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Friedrich Nietzsche

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Where does morality come from? Is morality something we should embrace or reject? ... (We'll come back to this in a little while.) Where does morality come from? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Friedrich Nietzsche


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Friedrich Nietzsche
  • 1844-1900

3
Nietzsches Genealogy of Morals
  • A three-step process
  • What is morality?
  • Where does morality come from?
  • Is morality something we should embrace or reject?

4
What is morality?
  • (Well come back to this in a little while.)

5
Where does morality come from?
  • What is the origin of the value judgments of good
    and evil?
  • What underlies that which we call morality?

6
Should we embrace or reject morality?
  • The value of these values themselves must be
    called into question.
  • What value do moral values themselves possess?
    Have they hindered or furthered human
    prosperity?
  • Might morality be a great danger to mankind,
    the danger of all dangers?

7
  • Consider a parallel three-step project about
  • Halloween
  • Capitalism
  • Religion(s)
  • Racism

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Nietzsches Genealogical Project
  • What is morality?
  • Where does morality come from?
  • Is morality something we should embrace or reject?

9
Nietzsches Genealogical Project
  • What is morality?
  • Where does morality come from?
  • Is morality something we should embrace or reject?

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Central tenets of what we call morality
  • Each and every human no matter his or her
    abilities or social status is of equal moral
    worth.
  • I should care about others welfare for their own
    sakes, independently of what it might do for me.
  • I should not repay harm with harm.

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  • Moral Equality
  • Moral Democracy
  • Anti-Egoism
  • Anti-Retaliation

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Where does morality come from?
  • Kants answer
  • A priori reason
  • Mills answer
  • Intrinsic value of happiness of everyone
  • Lockes answer
  • God

13
  • Nietzsches view of the origin of morality
  • A genealogical answer
  • An historical answer
  • (Recall comparison with Halloween, capitalism,
    etc.)

14
  • According to Nietzsche
  • Morality has changed.
  • Originally, there was a master-morality.
  • Now what we have is a slave-morality.
  • How did we get from there to here?

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Master Morality
  • Original value distinction
  • Good vs. Bad (not good vs. evil)

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Master Morality
  • Good
  • Noble, aristocratic, strong, beautiful, powerful,
    healthy, vital
  • A term the superior applied to themselves
  • Bad
  • Whoever is not good an afterthought
  • Common, weak, ugly, wretched, lowly

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Master Morality
  • Pleasure is a trivial concern.
  • The happiness of people in general is of no
    concern.
  • The good is defined as that which promotes the
    goals of those who are superior.
  • The gods are conceived of as loving the strong.

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Master Morality
  • Proudly Elitist (not for moral equality or
    democracy)
  • Unabashedly Egoistic

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  • Compare Nietzsches master morality to the ethos
    of great art.

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  • Master Morality
  • Proudly Elitist
  • Unabashedly Egoistic
  • Elevating good over bad.
  • Slave Morality
  • Anti-elitist (egalitarian, democratic)
  • Anti-Egoistic
  • Elevating good over evil.

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  • Master Morality
  • Proudly Elitist
  • Unabashedly Egoistic
  • Elevating good over bad.
  • Slave Morality
  • Anti-elitist (egalitarian, democratic)
  • Anti-Egoistic
  • Elevating good over evil.

22
  • How did the valuations of master-morality get
    twisted into those of slave-morality?

23
  • Who twisted our valuations from master morality
    into slave-morality?
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