Beyond Good and Evil

(Barry) #1
110 Beyond Good and Evil


  1. It is to be INFERRED that there are countless dark
    bodies near the sun—such as we shall never see. Among
    ourselves, this is an allegory; and the psychologist of mor-
    als reads the whole star-writing merely as an allegorical and
    symbolic language in which much may be unexpressed.

  2. The beast of prey and the man of prey (for instance,
    Caesar Borgia) are fundamentally misunderstood, ‘nature’
    is misunderstood, so long as one seeks a ‘morbidness’ in
    the constitution of these healthiest of all tropical monsters
    and growths, or even an innate ‘hell’ in them—as almost all
    moralists have done hitherto. Does it not seem that there is
    a hatred of the virgin forest and of the tropics among mor-
    alists? And that the ‘tropical man’ must be discredited at
    all costs, whether as disease and deterioration of mankind,
    or as his own hell and self-torture? And why? In favour of
    the ‘temperate zones’? In favour of the temperate men? The
    ‘moral’? The mediocre?—This for the chapter: ‘Morals as Ti-
    midity.’

  3. All the systems of morals which address themselves
    with a view to their ‘happiness,’ as it is called—what else
    are they but suggestions for behaviour adapted to the de-
    gree of DANGER from themselves in which the individuals
    live; recipes for their passions, their good and bad propen-
    sities, insofar as such have the Will to Power and would
    like to play the master; small and great expediencies and
    elaborations, permeated with the musty odour of old fam-
    ily medicines and old-wife wisdom; all of them grotesque

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