[QUOTE] Originally posted by Oncle Boris
But the question is, does the slave morality come from actual slaves and their reaction to their situation. If the morality actually comes from rulers, from priests and aristocrats of a Jewish kingdom, developing it in response to a desire to understand the world, is it possible that its NOT really a slave morality in any meaningful sense?
[q]Nietzsche's claim of Jewish morals being a "slave morality" comes from the notion of sin, as it entails (a) belief in a transcendant and retributivist moral order
and (b) submission to the passions of regret and "salvation", i.e. messianism.
Its not clear that early Jewish messianism was anything other than an actual political program for the restoration of a legitimate royal line. This gets to distinguishing the proto-christian views found in the apochrypha (generally marginal lit to the Jews) vs the views found in early rabbinical lit. To someone like Rambam, its largely still that. Its only later and more to the mystics that it becomes a more completely "spiritual" program, and even then, theres a strong residue of "deed" that infiltrates - the notion that Jews, by following Jewish law and in other ways, actively bring the messianic age - a secularized version of which flows into Jewish leftism, Zionism, etc.
But how is it any more of a "lie" than "herrenmoral"? Its just a different perspective. The notion that its a lie to fool the "oppressors", doesnt make much sense if the Jews werent in fact oppressed when they created it. Thats what my problem is.
Hmmmm? How would that work?
Seeing as how Jewish morals went on for a few hundred years without generating Christianity, and that most Jews reject C, that doesnt seem likely either. C was a historical contingency that happened to emerge from J.
IMO, it's a false question you're asking. In Nietzsche's way, you could very well be, socially, a slave, and still think and behave like a nobleman.
But the question is, does the slave morality come from actual slaves and their reaction to their situation. If the morality actually comes from rulers, from priests and aristocrats of a Jewish kingdom, developing it in response to a desire to understand the world, is it possible that its NOT really a slave morality in any meaningful sense?
[q]Nietzsche's claim of Jewish morals being a "slave morality" comes from the notion of sin, as it entails (a) belief in a transcendant and retributivist moral order
and (b) submission to the passions of regret and "salvation", i.e. messianism.
Its not clear that early Jewish messianism was anything other than an actual political program for the restoration of a legitimate royal line. This gets to distinguishing the proto-christian views found in the apochrypha (generally marginal lit to the Jews) vs the views found in early rabbinical lit. To someone like Rambam, its largely still that. Its only later and more to the mystics that it becomes a more completely "spiritual" program, and even then, theres a strong residue of "deed" that infiltrates - the notion that Jews, by following Jewish law and in other ways, actively bring the messianic age - a secularized version of which flows into Jewish leftism, Zionism, etc.
That's why he believes that Christianism is a mere "universalized" judaism, something that he calls the "ultima ratio" of lie and degenerescence.
But how is it any more of a "lie" than "herrenmoral"? Its just a different perspective. The notion that its a lie to fool the "oppressors", doesnt make much sense if the Jews werent in fact oppressed when they created it. Thats what my problem is.
But that's not where his reflexions stop. The question to be asked, then, is to know whether Christianism is a lie created by astute Jews to ensure their own protection against persecution
Hmmmm? How would that work?
, or a pure, determined consequence of their morals.
Seeing as how Jewish morals went on for a few hundred years without generating Christianity, and that most Jews reject C, that doesnt seem likely either. C was a historical contingency that happened to emerge from J.
Comment