Book II
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
Summary
97
To become moral is not in itself moral. – Subjection to morality can be slavish or vain or self-interested or resigned or gloomily enthusiastic or an act of despair, like subjection to a prince: in itself it is nothing moral.
98
Mutation of morality. – There is a continual moiling and toiling going on in morality – the effect of successful crimes (among which, for example, are included all innovations in moral thinking).
99
Wherein we are all irrational. – We still draw the conclusions of judgments we consider false, of teachings in which we no longer believe – our feelings make us do it.
100
Awakening from a dream. – Wise and noble men once believed in the music of the spheres: wise and noble men still believe in the ‘moral significance of existence’. But one day this music of the spheres too will no longer be audible to them! They will awaken and perceive that their ears had been dreaming.
101
Suspicious. – To admit a belief merely because it is a custom – but that means to be dishonest, cowardly, lazy! – And so could dishonesty, cowardice and laziness be the preconditions of morality?
102
The oldest moral judgments. – What really are our reactions to the behaviour of someone in our presence? – First of all, we see what there is in it for us – we regard it only from this point of view.
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- Nietzsche: DaybreakThoughts on the Prejudices of Morality, pp. 57 - 94Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997