclitus, Anaxagoras and others; the contrast of this life of soul, still full of spiritual impulses—and that other life of soul which gradually began to paralyze the true spirituality. According to Nietzsche this began with Socrates who confronted all world-questions with intellectual questions, with Socrates who established his art of definition, about which Nietzsche felt: “When it began man no longer looked at the immediate and living Spirit in the old natural way.” Provided this idea is not carried too far and thus made intellectual, it shows that Nietzsche felt something of great significance.
Real experience of the Spiritual, wherever we meet it, always becomes individualism. Definition inevitably becomes generalization. In going through life and meeting individuals we must have an open heart—an open mind for the individual. Towards each single individual we should be capable of unfolding an entirely new human feeling. We only do justice to the human being when we see in him an entirely new personality. For this reason every individual has the right to ask of us that we should develop a new feeling for him as a human being. If we come with a general idea in our heads, saying that the human being should be like this or like that—then we are being unjust to the individual. With every definition of a human being we are really putting up a screen to make the human individual invisible.
Nietzsche felt this in regard to the spiritual life—hence his opposition to the Socratic teaching. And so, during the sixties and early seventies of the nineteenth century there grew in his soul the idea that the true and living Greek culture has a kind of pessimism at the root of its feeling about the world. He thought the Greeks were convinced that immediate life, in its elementary form, cannot give man satisfaction, a complete feeling of his dignity as man. Therefore the Greeks took refuge in what art was to them. And to the Greeks, the art they cultivated in the time of their prime was the great comforter, helping to overcome what was lacking in material existence. So that for Nietzsche, Greek art could be understood only out of a tragic feeling about life, and he thought that this mission of art would again be revived by Wagner and through his artistic impulse.
The seventies approached and Nietzsche began to feel that after all this was not so, because in his time he failed to find the impulse which the Greeks had set up as the great consoler for the material life around them. And so he reflected: “What was it that I wanted to find in Wagner's art as a renewal of Greek art? What was it? Ideals.” But it dawned upon him, as he let these ideals work upon his soul, that they were no different from those of his own epoch.
During the last third of the nineteenth century there came a terribly tragic moment in Nietzsche's life, the moment when he felt his ideals to belong to his own times. He was forced to admit: “My ideals are no different from what this present age calls its ideals. After all, I am drawing from the same forces from which my own age draws its ideals.” This was a moment of great pain for Nietzsche. For he had experienced the idealistic tendencies manifest in his day. He had found, for example, a David Friedrich Strauss—revered by the whole age as a great man—but whom he had unmasked as a philistine. And he realized that his own ideals, stimulated by his absorption in Wagner and in Greek art, strongly resembled those of his time. But these ideals seemed to him impotent and unable to grasp the Spiritual.
So he said to himself: “If I am true to myself, I cannot have any ideals in common with my time.” This was a tragic discovery although not expressed in these words. Anyone who has steeped himself in what Nietzsche lived through during the years of which I am speaking, knows that there came for Nietzsche the tragic moment when, in his own way, he said: “When a man of the present day speaks of ideals and these coincide with what others call their ideals, then he is moving in the realm of the ‘empty phrase’, the ‘empty phrase’ that is no longer the living body but the dead corpse of the Spirit.”
This brought Nietzsche to the conviction: I must resolutely put aside the ideals I have evolved hitherto. And this putting aside all his ideals began in the middle of the seventies. He published his Human All Too Human, The Dawn of Day and The Joyful Wisdom—works in which he pays some homage to Voltaire but which also contain a certain view of human morals.
An external inducement to forsake his former idealism and steer towards the views of his second period was his acquaintance with the works of Paul Rée. Paul Rée treated the moral nature and its development from a purely scientific point of view, entirely in line with the natural science of the day. Paul Rée has written the very interesting little book, On the Origin of Moral Perceptions and also a book on The Genesis of Conscience. This book, which everyone should read who wants to know about the thought of the last third of the nineteenth century, had a very deep influence on Nietzsche.
What is the spirit of this book? Again, I am not describing it because I think that philosophy has a direct influence upon life; I do so because I want to have a thermometer for culture by which we can read the state of the ethical impulses of the time. Paul Rée's view amounted to this: The human being, originally, had no more than what in his opinion a child has, namely, a life of instinct, impulses of unconscious, instinctive activity. The individual human being, when he becomes active, comes up against others. Certain of these activities unfolded towards the outer world happen to suit other human beings, to be beneficial to them; other activities may be harmful. From this there arises the judgment: What proceeds from the instinctive activities of the human being as beneficial is gradually seen to be “Good;” what proves harmful to others is branded as “Evil.” Life becomes more complicated all the time. People forget how they put labels on things. They speak of good and evil and have forgotten that in the beginning the good was simply what was beneficial and the evil what was felt to be harmful. So finally what has arisen has become instinct, has recast itself as instinct. It is just as if someone struck out blindly with his arm—if the result is a caress, then this is called good; if it is a box on the ears, then it is evil. And so judgments pile up. The sum of such judgments becomes instinct. People know how they raise their hand just as little as they know why a voice comes out of the soul and utters this or that moral judgment. This voice they call conscience. This voice of conscience is simply what has arisen out of instinctive judgments about the beneficial and the harmful. It has become instinct, and because its origin has been forgotten, it speaks from within as if it were the voice of conscience.
Nietzsche realized fully that not everyone would agree with Paul Rée. But he was also quite clear that when views on natural science were such as they were in his day, it is impossible to think about Ethics otherwise than in the way Paul Rée did. Nietzsche was thoroughly honest; he deduced the ultimate consequences as Paul Rée had done. Nietzsche bore the philosopher no grudge for having written such things. This had not much more significance for Nietzsche than what was circumscribed by the four walls of the room in which Paul Rée did his writing, just as a thermometer indicates nothing more than the temperature of the immediate environment. However, it shows something universal, and Nietzsche felt this. He felt the ethical sediment of the times in this book and with this he agreed. For him there was nothing more important than to put aside the old “empty phrase” and to say: “When people talk about nebulous ideals they make nothing clear. In fact everything is instinct.”
Nietzsche often said to himself: Here is someone who says, I am an enthusiast for this or that ideal and I rejoice that others too should be enthusiastic about it. And so, Nietzsche comes to the conclusion that when all is said and done, a man who is an enthusiast for certain ideals and wants to enthuse others, is so constituted that when he is thinking of these ideals he can work up the juices in his stomach in the best way for the digestion of his food. I am putting this rather inelegantly but it is exactly what Nietzsche felt in the seventies and eighties. He said to himself: People talk about all sorts of spiritual things and call them ideals. But in reality it is there for no other purpose than to enable people, each according to his constitution, to digest and carry out bodily functions in the best way. What is known as human must be divested of the “empty phrase,” for in truth the human is all-too-human.
With a magnificent devotion to honesty, Nietzsche declared war on all idealism. I know that this aspect of Nietzsche has not always been emphasized. A great deal that has been said about him is pure snobbery, without anything serious in it. So Nietzsche found himself facing the “Nothingness” at the end of the first period of his spiritual development, consciously facing the Nothingness in a second period which began with Human All Too Human and ended with The Joyful Wisdom. Finally, only one mood remained, for it is impossible to reach a real spiritual content when all ideals are traced back to bodily functions. One example will show what Nietzsche's view became. He said to himself: There are people who work towards asceticism, that is to say, towards abstention from physical enjoyment. Why do they do this? They do it because they have exceedingly bad digestion arid feel most comfortable when they abstain from physical enjoyment. That is why they regard asceticism as the highest aim worth striving for. But unconsciously they are seeking what makes them most comfortable. They wish to feel the greatest enjoyment in the absence of enjoyment. That absence of enjoyment is their greatest enjoyment shows us how they are constituted.
In Nietzsche, who was thoroughly honest, this mood intensified to moments when he gave vent to words like these:
“Ich wohn' in meinem eigenen Haus,
Hab' niemand etwas nachgemacht,
Und lache jeden Meister aus,
Der sich nicht selber ausgelacht.”(I dwell within my own house and
have imitated no single man; and I
laugh at every master who has not
laughed at himself.)
In its poetic anticipation this verse is a magnificent description of the mood that came to its climax about the turn of the nineteenth century, yet it was already there earlier, in a form that made itself felt in the life of soul. Nietzsche found his way out of this second period of facing the Nothingness by creating what is implicit in two ideas to which he gave poetic expression. The one was the idea of the “Superman.” Ultimately there was nothing left but to call upon something which must be born out of the human being but was not yet there. After his grandiose experience of facing Nothingness, there arose the idea of the eternal recurrence of the same, which came to him out of the theory of evolution. In his scientific period he had become familiar with the idea of evolution. But as he steeped himself in what came from these thoughts about evolution he discovered nothing that would bring evolution forward; these only gave him the idea of eternal recurrence. This was his last period, which need not be described any further, although from the point of view of psychology a very great deal might be learnt from it.
I do not wish to draw a character-study but only to indicate how Nietzsche, who was forced through illness to lay down his pen at the end of the eighties, had experienced in advance the mood that dominated deeper souls at the turn of the century. During the last third of the nineteenth century Nietzsche tried to express a mood drawn from his store of ideas, from Greek philosophy and art, from art as found in Wagner, from the philosophy of Schopenhauer, and so on. But time and again Nietzsche himself abandoned his own views.
One of his last works is called The Twilight of the Idols, or How to Philosophize with the Hammer. He felt himself as a destroyer of the old ideas. It was really very remarkable. The old ideas had already been destroyed by the spirit of cultural evolution. During Nietzsche's youth the store of ideas was already destroyed. Up to the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, ideas continued through tradition but came to an end in the last third of the nineteenth century. The old spirit was already in ruins. It was only in the “empty phrase,” the cliché, that these ideas lived on.
Those who thought in accordance with spiritual reality in Nietzsche's day would not have felt that they had to smash the ideals with a hammer but that they had already been smashed simply in the course of the evolution of the human race. Mankind would not have reached freedom unless this had happened. But Nietzsche who found these ideals still blossoming in the empty phrase was under the illusion that he was doing what had already long been done.
What had been the inner fuel of the spiritual life in the former age, the fuel whereby the Spirit in man could be kindled and, once kindled, illuminate both Nature and his own life—this had passed away. In the realm of the moral this is expressed by people saying: There can be no moral intuitions any longer.
As I mentioned yesterday, theoretical refutations of materialism as world-conception are sheer nonsense, for materialism has its justification in this age. Thoughts which our age has to recognize as right are products of the brain. Therefore a refutation of materialism is in itself of the nature of the empty phrase, and no one who is honest can see the good of refuting materialism theoretically for nothing is to be gained by it. The human being has come to the stage where he no longer has an inner, living Spirit but only a reflection of the Spirit entirely dependent upon the physical brain. Here materialism is fully justified as a theoretical world conception. The point is not that people have a false world-conception or refute it, but that little by little they have come to an inner attitude of life and soul that is lacking in Spirit. This rings tragically, like a cry, through Nietzsche's philosophy.
This is the situation of the spiritual life in which souls with natural feeling among the young of the twentieth century found themselves. You will not come to any clear view, to any tangible experience, of what is brewing indistinctly, subconsciously in your souls and what you call the experiences of youth, unless you look into this revolution that has inevitably taken place in the spiritual life of the present period of evolution.
If you try to characterize what you experience on any other basis, you will always feel after a time that you must brush it aside. You will not hit upon a truth but only on clichés. For unless the human being today honestly admits: I must grasp the living, the active Spirit, the Spirit which no longer has its reality but only its corpse in intellectualism—unless I come to this, there is no freedom from the confusion of the age. As long as anyone believes that he can find Spirit in intellectualism, which is merely the form of the Spirit in the same way as the human corpse is the form of a man, man will not find himself.
To find oneself is only possible if man will honestly confess: Intellectualism has the same relation to the living essence of the Spirit as a dead corpse to the man who has died. The form is still there but the life of the Spirit has gone out of intellectualism. Just as the human corpse can be treated with preparations that preserve its form—as indeed Egyptian mummies show—so too can the corpse of the Spirit be preserved by padding it out with the results of experiment and observation. But thereby man gets nothing of what is livingly spiritual, he gets nothing that he can unite naturally with the living impulses of the soul. He gets nothing but a dead thing, a dead thing that can wonderfully reproduce what is dead in the world, just as one can still marvel at the human form in the mummy. But in intellectualism we cannot get what is truly spiritual any more than a real human being can be made out of a mummy.
As long as importance is attached to conserving what the union of observation and intellect is intended to conserve, one can only say: The achievements of the modern age are great. The moment the human being has to unite in the depths of his soul with what his Spirit inwardly holds up before him—there can be no link between intellectualism and the soul. Then the only thing is for him to say: “I am thirsting for something, and nothing I find out of intellectuality gives me water to quench my thirst.”
This is what lives in the feelings of young people today although, naturally, it is not so clear when expressed in words. Young people today say many things, annoying things when one gets to the bottom of what is said. But one soon overcomes it. The annoyance is due to the fact that bombastic words are used that express anything rather than what the speaker really feels. The empty phrase over-reaches itself and what appears as the character of the youth movement is, for one who lives in the Spirit, like a continuous bursting of bubbles; it is really intellectualism overreaching itself. I do not want to hurt any of you personally, but if it does hurt—well, I cannot help it. I should be sorry, but I still think it right to say it. I cannot say only pleasant things; I must sometimes say things which will not please everyone. Moreover I must say what I know to be true. So, in order to characterize what is rightly there in the souls of young people today, we need something more than a revival of old concepts over-reaching themselves in empty phrases; we need a highly-developed feeling for truth.
We need truth at the bottom of our soul. Truth is the alpha and the omega of what we need today, and when your Chairman said yesterday that we have got to a point where we do not want to utter the word “Spirit” any longer, that is in itself a confession of the truth. It would be much more clever if our age, which has lost the Spirit, would stop there and not want to talk about the Spirit, because then human beings would again begin to thirst for the Spirit. Instead of this, anything and everything is termed “Spirit,” “spiritual.” What we need is truth, and if any young person today acknowledges the condition of his own soul, he can only say: This age has taken all spirit out of my soul, but my soul thirsts for the Spirit, thirsts for something new, thirsts for a new conquest of the Spirit.
As long as this is not felt in all honesty the youth movement cannot come into its own. Let me add the following to what I have said in characterization of what we must seek. In the deepest, innermost being of the soul, we must seek for light; above all else we must acquire the most profound feeling for honesty and truth. If we build upon honesty and truth, then we shall progress, for humanity must indeed progress. Then we shall speak of the Spirit which is so like our human nature. The soul is most of all like the Spirit, therefore it can find the Spirit if only it so wills. In our time the soul must strive beyond empty phrase, convention and routine; beyond the empty phrase to a grasp of truth; beyond convention to a direct, elementary warm-hearted relation between man and man; beyond routine to the state in which the Spirit lives in every single action, so that we no longer act automatically but that the Spirit lives in the most ordinary everyday actions. We must come to spirituality in action, to the immediate experience of human beings in their relations to one another and to honest, upright experience of truth.
Vierter Vortrag
[ 1 ] Ich möchte heute beginnen mit einer Beurteilung der Ethik, wie sie sich bis zum Ende des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts hin entwickelt hat. Nicht etwa um nachzuweisen, daß philosophische Darstellungen der Ethik irgendwie impulsiv für die Moral der Menschen wirken könnten, sondern um Ihnen anschaulich zu machen, wie dasjenige, was aus ganz anderen Untergründen heraus sittlich bestimmend für die Menschen wirkt, symptomatisch in den philosophischen Darstellungen des Sittlichen zum Ausdruck kommt.
[ 2 ] Man muß überhaupt die Ansicht aufgeben, als ob Philosophien, wenn sie vom Intellekt ausgehen, irgendwie unmittelbar richtunggebend sein könnten. Aber in demjenigen, was die Philosophen sagen, drückt sich doch der ganze Zeitimpuls aus. Niemand wird zum Beispiel behaupten, daß unser Wärmegefühl in einem Zimmer vom Stande des Thermometers beeinflußt wird, aber jeder weiß, daß der Stand des Thermometers selbst von dem abhängig ist, was man die Wärmeverhältnisse eines Zimmers nennen kann. Ebenso, möchte ich sagen, sieht man bei den Philosophen, die von Sittlichkeit sprechen, welches der allgemeine sittliche Stand ist.
[ 3 ] Sie sehen, daß ich die philosophischen Darstellungen des Ethischen etwas anders behandle, als das gewöhnlich geschieht. Ich behandle sie nur wie eine Art Thermometerstand gegenüber den Temperaturverhältnissen. Aber so, wie man über die Wärmeverhältnisse eines Zimmers Bescheid weiß, wenn man den Thermometerstand kurz angibt, so erfährt man unermeßlich viel von dem, was in den Untergründen des allgemeinen Menschenlebens einer Gegend, eines Zeitalters liegt, wenn man weiß, was die Philosophen dieses Zeitalters in ihren Darstellungen zum Ausdruck bringen.
[ 4 ] Nur von diesem Gesichtspunkte aus betrachten Sie es also, wenn ich Ihnen eine kurze Stelle vorlese, die im Jahre 1893 in der «Deutschen Literaturzeitung» erschienen ist und von Spencers «Prinzipien der Ethik» handelt. Da lesen wir: «Er enthält den, wie ich glaube, vollständigsten» — so sagt der Rezensent — «und mit erdrückendem Material geführten Nachweis, daß es schlechterdings keinen allgemeinmenschlichen Inhalt des Sittlichen, oder unveränderliche Sittengebote gibt; daß nur eine einzige Norm existiert, welche aller Schätzung menschlicher Eigenschaften und Handlungen zugrunde liegt: die praktische Angemessenheit oder Unangemessenheit eines Charakters oder einer Tat an den gegebenen Zustand der Gesellschaft, in welcher die Beurteilung stattfindet; und daß eben deswegen die nämlichen Dinge in verschiedenen Kulturverhältnissen sehr verschieden bewertet worden sind. Referent ist der Ansicht, daß diese Meisterleistung» — also die Spencer sehen Prinzipien der Ethik - «... die letzten Versuche, ethische Unterscheidungen auf Intuitionen, angeborene Gefühle, selbst evidente
[ 5 ] Axiome usw. zu gründen, in der Wissenschaft wenigstens mundtot machen muß.» Ich lese Ihnen diese Worte aus dem Grunde vor, weil sie die ethische Stimmung fast der ganzen zivilisierten Welt vom Ende des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts charakterisieren, jene ethische Stimmung, die sich so weit entwickelt hatte, daß sie in philosophische Worte gefaßt werden konnte.
[ 6 ] Machen wir uns einmal klar, was hier eigentlich gesagt wird. Es wird in dem wirklich außerordentlich bedeutenden Werke, in Spencers «Prinzipien der Ethik», der Versuch unternommen, mit erdrückendem Material — es ist schon so, wie der Rezensent sagt — nachzuweisen, daß aus dem menschlichen Seelenleben sogenannte moralische Intuitionen, moralische Axiome oder dergleichen nicht hervorgeholt werden können, daß man endlich aufhören müsse, über solche moralische Intuitionen zu sprechen. Denn das einzige, was man sagen kann, ist: Die Menschen handeln aus der natürlichen Veranlagung heraus. Dieses Handeln wird beurteilt von der gesellschaftlichen Umgebung. Der Mensch ist gezwungen, sein Handeln nach dem Urteil der gesellschaftlichen Umgebung einzurichten. Daraus ergeben sich die konventionellen, sittlichen Urteile, die sich modifizieren, je nachdem sich die menschliche Gesellschaft von Zeitalter zu Zeitalter ändert. Und es wird hier von einem Rezensenten im Beginne der neunziger Jahre des vorigen Jahrhunderts gesagt, es sei nun endlich möglich, alle Versuche, über Ethik und sittliche Anschauungen so zu sprechen, als ob es unmittelbar aus der Seele hervorgeholte moralische Intuitionen gäbe, wenigstens soweit die Wissenschaft in Betracht komme, mundtot zu machen.
[ 7 ] Ich habe diese einzelne Erscheinung herausgegriffen, weil sie tatsächlich dasjenige charakterisiert, dem man in jener Zeit sich gegenübergestellt fand, wenn man über Ethik, über Sittenimpulse nachsann.
[ 8 ] In diese Zeitstimmung hinein versuchte ich meine «Philosophie der Freiheit» zu schicken, die in der Anschauung gipfelt, daß jetzt, also am Ende des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts, gerade die Zeit gekommen sei, die im eminentesten Sinne notwendig macht, daß die Menschen sich darauf besinnen, wie sie sittliche Impulse immer mehr und mehr dadurch finden können, daß sie auf das Wesen der menschlichen Seele selber zurückgehen. Selbst für die sittlichen Impulse des Alltags müssen sie immer mehr und mehr zu moralischen Impulsen ihre Zuflucht nehmen, weil andere Impulse als die unmittelbar in der menschlichen Seele bloßzulegenden moralischen Intuitionen immer weniger bestimmend sein können. Diese Situation lag dazumal für mich vor. Ich fand mich genötigt, zu sagen: AlleZukunft der menschlichen Ethik hängt davon ab, daß die Kraft der moralischen Intuition mit jedem Tage stärker werde. Damit war auch gesagt, daß wir mit Bezug auf die moralische Pädagogik überhaupt nur vorwärtskommen, wenn wir die Kraft der moralischen Intuition in der menschlichen Seele immer mehr stärken, wenn wir das einzelne menschliche Individuum immer mehr und mehr dahin bringen, sich bewußt zu werden, was in seiner Seele an moralischen Intuitionen ersprießen kann.
[ 9 ] Demgegenüber stand das Urteil — das schier allgemein war, denn es ist hier nur etwas ganz Allgemeingültiges ausgesprochen -, daß nunmehr die Zeit herangerückt sei, wo mit erdrückendem Material nachgewiesen sei, daß alle moralischen Intuitionen wissenschaftlich mundtot gemacht werden müssen. Es war also notwendig für mich, den Versuch zu machen, ein Buch zu schreiben, welches in energischer Weise gerade den Standpunkt vertritt, der in ebenso energischer Weise von der Wissenschaft dazumal als der bezeichnet wurde, welcher mundtot zu machen sei.
[ 10 ] Ich charakterisiere Ihnen dieses aus dem Grunde, weil damit an einem einzelnen Fall dargestellt wird, wovon ich gestern und vorgestern sprach, nämlich der ungeheuer bedeutungsvolle Wendepunkt in der gesamten Geistesentwickelung des Abendlandes am Ende des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts. Alle meine Ausführungen wiesen ja bis jetzt darauf hin, daß die Menschheit, die seit dem Ende des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts heranwuchs, vor einer ganz neuen Seelensituation steht gegenüber derjenigen der vorangegangenen Jahrhunderte. Ich habe schon einmal den Ausdruck gebraucht, daß man am Ende des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts als Menschenseele mit Bezug auf das Geistige gegenüber dem Nichts steht. Es war schon einmal notwendig, gerade gegenüber dem Sittlichen in scharfer Weise zu markieren, wie dasjenige, was man aus geistigen Untergründen heraus als das Notwendigste bezeichnen muß für die Zukunft: moralische Intuition, gegenübergestellt ist demjenigen, was aus der Vergangenheit heraufkam — dem Nichts, das fertig ist mit seiner Entwickelung. Es kam ja dieser Wendepunkt auf eine wirklich tragische Weise am Ende des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts gerade innerhalb der deutschen Kultur zum Ausdruck, und man braucht, um dieses Tragische anzudeuten, nur den Namen Nietzsche zu nennen.
[ 11 ] Nietzsche ist für Menschen, die bewußt und wach den Übergang von dem neunzehnten ins zwanzigste Jahrhundert miterlebt haben, wirklich das Miterleben einer Tragödie gewesen. Man kann sagen, daß Nietzsche selbst eine Persönlichkeit war, die in den aufeinanderfolgenden Lebensepochen in scharfer Weise mit der eigenen Seele erlebt hat das dem Nichts Gegenübergestelltsein, jenem Nichts, das sie zunächst als ein Etwas genommen hat.
[ 12 ] Es wird vielleicht für das, was in diesen Tagen von Ihren Seelen aufgenommen werden sollte, nicht ganz überflüssig sein, diesen Friedrich Nietzsche gerade in diesem Momente mit einigen Worten zu berühren. In gewissem Sinne ist Nietzsche schon derjenige Mensch gewesen, der durch sein tragisches Schicksal scharf hindeutet auf dasjenige, was in der geistigen Entwickelung der Menschheit im neunzehnten Jahrhundert sich einer Abendröte zuneigte und eine Morgenröte mit dem beginnenden neuen Jahrhundert notwendig machte.
[ 13 ] Nietzsche ist ja hervorgegangen aus einem reifen wissenschaftlichen Standpunkte. Er hat zunächst diesen wissenschaftlichen Standpunkt in der Mitte des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts in der Philologie kennengelernt. Nietzsche hat wirklich mit einem innerlich außerordentlich beweglichen Geiste den philologischen Standpunkt von der Mitte des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts aufgenommen, und er hat eigentlich mit der Philologie aufgenommen den ganzen Geist des Griechentums. Dabei war Nietzsche keine Persönlichkeit, die sich gegenüber der allgemeinen Kultur abschloß. Er war das Gegenteil eines Stubengelehrten. Nietzsche nahm daher auch auf, was ihm in der Mitte des neunzehnten Jahrhundertsals philosophischer Standpunkt nahekommen mußte: dieSchopenhauersche Philosophie, den Schopenhauerschen philosophischen Pessimismus. Dieser Schopenhauersche philosophische Pessimismus hat auf ihn einen tiefgehenden Eindruck gemacht, einen Eindruck, der nur dadurch kommen konnte, daß Nietzsche mehr als Schopenhauer selber das Hinuntersinkende des Geisteslebens, inmitten dessen er lebte, empfunden hat. Ein Licht, das nach der Zukunft hinwies, gab es für Nietzsche nur in der Form der Richard Wagnerschen Musik. Wagner war ja in bezug auf seine Weltanschauung Schopenhauerianer in der Zeit, in der er Nietzsche kennenlernte.
[ 14 ] Und so bildete sich für Nietzsche, gegen den Beginn des letzten Drittels des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts, die Anschauung heraus, die für ihn wirklich nicht Theorie, sondern Lebensinhalt war: daß schon innerhalb des Griechentums jenes Zeitalter heraufgekommen war, welches den vollen menschlichen Inhalt durch den Intellektualismus erdrückte. Nietzsche hat sich gewiß in bezug auf die Entwickelung und völlige Ausbildung des Intellektualismus geirrt. Denn in jener Gestalt, in der Nietzsche den Intellektualismus wie ein alles ertötendes Geistiges erlebte, ist er eigentlich erst seit dem fünfzehnten Jahrhundert heraufgekommen, wie ich das gestern und vorgestern gezeigt habe. Aber schließlich hat ja Nietzsche den Intellektualismus der unmittelbaren Gegenwart erlebt, und er hat ihn zurückdatiert bis in das spätere Griechentum. Es bildete sich ihm die Anschauung: dasjenige, was so auslöschend wirkte für das Lebendig-Geistige, habe eigentlich schon mit Sokrates begonnen. So wurde Nietzsche ein Anti-Sokratiker. Er sah schon in dem Hineinstellen desSokrates in das griechische Geistesleben, wie der Intellektualismus, das Verstandesmäßige, ein altes Geistiges vertrieb.
[ 15 ] Wohl nur wenige Menschen haben mit einer solchen elementaren Größe den Gegensatz empfunden zwischen dem Griechischen, wie es dem Menschen in Äschylos, in Sophokles, der älteren griechischen bildenden Kunst und den grandiosen Philosophien des Heraklit, Anaxagoras und so weiter entgegentreten kann, zwischen diesem griechischen Seelenleben, das noch voll von geistigen Impulsen ist, und jenem anderen, das sich allmählich ertötend über das eigentlich Geistige legt. Das hat für Nietzsche mit Sokrates seinen Anfang genommen, mit jenem Sokrates, der gegenüber allen Fragen der Welt die Fragen des Verstandes gestellt hat, der allem gegenüber seine Kunst des Definierens aufgestellt hat, von der Nietzsche zweifellos gefühlt hat: wo sie beginnt, setzt sich der Mensch gegenüber dem unmittelbar lebendigen Geiste eine Brille auf. — Es ist damit, wenn man die Begriffe nicht preßt und so selber wieder in das Intellektualistische hineinkommt, etwas sehr Bedeutendes von Nietzsche empfunden worden.
[ 16 ] Sehen Sie, das wirkliche Erleben des Geistigen wird überall, wo man dieses Geistige trifft, Individualismus. Das Definieren wird überall Allgemeines. Wenn man durchs Leben geht, einzelnen Menschen gegenübertritt, muß man ein offenes Herz, einen offenen Sinn haben für diese einzelnen Menschen. Man muß sozusagen jedem einzelnen individuellen Menschen gegenüber in der Lage sein, ein ganz neues Menschengefühl zu entwickeln. Man wird nur dadurch dem Menschen gerecht, daß man in jedem einzelnen einen neuen Menschen sieht. Aus dem Grunde hat jeder Mensch uns gegenüber das Recht, daß wir ihm gegenüber ein neues Menschengefühl entwickeln. Denn wenn wir mit einem allgemeinen Begriffe kommen und sagen, so sollte der Mensch sein in dieser oder jener Hinsicht, dann tun wir ihm unrecht. Mit jeder Definition des Menschen setzen wir uns eigentlich eine Brille auf, um den individuellen Menschen nicht sehen zu können.
[ 17 ] Das empfindet Nietzsche gegenüber dem Geistesleben überhaupt, und darin besteht seine Gegnerschaft gegenüber dem Sokratismus. Und so legte sich für die sechziger, ja auch noch für die ersteHälfte der siebziger Jahre des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts die Anschauung auf seine Seele: das wirklich wahre, das lebendige Griechentum habe eigentlich in der Grundlage seiner Weltempfindung eine Art Pessimismus. Die Griechen wären im Grunde überzeugt gewesen, das unmittelbare Leben, wie es sich der Menschheit elementar darbietet, könne dem Menschen keine Befriedigung, kein Totalgefühl seiner Menschenwürde geben. Darum nahmen sie ihre Zuflucht zu dem, was ihnen Kunst gewesen ist, und den Griechen war die Kunst, die sie in der besten Zeit ihrer Entwickelung gepflegt haben, die große Trösterin, die über die Mangelhaftigkeit des rein materialistischen Daseins hinweghilft. So war für Nietzsche die griechische Kunst nur aus der tragischen Lebensstimmung der Griechen heraus zu begreifen. Und diese Mission der Kunst, glaubte Nietzsche zunächst, würde sich wieder aufrichten lassen durch die Wagnerische Kunst und durch alles das, was sich künstlerisch aus der Wagnerischen Kunst ergeben kann.
[ 18 ] Dann kamen die siebziger Jahre, und Nietzsche fühlte, daß das nicht so sein könne, weil er in seiner Zeit den Impuls vermißte, der das wirklich finden konnte, was die Griechen als die große ’Trösterin hingesetzt hatten über das unmittelbar materielle Leben. Für Nietzsche kam die Zeit, in der er sich die Frage stellte: Was war es eigentlich, was ich in der Wagnerischen Kunst wie einer Wiedererneuerung der griechischen Kunst gesucht habe? Das waren ja Ideale! - Und nun wurde er gewahr, wie diese Ideale, so wie er sie auf seine Seele wirken ließ, eine Ähnlichkeit hatten mit den Idealen seines Zeitalters.
[ 19 ] Und da kam einmal in der Mitte der siebziger Jahre des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts ein furchtbar tragischer Augenblick in seinem Leben: jener Augenblick, in dem er seine Ideale ähnlich fühlte denen der eigenen Zeit, der Augenblick, wo er sich sagen mußte: Damit bin ich ähnlich dem, was unser Zeitalter Ideale nennt; ich schöpfe schließlich aus derselben Kraft, aus der mein Zeitalter seine Ideale holt.- Das war für Nietzsche ein ganz besonders schmerzlicher Augenblick, denn er hatte gerade diese idealistischen Zeiterscheinungen um sich herum erlebt. Er hatte zum Beispiel einen David Friedrich Strauß erlebt, den das ganze Zeitalter als großen Mann verehrte, und den er entlarvt hat als — Philister. Jetzt sah er, wie stark seine eigenen Ideale, die er nur durch sein Hineingeraten in den Wagnerianismus und in die griechische Kunst aufgepeitscht hatte, seiner Zeit ähnlich waren. Kraftlos jedoch gegenüber dem Erfassen des wirklichen Geistigen kamen ihm die Ideale des Zeitalters vor. Und so sagte er sich: Bin ich wahr, so darf ich eigentlich mit meinem Zeitalter keine Ideale haben. - Wenn er es auch nicht in diesen Worten aussprach, so war dies doch für ihn eine tragische Entdeckung. Wer sich recht vertieft in dasjenige, was Nietzsche in den Jahren, von denen ich jetzt spreche, durchgemacht hat, der weiß, daß für Nietzsche einmal der Augenblick der großen Tragik kam, wo er sich auf seine Weise sagte: Wenn der gegenwärtige Mensch von Idealen redet, und das noch irgendwie zusammenstimmt mit demjenigen, was die anderen Ideale nennen, dann bewegt er sich auf dem Gebiete der Phrase, jener Phrase, die nicht mehr der lebendige Körper, sondern der tote Leichnam des Geistes ist.
[ 20 ] Aus einer solchen Stimmungheraus hat Nietzsche dieWorte geprägt: Also muß ich mit energischer Kraft die Ideale, die ich mir bisher gebildet habe, aufs Eis legen. — Und dieses Aufs-Eis-Legen aller Ideale in dem Sinne, wie ich es jetzt charakterisiert habe, beginnt für ihn in der Mitte der siebziger Jahre. Es entstehen seine Schriften «Menschliches, Allzumenschliches», «Morgenröte» und «Fröhliche Wissenschaft», in denen er in einer gewissen Weise Voltaire huldigt, die aber auch verbunden sind mit einer gewissen Anschauung von der menschlichen Sitte.
[ 21 ] Ein äußerlicher Anlaß für Nietzsche, von seinem früheren Idealismus loszukommen, hinzusteuern in dasjenige, was dann seine Lebensanschauung in der zweiten Periode seines Lebens war, bot sich ihm dadurch, daß er in jener Zeit Paul Ree kennenlernte, den ich den rein naturwissenschaftlichen Behandler der menschlichen Sitte, des menschlichen Sittenwesens nennen möchte. Paul R&e behandelte ganz im Sinne der damaligen Naturwissenschaft die Entwickelung des menschlichen Sittenlebens. Er hat das außerordentlich interessante Büchelchen geschrieben «Der Ursprung der moralischen Empfindungen», ferner ein Buch «Die Entstehung des Gewissens». Das Büchelchen über die moralischen Empfindungen, das eigentlich jeder nachlesen sollte, der wissen will, wie es mit dem Denken des letzten Drittels des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts beschaffen ist, hat auf Nietzsche einen tiefgehenden Einfluß gehabt.
[ 22 ] Welcher Geist herrscht nun in diesem Büchelchen? Wiederum schildere ich nicht deshalb, weil ich meine, daß von der Philosophie ein direkter Einfluß auf das Leben ausgeht, sondern weil ich auf ein Kulturthermometer weisen will, an dem man ablesen kann, wie der Stand der sittlichen Impulse und Anschauungen und der Gedanken über die sittlichen Impulse damals war. Nach Paul Re&es Ansicht hat der Mensch ursprünglich überhaupt nichts anderes gehabt als das, was nach seiner Ansicht das Kind hat: ein Triebleben, Impulse der unbewußsten instinktiven Betätigung. Der einzelne Mensch stößt gewissermaßen, indem er sich regt, nach allen Seiten mit anderen Menschen zusammen. Von einzelnen solchen Regungen, die der Mensch nach außen entwickelt, stellt sich heraus, daß sie den anderen Menschen zupaß kommen, daß sie ihnen nützlich sind. Von anderen stellt sich heraus, daß sie ihnen schädlich sind. Daraus bilden sich die Urteile: Was vom Menschen aus seinen instinktiven Regungen als Nützliches ausströmt, nennt man allmählich «gut»; was sich als schädlich erweist für die anderen, dem klebt man die Marke «bös» auf.- Natürlich wird das Leben immer komplizierter. Die Menschen vergessen, wie sie den Dingen diese Marken aufgeklebt haben. Aber sie reden dann von «gut» und «böse» und haben vergessen, daß man anfangs nur das als «gut» bezeichnet hat, was einem wohltat, und als «böse», was man als schädlich empfand. So hat sich schließlich das, was so entstanden ist, zum Instinkte umgebildet. Nehmen wir an, jemand stößt blind mit dem Arm: streichelt er einen dabei, so nennt man es gut, gibt er einem eine Ohrfeige, so nennt man es böse. Daraus summieren sich die Urteile. Es wird das, was sich aus solchen Urteilen zusammengepreßt hat, selber Instinkt. Ebensowenig, wie die Menschen wissen, warum sie die Hand so heben, ebensowenig wissen sie, woher es kommt, daß eine Stimme aus ihrer Seele hervortritt und über dies oder jenes moralische Urteile abgibt, was sie dann die Stimme des Gewissens nennen. Diese «Stimme des Gewissens» ist nichts anderes, als was sich aus solchen instinktiven Urteilen über Nützliches und Schädliches abgesetzt hat und an sich wieder Instinkt geworden ist und, weil man dessen Ursprung vergessen hat, wie aus dem Inneren heraus als Gewissensstimme erklingt.
[ 23 ] Nietzsche war durchaus imstande, aus der Regsamkeit seines Geisteslebens heraus zu begreifen, daß gewiß nicht alle das gleiche wie Paul R£&e sagten. Aber er war sich auch klar darüber, daß, wenn man über Naturwissenschaftliches nur so denkt, wie in seinem Zeitalter gedacht wurde, man über Ethisches nicht anders denken könne als Paul Ree. Nietzsche war eben ehrlich; er zog die letzten Konsequenzen, wie sie Paul R&e auch gezogen hat. Und Nietzsche empfand nicht etwa einen Groll, weil da ein Philosoph aufgetreten ist, der so etwas geschrieben hat. Dieses unmittelbare Faktum hatte für Nietzsche nicht viel mehr Bedeutung, als sich erschöpfen ließe innerhalb der Ereignisse der Stube, in welcher Paul Ree geschrieben hat, so wie einem das Thermometer auch nichts weiter angibt als die Temperaturverhältnisse der nächsten Umgebung. Aber es zeigt einem etwas, was allgemein ist, und das empfand Nietzsche. Er empfand den ethischen Bodensatz seiner Zeit in diesem Buche, und insofern bejahte er es. Für ihn gab es nichts Wichtigeres, als die alte Phrase aufs Eis zu setzen und zu sagen: Wenn die Menschen von nebelhaften Idealen reden, so ist das eben nur Benebelung. In Wahrheit ist alles Instinkt. — Nietzsche hat oft genug Momente gehabt, in denen er sagte: Wenn einer auftritt und sich für dieses oder jenes Ideal begeistert und andere auch dafür begeistern will, so ist das letzten Endes, weil dieser Mensch so veranlagt ist, daß er beim Denken über diese Ideale just am besten seinen Magensaft verarbeiten kann, weil dann die Speisen für ihn in die beste Verdauungsströmung hineinkommen. — Ich drücke das etwas radikal aus, aber durchaus in dem Sinne, wie Nietzsche in den siebziger, achtziger Jahren empfunden hat. Nietzsche sagte sich: Da reden die Menschen von allerlei Geistigem und nennen es Ideale. In Wahrheit ist das alles zu nichts anderem da, als daß der oder jener, je nach seiner Konstitution, die beste Art der Verdauung und der anderen Körperfunktionen hat, indem er gerade so für das sogenannte Ideale empfindet. Dasjenige, was man «menschlich» nennt, muß man der Phrase entkleiden, denn es ist wahrhaft ein Allzumenschliches.
[ 24 ] Es war schon, ich möchte sagen, eine grandiose Hingabe an die Ehrlichkeit, mit der Nietzsche dazumal allem Idealismus den Krieg erklärte. Ich weiß, daß man nicht immer diese Seite bei Nietzsche betont hat. Allein vieles, was über Nietzsche gesprochen worden ist, war Snobismus, war nicht irgend etwas Ernsthaftes. So fand sich Nietzsche am Ende seiner ersten geistigen Periode dem Nichts gegenüber und er fand sich in seiner zweiten Periode, die anfängt mit «Menschliches, Allzumenschliches» und abschließt mit «Fröhliche Wissenschaft» in einem gewissen Sinne in bezug auf allen Geist bewußt dem Nichts gegenüber. Schließlich konnte er eigentlich nur noch eine Stimmung entwickeln; denn man kann im Grunde zu keinem geistigen Inhalt kommen, wenn man in dieser Weise alle Ideale auf menschliche physische Funktionen zurückführt. Man braucht sich nur an einem Beispiel zu veranschaulichen, wie Nietzsches Anschauung allmählich geworden ist. Er sagte sich etwa: Da gibt es Leute, die nach der Askese hinarbeiten, das heißt nach der Enthaltung von physischen Genüssen. Warum tun die das? Sie tun es, weil sie eine außerordentlich schlechte Verdauung haben und weil sie sich am besten befinden, wenn sie sich physischer Genüsse enthalten; daher sehen sie Askese als das Erstrebenswerteste an. Im Unterbewußtsein wollen sie aber das, bei dem sie sich am besten befinden. Sie wollen den höchsten Genuß in der Genußlosigkeit empfinden. Da sieht man, wie sie geartet sind, daß ihnen die Genußlosigkeit der allerhöchste Genuß ist.
[ 25 ] Bei Nietzsche, der durchaus ehrlich war, hat sich diese Stimmung verdichtet zu Momenten, in denen er Worte ausgesprochen hat wie diese:
Ich wohne in meinem eignen Haus,
Hab’ niemandem nie nichts nachgemacht,
Und - lachte noch jeden Meister aus,
Der nicht sich selber ausgelacht.
[ 26 ] Darin war in grandioser Weise, ich möchte sagen poetisch vorausnehmend, jene Stimmung bezeichnet, die eigentlich um die Wende des neunzehnten, zwanzigsten Jahrhundertskulminierte, damals aber schon so da war, daß sie von einem tieferen Seelenleben durchaus erlebt werden mußte. Nietzsche hat sich dann aus diesem dem-Nichts-Gegenübergestelltsein der zweiten Periode dadurch herausgefunden, daß er den Stimmungsgehalt von zwei Ideen geschaffen hat, die er dichterisch zum Ausdruck brachte: die Idee des Übermenschen, weil er schließlich nicht mehr anders konnte, als an etwas appellieren, was aus dem Menschen herausgeboren werden mußte, aber noch nicht da war, und nachdem er in einer so grandiosen Weise das «Gegenüber-dem-Nichts» erlebt hatte — die Idee der ewigen Wiederkunft des Gleichen, die ihm aus der Entwickelungsidee heraus gekommen ist. Er hat sich gerade in seinem naturwissenschaftlichen Zeitalter in die Entwickelungsidee hineingelebt. Er fand, indem er sich in dasjenige vertiefte, was ihm die Entwickelungsgedanken gaben, nichts, was diese Entwickelung vorwärtsbringen würde. Sie ergaben ihm nur die Idee einer fortwährenden Wiederkunft des Gleichen. Das war dann seine letzte Periode, die wir jetzt nicht weiter zu charakterisieren brauchen. Psychologisch charakterisiert, ergäbe sich außerordentlich vieles.
[ 27 ] Aber ich will nicht eine Charakteristik Nietzsches geben, sondern nur hinweisen darauf, wie Nietzsche, der durch seine Krankheit gezwungen war, Ende der achtziger Jahre die Feder niederzulegen, vorempfunden hat, was für jede tiefere Seele die Stimmung werden mußte um die Wende des neunzehnten zum zwanzigsten Jahrhundert. Nietzsche hat eben im letzten Drittel des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts versucht, einer Stimmung in Worten Ausdruck zu geben, die er hergenommen hat aus seinen Ideenschätzen, aus der griechischen Philosophie und Kunst, aus dem Künstlerischen bei Wagner, aus dem Philosophischen bei Schopenhauer und so weiter. Nietzsche hat immer wieder selbst dasjenige verlassen, was er so als Charakteristik gegeben hat.
[ 28 ] Eine letzte Schrift von ihm ist diese: «Götzendämmerung, oder wie man mit dem Hammer philosophiert.» Er fühlte sich als ein Zertrümmerer der alten Ideen. Es war das schon etwas sehr Merkwürdiges, denn diese alten Ideen vom Geiste der Kulturentwickelung waren ja schon zertrümmert. In Nietzsches Jugend waren die Ideenschätze schon zertrümmert. Seit dem vierzehnten, fünfzehnten Jahrhundert haben sich die Ideen traditionell fortgesetzt. Diese Traditionen haben aber im letzten Drittel des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts aufgehört. Das Zertrümmern des alten Geistes war geschehen; nur in der Phrase lebten die Ideenschätze noch weiter.
[ 29 ] Derjenige, der geistgemäß gedacht hätte in der Zeit, in der Nietzsche lebte, würde nicht das Empfinden gehabt haben, als ob er die Ideale mit dem Hammer zerschlagen müßte, sondern er würde empfunden haben, daß diese zerschlagen worden sind einfach durch die notwendige und richtige Entwickelung des Menschengeschlechtes. DieMenschheit wäre nicht zur Freiheit gekommen, wenn das nicht geschehen wäre. Aber Nietzsche, der überall noch in der Phrase die Ideale aufblühen fand, hatte den Wahn, daß er selber tat, was längst getan war. Jedenfalls war das fort, was für das ältere Zeitalter der innere Brennstoff des geistigen Lebens war, wodurch der Geist im Menschen angezündet werden konnte, so daß mit diesem angezündeten Geist der Mensch dann sowohl die Natur, wie das eigene Menschenleben durchleuchten konnte. Auf dem besonderen Gebiete des Sittlichen drückt sich das so aus, daß man sagt: Es kann keine moralischen Intuitionen mehr geben.
[ 30 ] Schon gestern mußte ich Ihnen sagen: Theoretische Widerlegungen des Materialismus als Weltanschauung sind für unser Zeitalter eigentlich Unsinn, denn der Materialismus hat für unser Zeitalter recht. Die Gedanken, die unser Zeitalter als die richtigen ansehen muß, sind Gehirnprodukte. Daher ist eine Widerlegung des Materialismus in unserem Zeitalter an sich eine Phrase und wer ehrlich ist, kann eigentlich nicht viel Wertvolles sehen in einer Widerlegung des Materialismus, denn auf die theoretische Widerlegung kommt es dabei gar nicht an. Die Menschheit ist eben an demjenigen Punkte der Entwickelung angelangt, wo sie keinen innerlichen, lebendigen Geist mehr hat, sondern nur jenen Geistesreflex, der restlos vom physischen Gehirn abhängig ist. Für diesen Reflexgeist ist der Materialismus als theoretische Weltanschauung voll berechtigt. Es handelt sich nicht darum, ob man eine falsche Weltanschauung hat, oder sie widerlegt, sondern darum, daß man allmählich zu einer geistlosen inneren Lebens- und Seelenhaltung gekommen ist. Das ist es, was wie ein Schrei, in tragischer Weise vorempfunden, durch Nietzsches Philosophie geht.
[ 31 ] In dieser Situation hat die natürlich empfindende Jugendseele im zwanzigsten Jahrhundert die geistige Lage der Welt angetroffen. Sie werden nicht zu einer Klarheit, zu einer faßbaren Empfindung dessen kommen, was in unbestimmter Weise, unterbewußt in Ihren Seelen rumort und was Sie das heutige Jugenderlebnis nennen, wenn Sie nicht also hineinschauen in diesen Umschwung, der sich mit dem ganzen Geistesleben notwendigerweise in der heutigen Periode der Menschheitsentwickelung ergeben hat.
[ 32 ] Wollen Sie von anderen Untergründen aus das, was Sie in unbestimmter Weise empfinden, charakterisieren,so werden Sie immer nach einiger Zeit empfinden: Sie können nur immer wieder Abschied nehmen von einer solchen Charakterisierung. Sie kommen nicht auf eine Wahrheit, sondern doch immer nur auf Phrasen. Denn solange der Mensch heute sich nicht ehrlich gesteht: Ich muß zum lebendigen, zum regsamen Geiste, zu demjenigen Geist, der im Intellektualismus nicht mehr seine Wirklichkeit, sondern nur seinen Leichnam hat, solange ist keine Rettung aus der Wirrnis des Zeitalters möglich. Solange einer noch glaubt, daß er im Intellektualismus Geist finden kann, wo der Intellektualismus gerade nur noch so die Form des Geistes ist, wie der menschliche Leichnam die Form des Menschen, solange ist kein Sichfinden des Menschen möglich.
[ 33 ] Ein Sichfinden des Menschen kann erst dadurch eintreten, daß man sich ehrlich gesteht: So wie sich der menschliche Leichnam zum Menschen verhält, der gestorben ist, so verhält sich der Intellektualismus zum Wesen des Geistes. Er trägt noch die Form, aber das Leben des Geistes ist aus dem Intellektualismus gewichen. Und so wie der menschliche Leichnam durchdrungen werden kann von Ingredienzien, die seine Form konservieren, was die ägyptischen Mumien zeigen, so kann man,indem man den Leichnam des Geistes mit Beobachtungsresultaten, mit Experimentierresultaten ausstaffiert, auch ihn konservieren. Man bekommt aber dadurch kein lebendiges Geistiges, nichts, was man mit den lebendigen Impulsen der menschlichen Seele in naturgemäßer Weise verbinden kann; man bekommt nichts anderes als ein Totes. Dieses Tote kann in wunderbarer Weise das Tote in der Welt wiedergeben, so wie man in der Mumie noch die menschliche Gestalt bewundern kann. Aber man bekommt im Intellektualismus kein wirklich Geistiges, ebensowenig wie aus der Mumie ein wirklicher Mensch gemacht werden kann.
[ 34 ] Solange es sich darum handelt, gerade dasjenige zu konservieren, was durch die Ehe zwischen Beobachtung und Intellekt konserviert werden soll, solange kann man nur sagen: Die Leistungen der neueren Zeit sind großartig. In dem Augenblick, wo der Mensch sich selber die Aufgabe setzen muß, sich im Tiefsten seiner Seele nur mit dem, was sein Geist sich innerlich selber vorhält, zu verbinden, in dem Augenblicke gibt es keine Verbindung zwischen dem Intellektualismus und der Menschenseele. Dann gibt es nur das eine, daß der Mensch sich sagt: Ich dürste nach etwas, und alles, was mir aus intellektualistischen Untergründen aus der Welt entgegentritt, gibt mir nicht Wasser für diesen Durst.
[ 35 ] Das ist es, was natürlich in Worte gefaßt nicht so gut herauskommt, was aber in den Empfindungen der heutigen Jugend lebt. Die heutige Jugend sagt das oder jenes meistens so, daß, wenn man auf die Untergründe der Dinge geht, man eigentlich recht ärgerlich wird über das, was gesagt wird. Aber man tröstet sich gleich über den Ärger. Der Ärger kommt nur daher, daß scheußlich bombastische Worte gebraucht werden, die auf alles eher passen als auf das, was der Betreffende empfindet. Die Phrase überschlägt sich und das, was als Charakter in der Jugendbewegung auftritt, ist für den, der im Geiste zu leben versteht, von solcher Art, daß es ihm vorkommt, als wenn es Blasen wären, die fortwährend zerplatzen; es ist eigentlich der sich überschlagende Intellektualismus. Ich will Ihnen mit diesen Dingen nicht etwa selber wehe tun, und wenn ich dem einen oder anderen doch wehe tat, so konnte ich nichts dafür. Dann würde es mir zwar leid tun, aber ich würde es doch außerordentlich gerecht finden. Ich kann nicht nur sagen, was gefällt, ich muß schon einmal auch dasjenige sagen, was dem einen oder anderen nicht gefällt. Ich muß ja dasjenige sagen, was ich als wahr erkenne. Deshalb muß ich Ihnen sagen: Um dasjenige zu charakterisieren, was berechtigterweise in den Seelen der jungen Menschen liegt, ist noch etwas ganz anderes nötig als ein Aufpressen der alten Begriffe, die sich als Phrasen überschlagen. Das, was dazu nötig ist, ist ein intensiv entwickeltes Wahrheitsgefühl.
[ 36 ] Wahrheit brauchen wir auf dem Grunde der Seele, meine lieben Freunde. Wahrheit ist das erste und letzte, was wir heute brauchen, und wenn gestern Ihr Vorsitzender hier gesagt hat, wir seien soweit gekommen, daß wir eigentlich das Wort «Geist» nicht mehr aussprechen wollen, so ist das schon wie ein Geständnis von der Wahrheit. Es wäre eigentlich viel gescheiter, wenn unser Zeitalter, das den Geist verloren hat, das durchführen würde, nicht mehr vom Geist zu reden; denn dann würden die Menschen in ehrlicher Weise wieder den Durst nach dem wirklichen Geiste bekommen. Statt dessen nennt man heute alles mögliche «Geist» und «geistig». Was wir brauchen, ist Wahrheit, und wenn der heutige junge Mensch über seinen eigenen Seelenzustand sich die Wahrheit gestehen will, dann darf er nichts anderes sagen als: Das Zeitalter hat mir allen Geist aus der Seele genommen. Meine Seele dürstet aber nach Geist, sie dürstet nach etwas Neuem, nach einer neuen Eroberung des Geistes.
[ 37 ] Solange dieses nicht in aller Ehrlichkeit und Wahrheit empfunden wird, solange kommt die Jugendbewegung nicht zu sich selbst. Zu alledem, was ich als Charakteristikum gegeben habe für das, was wir noch suchen müssen, füge ich heute das hinzu: Wir müssen im Tiefsten, im Innersten der Seele suchen nach Licht, vor allen Dingen müssen wir zu dem tiefinnersten Ehrlichkeits- und tiefinnerlichsten Wahrheitsgefühl zu kommen suchen. Wenn wir auf Ehrlichkeit und Wahrhaftigkeit bauen, dann werden wir weiterkommen, und weiterkommen muß die Menschheit. Dann werden wir dahin kommen, daß man wieder von Geist reden darf, der der menschlichen Natur doch am ähnlichsten ist. Die Seele ist am ähnlichsten dem Geiste, daher kann sie ihn finden, wenn sie will. In unserer Zeit aber muß sie hinausstreben über Phrase, Konvention und Routine; hinaus über die Phrase — zu der Erfassung der Wahrheit, hinaus über die Konvention — zu dem unmittelbaren, elementaren herzlichen Verhältnis von Mensch zu Mensch, und hinaus über die Routine — zu dem, wodurch in jeder einzelnen Handlung des Lebens wieder Geist liegt, so daß wir nicht aus einem Automatischen heraus handeln, wie das heute so vielfach geschieht, sondern daß in der alltäglichsten Handlung wieder Geist lebt. Wir müssen zu der Geistigkeit des Handelns, wir müssen zu dem unmittelbaren Erlebnis der Menschen untereinander und zum ehrlichen Erlebnis derWahrheit kommen.
Fourth lecture
[ 1 ] I would like to begin today with an assessment of ethics as it developed until the end of the nineteenth century. Not in order to prove that philosophical representations of ethics could somehow have an impulsive effect on human morality, but rather to illustrate how that which, arising from entirely different sources, has a moral influence on human beings is symptomatically expressed in philosophical representations of morality.
[ 2 ] We must abandon the view that philosophies, when they proceed from the intellect, can somehow directly determine the direction of human life. But what philosophers say expresses the whole impulse of time. No one would claim, for example, that our feeling of warmth in a room is influenced by the position of the thermometer, but everyone knows that the position of the thermometer itself depends on what we call the thermal conditions of a room. Similarly, I would say, one can see from philosophers who speak of morality what the general moral state is.
[ 3 ] You see that I treat philosophical representations of ethics somewhat differently than is usually done. I treat them only as a kind of thermometer reading in relation to the temperature conditions. But just as one knows about the temperature conditions in a room when one briefly indicates the thermometer reading, so one learns an immeasurable amount about what lies in the foundations of the general human life of a region or an age when one knows what the philosophers of that age express in their descriptions.
[ 4 ] Consider it only from this point of view when I read you a short passage that appeared in the Deutsche Literaturzeitung in 1893 and deals with Spencer's Principles of Ethics. There we read: “It contains, I believe, the most complete” — so says the reviewer — "and overwhelmingly documented proof that there is absolutely no universal human content to morality, or immutable moral precepts; that there is only one norm underlying all estimation of human qualities and actions: the practical appropriateness or inappropriateness of a character or an act to the given state of society in which the judgment takes place; and that for this very reason the same things have been evaluated very differently in different cultural contexts. The speaker is of the opinion that this “masterpiece” — that is, Spencer's principles of ethics — “... are the last attempts to base ethical distinctions on intuitions, innate feelings, self-evident axioms, etc., which, at least in science, must be silenced.”
[ 5 ] axioms, etc., must at least be silenced in science." I am reading these words to you because they characterize the ethical mood of almost the entire civilized world at the end of the nineteenth century, that ethical mood which had developed to such an extent that it could be expressed in philosophical terms.
[ 6 ] Let us be clear about what is actually being said here. In Spencer's truly extraordinary work, Principles of Ethics, an attempt is made, with overwhelming material—as the reviewer says—to prove that so-called moral intuitions, moral axioms, or the like cannot be derived from human mental life, that we must finally stop talking about such moral intuitions. For the only thing that can be said is that people act out of natural disposition. This action is judged by the social environment. Man is compelled to adapt his actions to the judgment of the social environment. This gives rise to conventional moral judgments, which change as human society changes from age to age. And a reviewer in the early 1990s said that it was now finally possible to silence all attempts to talk about ethics and moral views as if they were moral intuitions drawn directly from the soul, at least as far as science is concerned.
[ 7 ] I have singled out this particular phenomenon because it truly characterizes what one was confronted with at that time when reflecting on ethics and moral impulses.
[ 8 ] It was into this mood that I attempted to send my “Philosophy of Freedom,” which culminates in the view that now, at the end of the nineteenth century, the time has come when it is necessary in the most eminent sense for people to reflect on how they can find moral impulses more and more by returning to the essence of the human soul itself. Even for the moral impulses of everyday life, they must increasingly resort to moral impulses, because impulses other than the moral intuitions that can be revealed directly in the human soul can be less and less decisive. This was the situation for me at that time. I felt compelled to say: The entire future of human ethics depends on the power of moral intuition growing stronger with each passing day. This also meant that we can only make progress in moral education if we strengthen the power of moral intuition in the human soul more and more, if we lead the individual human being more and more to become aware of what moral intuitions can spring forth in his soul.
[ 9 ] This was contrasted with the opinion—which was almost universal, for it expresses only something very general—that the time had now come when it had been proven with overwhelming evidence that all moral intuitions must be silenced by science. It was therefore necessary for me to attempt write a book that energetically defends the very position that was just as energetically denounced by science at the time as one that had to be silenced.
[ 10 ] I characterize this for you because it illustrates in a single case what I spoke of yesterday and the day before yesterday, namely, the enormously significant turning point in the entire intellectual development of the West at the end of the nineteenth century. All my remarks so far have pointed to the fact that humanity, which has been growing since the end of the nineteenth century, is facing a completely new spiritual situation compared to that of previous centuries. I have already used the expression that at the end of the nineteenth century, the human soul stands in relation to the spiritual as nothingness. It was necessary to sharply contrast what must be regarded as the most essential for the future, namely moral intuition, with what has emerged from the past — nothingness, which has completed its development. This turning point came about in a truly tragic way at the end of the nineteenth century, particularly within German culture, and one need only mention the name Nietzsche to hint at this tragedy.
[ 11 ] For people who consciously and alertly experienced the transition from the nineteenth to the twentieth century, Nietzsche was truly the experience of a tragedy. One could say that Nietzsche himself was a personality who, in successive stages of his life, experienced in a sharp way with his own soul the confrontation with nothingness, that nothingness which he initially took to be something.
[ 12 ] It may not be entirely superfluous for what your souls should take in these days to touch on Friedrich Nietzsche with a few words at this very moment. In a certain sense, Nietzsche was already the person who, through his tragic fate, pointed sharply to that which, in the spiritual development of humanity in the nineteenth century, was drawing to a close and necessitated a new dawn with the beginning of the new century.
[ 13 ] Nietzsche emerged from a mature scientific standpoint. He first became acquainted with this scientific standpoint in the mid-nineteenth century in philology. Nietzsche truly took up the philological standpoint of the mid-nineteenth century with an extraordinarily agile mind, and in fact took up the whole spirit of Greek culture with philology. Yet Nietzsche was not a personality who closed himself off from general culture. He was the opposite of a bookworm. Nietzsche therefore also took up what must have been close to him as a philosophical standpoint in the mid-nineteenth century: Schopenhauer's philosophy, Schopenhauer's philosophical pessimism. This Schopenhauerian philosophical pessimism made a deep impression on him, an impression that could only come about because Nietzsche felt more than Schopenhauer himself the decline of the intellectual life in which he lived. For Nietzsche, the only light pointing toward the future was in the form of Richard Wagner's music. In terms of his worldview, Wagner was a Schopenhauerian at the time he met Nietzsche.
[ 14 ] And so, towards the beginning of the last third of the nineteenth century, Nietzsche developed a view that was for him not really a theory but the content of his life: that already within Greek civilization, an age had dawned in which intellectualism was suppressing the full content of human existence. Nietzsche was certainly mistaken about the development and complete formation of intellectualism. For in the form in which Nietzsche experienced intellectualism as a spirit that kills everything, it has actually only emerged since the fifteenth century, as I showed yesterday and the day before yesterday. But ultimately, Nietzsche experienced the intellectualism of the immediate present, and he dated it back to late Greek times. He formed the view that what had such a destructive effect on the living spirit had actually begun with Socrates. Thus Nietzsche became an anti-Socratician. He saw in Socrates' introduction into Greek intellectual life how intellectualism, rationality, drove out an ancient spirituality.
[ 15 ] Few people have felt with such fundamental clarity the contrast between the Greek way of life as reflected in Aeschylus, Sophocles, the older Greek visual arts, and the grandiose philosophies of Heraclitus, Anaxagoras, and so on, between this Greek soul life, which is still full of spiritual impulses, and that other one, which gradually kills itself and covers over what is actually spiritual. For Nietzsche, this began with Socrates, who posed questions of reason to all questions of the world, who applied his art of definition to everything, and of whom Nietzsche undoubtedly felt that where it begins, man puts on glasses to view the immediately living spirit. — If one does not press the concepts and thus fall back into intellectualism, something very significant has been felt by Nietzsche.
[ 16 ] You see, the real experience of the spiritual becomes individualism wherever one encounters the spiritual. Defining becomes general everywhere. When you go through life, encountering individual people, you must have an open heart, an open mind for these individual people. You must, so to speak, be able to develop a completely new feeling for each individual person. Only by seeing a new person in each individual can you do justice to humanity. For this reason, every human being has the right to expect us to develop a new feeling for them. For if we come with a general concept and say that human beings should be this way or that way, then we are doing them an injustice. With every definition of human beings, we are actually putting on glasses that prevent us from seeing the individual human being.
[ 17 ] This is how Nietzsche feels about intellectual life in general, and this is where his opposition to Socratism lies. And so, in the 1860s and even in the first half of the 1870s, the view took hold in his mind that true, living Greek culture was fundamentally pessimistic in its worldview. The Greeks were basically convinced that immediate life, as it presents itself to humanity in its elementary form, could not give man satisfaction or a complete sense of his human dignity. That is why they took refuge in what art had been for them, and for the Greeks, the art they cultivated in the best period of their development was the great comforter that helped them overcome the inadequacy of a purely materialistic existence. Thus, for Nietzsche, Greek art could only be understood from the tragic mood of Greek life. And Nietzsche initially believed that this mission of art could be restored through Wagnerian art and through everything that could artistically result from Wagnerian art.
[ 18 ] Then came the 1870s, and Nietzsche felt that this could not be the case, because he missed the impulse in his time that could truly find what the Greeks had set up as the great “consolation” for immediate material life. For Nietzsche, the time came when he asked himself the question: What was it I was looking for in Wagnerian art as a kind of renewal of Greek art? Those were ideals! - And now he became aware of how these ideals, as they affected his soul, bore a resemblance to the ideals of his own age.
[ 19 ] And then, in the mid-1870s, a terribly tragic moment came in his life: the moment when he felt that his ideals were similar to those of his own time, the moment when he had to say to himself: I am similar to what our age calls ideals; I ultimately draw from the same source of strength from which my age draws its ideals.This was a particularly painful moment for Nietzsche, because he had just experienced these idealistic phenomena around him. For example, he had experienced David Friedrich Strauss, whom the whole age revered as a great man, and whom he exposed as a philistine. Now he saw how similar his own ideals, which he had whipped up only by falling into Wagnerianism and Greek art, were to his time. However, the ideals of the age seemed powerless to him in grasping the real spiritual. And so he said to himself: If I am true, then I cannot really have any ideals with my age. Even if he did not express it in these words, it was nevertheless a tragic discovery for him. Anyone who has really immersed themselves in what Nietzsche went through in the years I am now talking about knows that there came a moment of great tragedy for Nietzsche when he said to himself in his own way: When contemporary man speaks of ideals, and this somehow corresponds to what others call ideals, he is moving in the realm of phrases, those phrases that are no longer the living body but the dead corpse of the spirit.
[ 20 ] It was out of this mood that Nietzsche coined the words: “So I must put the ideals I have formed so far on ice with energetic force.” And this putting of all ideals on ice, in the sense I have now characterized, began for him in the mid-1870s. He wrote “Human, All Too Human,” “Dawn,” and “The Gay Science,” in which he pays homage to Voltaire in a certain way, but which are also connected with a certain view of human customs.
[ 21 ] An external reason for Nietzsche to abandon his earlier idealism and move toward what became his outlook on life in the second period of his life was his acquaintance at that time with Paul Rée, whom I would call a purely scientific investigator of human customs and morals. Paul R&e treated the development of human moral life entirely in accordance with the natural science of his time. He wrote the extremely interesting little book “The Origin of Moral Feelings,” as well as a book entitled “The Origin of Conscience.”. The little book on moral feelings, which everyone who wants to know what the thinking of the last third of the nineteenth century was like should read, had a profound influence on Nietzsche.
[ 22 ] What spirit prevails in this little book? Again, I am not describing this because I believe that philosophy has a direct influence on life, but because I want to point to a cultural thermometer that can be used to gauge the state of moral impulses and views and thoughts about moral impulses at that time. According to Paul Re&e, humans originally had nothing else but what he believed children have: a life of instincts, impulses of unconscious instinctive activity. In a sense, by moving, the individual human being comes into contact with other human beings on all sides. It turns out that some of these individual impulses that humans develop outwardly are convenient for other humans, that they are useful to them. Others turn out to be harmful to them. From this, judgments are formed: what emanates from humans as useful from their instinctive movements is gradually called “good”; what proves harmful to others is labeled “evil.” Of course, life becomes more and more complicated. People forget how they came to label things in this way. But they then talk about “good” and “evil” and have forgotten that in the beginning, only what was beneficial was called ‘good’ and what was perceived as harmful was called “evil.” In this way, what has come into being has ultimately been transformed into instinct. Let's assume that someone bumps into you with their arm: if they stroke you, you call it good; if they slap you, you call it bad. These judgments accumulate. What has been compressed from such judgments becomes instinct itself. Just as people do not know why they raise their hands in a certain way, they do not know where the voice that emerges from their soul and passes moral judgments on this or that comes from, which they then call the voice of conscience. This “voice of conscience” is nothing other than what has emerged from such instinctive judgments about what is useful and harmful and has itself become instinct again and, because its origin has been forgotten, sounds from within as the voice of conscience.
[ 23 ] Nietzsche was perfectly capable of understanding, from the liveliness of his intellectual life, that certainly not everyone said the same thing as Paul R&e. But he was also aware that if one thought about natural science only as it was thought in his time, one could not think about ethics any differently than Paul Ree. Nietzsche was simply honest; he drew the ultimate conclusions, just as Paul Ree had done. And Nietzsche did not feel any resentment because a philosopher had written such a thing. For Nietzsche, this immediate fact had no more significance than could be exhausted within the events of the room in which Paul Ree wrote, just as a thermometer tells us nothing more than the temperature conditions of the immediate environment. But it shows us something that is universal, and Nietzsche felt that. He perceived the ethical dregs of his time in this book, and in this respect he affirmed it. For him, there was nothing more important than to put the old phrase on ice and say: When people talk about nebulous ideals, it is just fogging. In truth, everything is instinct. Nietzsche often had moments when he said: When someone comes along and enthuses about this or that ideal and wants to enthuse others about it, it is ultimately because that person is so predisposed that thinking about these ideals is the best way for them to process their gastric juices, because then the food enters the best digestive flow for them. — I am expressing this somewhat radically, but entirely in the sense that Nietzsche felt in the 1870s and 1880s. Nietzsche said to himself: People talk about all kinds of spiritual things and call them ideals. In truth, all this serves no other purpose than that this or that person, depending on their constitution, has the best kind of digestion and other bodily functions by feeling precisely this way about the so-called ideal. What we call ‘human’ must be stripped of its phraseology, for it is truly all too human."
[ 24 ] It was, I would say, a grandiose devotion to honesty with which Nietzsche declared war on all idealism at that time. I know that this side of Nietzsche has not always been emphasized. But much of what has been said about Nietzsche was snobbery, not something serious. Thus, at the end of his first intellectual period, Nietzsche found himself facing nothingness, and in his second period, which begins with “Human, All Too Human” and ends with “The Gay Science,” he found himself, in a certain sense, consciously facing nothingness in relation to all spirit. Ultimately, he could only develop one mood, because it is basically impossible to arrive at any intellectual content if one reduces all ideals to human physical functions in this way. One need only consider one example to illustrate how Nietzsche's view gradually developed. He said to himself, for example: There are people who strive for asceticism, that is, for abstinence from physical pleasures. Why do they do that? They do it because they have extremely poor digestion and because they feel best when they abstain from physical pleasures; therefore, they regard asceticism as the most desirable thing. In their subconscious, however, they want what makes them feel best. They want to experience the highest pleasure in the absence of pleasure. This shows what they are like, that the absence of pleasure is the highest pleasure for them.
[ 25 ] In Nietzsche, who was thoroughly honest, this mood intensified into moments when he uttered words such as these:
I live in my own house,
I have never imitated anyone,
And I have laughed at every master
Who did not laugh at himself.
[ 26 ] This described in a grandiose way, I would say poetically anticipating, the mood that actually culminated at the turn of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, but was already so prevalent at that time that it had to be experienced by a deeper soul life. Nietzsche then found his way out of this confrontation with nothingness in his second period by creating the mood content of two ideas, which he expressed poetically: the idea of the superhuman, because he could ultimately do nothing else but appeal to something that had to be born out of man but was not yet there, and after he had experienced the "facing nothingness" in such a grandiose manner—the idea of the eternal recurrence of the same, which came to him from the idea of development. He had lived himself into the idea of development, especially in his scientific age. By delving into what the ideas of development gave him, he found nothing that would advance this development. They only gave him the idea of a continuous recurrence of the same. That was his last period, which we need not characterize further here. Psychologically characterized, there would be an extraordinary amount to say.
[ 27 ] But I do not want to give a characterization of Nietzsche, only to point out how Nietzsche, who was forced by his illness to lay down his pen at the end of the 1880s, anticipated what must have been the mood of every profound soul at the turn of the nineteenth to the twentieth century. In the last third of the nineteenth century, Nietzsche attempted to express in words a mood that he drew from his treasure trove of ideas, from Greek philosophy and art, from the artistic in Wagner, from the philosophical in Schopenhauer, and so on. Nietzsche repeatedly abandoned what he himself had presented as characteristic features.
[ 28 ] His last work is entitled Götzendämmerung, or How to Philosophize with a Hammer. He saw himself as a destroyer of old ideas. This was very strange, because these old ideas about the spirit of cultural development had already been destroyed. In Nietzsche's youth, the treasure trove of ideas had already been shattered. Since the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, ideas had continued in the traditional manner. However, these traditions came to an end in the last third of the nineteenth century. The shattering of the old spirit had taken place; the treasure trove of ideas lived on only in phrases.
[ 29 ] Anyone who had thought spiritually in the time in which Nietzsche lived would not have felt as if he had to smash the ideals with a hammer, but would have felt that they had been smashed simply by the necessary and right development of the human race. Humanity would not have attained freedom if this had not happened. But Nietzsche, who still found ideals flourishing everywhere in phrases, had the delusion that he himself was doing what had long since been done. In any case, what had been the inner fuel of spiritual life in the older age, which had kindled the spirit in man so that with this kindled spirit man could then illuminate both nature and his own human life, was gone. In the special realm of morality, this is expressed by saying that there can be no more moral intuitions.
[ 30 ] I already had to tell you yesterday: Theoretical refutations of materialism as a worldview are actually nonsense for our age, because materialism is right for our age. The ideas that our age must regard as correct are products of the brain. Therefore, a refutation of materialism in our age is in itself a phrase, and anyone who is honest cannot really see much value in a refutation of materialism, because theoretical refutation is not what matters here. Humanity has simply reached the point in its development where it no longer has an inner, living spirit, but only that mental reflex which is completely dependent on the physical brain. For this reflexive spirit, materialism is fully justified as a theoretical worldview. It is not a question of whether one has a false worldview or refutes it, but of whether one has gradually arrived at a spiritless inner attitude toward life and the soul. This is what comes through Nietzsche's philosophy like a cry, tragically anticipated.
[ 31 ] In this situation, the naturally sensitive soul of youth in the twentieth century has encountered the spiritual state of the world. You will not arrive at a clarity, at a tangible perception of what is rumbling in an indefinite way, subconsciously in your souls, and what you call the experience of youth today, unless you look into this upheaval that has necessarily arisen with the entire spiritual life in the present period of human development.
[ 32 ] If you try to characterize what you feel in an indefinite way from other sources, you will always feel after a while that you can only say goodbye to such a characterization. You will not arrive at any truth, but only at phrases. For as long as people today do not honestly admit to themselves: I must turn to the living, active spirit, to the spirit that no longer has its reality in intellectualism, but only its corpse, there will be no salvation from the confusion of the age. As long as anyone still believes that they can find spirit in intellectualism, where intellectualism is now only the form of spirit, just as the human corpse is the form of the human being, as long as this is the case, it will not be possible for human beings to find themselves.
[ 33 ] Man can only find himself by honestly admitting that intellectualism is to the essence of the spirit what the human corpse is to the person who has died. It still has the form, but the life of the spirit has departed from intellectualism. And just as the human corpse can be permeated by ingredients that preserve its form, as Egyptian mummies show, so too can the corpse of the spirit be preserved by adorning it with the results of observation and experimentation. But this does not produce a living spirit, nothing that can be connected in a natural way with the living impulses of the human soul; it produces nothing but a dead thing. This dead thing can wonderfully reproduce the dead things in the world, just as one can still admire the human form in a mummy. But intellectualism does not yield anything truly spiritual, just as a mummy cannot be turned into a real human being.
[ 34 ] As long as it is a matter of preserving precisely that which is to be preserved through the marriage between observation and intellect, one can only say: The achievements of recent times are magnificent. At the moment when man must set himself the task of connecting himself in the depths of his soul only with what his spirit holds within itself, at that moment there is no connection between intellectualism and the human soul. Then there is only one thing left for man to say: I thirst for something, and everything that comes to me from the world on an intellectual basis does not give me water for this thirst.
[ 35 ] This is what does not come across so well when put into words, but what lives in the feelings of today's youth. Today's youth usually say this or that in such a way that, when you get to the bottom of things, you actually become quite annoyed by what is being said. But you immediately console yourself over your annoyance. The annoyance comes only from the use of horribly bombastic words that are more appropriate to everything else than to what the person concerned feels. The phrases are exaggerated, and what appears as character in the youth movement is of such a nature that, to those who know how to live in the spirit, it seems like bubbles that are constantly bursting; it is actually intellectualism running amok. I do not wish to hurt you with these things, and if I have hurt one or the other, I cannot help it. I would be sorry, but I would find it extremely justified. I cannot only say what pleases me, I must also say what displeases one or the other. I have to say what I recognize as true. That is why I have to tell you: in order to characterize what is justifiably in the souls of young people, something quite different is needed than imposing old concepts that tumble over each other as phrases. What is needed is an intensively developed sense of truth.
[ 36 ] We need truth in the depths of our souls, my dear friends. Truth is the first and last thing we need today, and when your chairman said here yesterday that we have come to the point where we no longer want to use the word “spirit,” that is already an admission of the truth. It would actually be much wiser if our age, which has lost the spirit, would stop talking about the spirit; for then people would honestly regain their thirst for the real spirit. Instead, today everything possible is called “spirit” and “spiritual.” What we need is truth, and if today's young people want to admit the truth about their own state of mind, then they can say nothing else but: The age has taken all spirit out of my soul. But my soul thirsts for spirit, it thirsts for something new, for a new conquest of the spirit.
[ 37 ] As long as this is not felt in all honesty and truth, the youth movement will not come into its own. To all that I have given as characteristics of what we still have to seek, I would add today: We must seek light in the depths, in the innermost depths of our souls; above all, we must seek to attain the deepest sense of honesty and the deepest sense of truth. If we build on honesty and truthfulness, then we will make progress, and humanity must make progress. Then we will come to a point where we can once again speak of the spirit, which is after all most similar to human nature. The soul is most similar to the spirit, and therefore it can find it if it wants to. In our time, however, it must strive beyond phrases, conventions, and routine; beyond phrase — to the grasping of truth, beyond convention — to the immediate, elementary, heartfelt relationship between human beings, and beyond routine — to that which restores spirit to every single action in life, so that we do not act automatically, as is so often the case today, but so that spirit lives again in the most everyday actions. We must come to the spirituality of action, we must come to the direct experience of people with one another and to the honest experience of truth.