Nietzsche Genius of the Modern World


Nietzsche

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In 1934, a photograph was taken here

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which epitomised the extraordinary influence

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of one of the most provocative and uncompromising thinkers

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of the 19th century.

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It's an image of Adolf Hitler

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standing next to the bust of Nietzsche here

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in Weimar where the philosopher lived.

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-With chilling eloquence, this tells us what many Nazis believed

--

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that Nietzsche was the brilliant mind, the inspiration,

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behind the terrifying ideologies of the Third Reich.

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Yet if Nietzsche had been alive to see it, he would have been appalled.

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His philosophies were being distorted by a regime

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that stood for so much that he'd have loathed.

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Nietzsche was one of the most dangerous minds of the 19th century.

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Nietzsche thinks we have blood on our hands.

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Because we haven't just killed God -

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we've killed that which gave our lives meaning.

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Nietzsche lived in a century in which Europe

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was witnessing unprecedented change.

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Where the authority of Christianity was being challenged.

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Radical breakthroughs in science were redefining belief.

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And thinkers like Freud, Marx,

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and Nietzsche were suddenly free to unleash ideas that

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in previous centuries would have seen them burnt at the stake.

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Yet they heralded nothing less than the modern world.

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In 1882, one of the greatest minds of the 19th century

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predicted a crisis.

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One that he believed would be without equal on Earth,

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and which would be triggered by nothing less than the murder of God.

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"God is dead, and God remains dead, because we have killed him.

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"What was holiest and most powerful

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"of all that the world has yet owned has bled to death under our eyes.

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"Who will wipe the blood from our hands?"

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These are the visceral, challenging words of Friedrich Nietzsche.

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The crisis that he proclaimed was a wave of disbelief in Christianity

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that he predicted would crash through Europe.

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And the raw,

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brutal language that he chose to describe this death of God

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is a measure of just how terrifying he thought the consequence would be.

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For what Nietzsche saw, with disturbing, prophetic clarity,

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was that without a belief in God,

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there was no authority for the moral values

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that had underpinned European society across 2,000 years.

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He was declaring our freedom from God, our mastery of our own fates.

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No longer controlled by divine laws,

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we were now liberated, or condemned, to create our own values.

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But what haunted and tormented Nietzsche was his realisation that

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this was a freedom that came at a terrible price.

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The loss of religious belief would bring with it nothing less than

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a vacuum of meaning in human existence.

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It was a crisis that Nietzsche would wrestle with

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for the rest of his life.

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BELL RINGS

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MUSIC: Messiah by Handel

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The childhood of the man who would come to call himself the Antichrist

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was, with no little irony,

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one infused with the joy of Christianity.

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When Nietzsche was just nine years old,

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he heard Handel's Messiah for the first time.

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And he said he felt he had to join in the joyful singing of the angels

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on whose billows of sound Jesus ascended to heaven.

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The man who would spend his life as an adult with a mission to attack

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everything that Christianity stood for

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started off in life as the son of a Lutheran pastor,

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here in the very cradle of Protestant Christianity.

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Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche grew up in the village of Rocken in Prussia,

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now northern Germany.

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And as a boy, he was passionately pious.

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This is the parsonage where Nietzsche was born.

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His father, Carl Ludwig, had a very simple faith,

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and the household lived and breathed Christianity.

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Nietzsche's early years were settled and sheltered.

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His parents had two other children.

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When he was two, his sister Elisabeth was born,

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followed a year later by a brother, Joseph.

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But in the autumn of 1848, when Friedrich was only four years old,

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his childhood was ripped apart.

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His father became mentally ill,

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and was diagnosed with a terminal brain disease.

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It was a torturous decline.

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He went blind and eventually was bedridden.

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One year later, he was dead.

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An autopsy revealed that a quarter of his brain was missing.

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This must have been a truly horrific end.

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The suffering of his beloved father marked Friedrich for life.

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As a teenager, he wrote about his father's funeral

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in this church where he had once preached.

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"Oh, never will the deep-throated sound of those bells quit my ear.

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"The organ resounded through the empty spaces of the church."

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For Nietzsche, the death of his father posed a profound question.

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Why had this God,

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whom his father had so loved and to whom he dedicated his life,

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punished a good man with such torment?

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It was the start of a journey into doubt that would come to define

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Nietzsche's life.

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Despite the loss of his father, in 1864, at the age of 20,

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Nietzsche arrived in Bonn to study theology at the university,

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contemplating a future as a Lutheran pastor.

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But it was during his time here that he came under the influence of

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a controversial new method of studying the Bible,

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known as Biblical criticism.

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And it scandalously suggested that this sacred text wasn't a credible

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historical work, but largely myth.

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It was radically undermining the authenticity of the scriptures.

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And for Nietzsche, it had a dramatic impact.

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If his father's death and suffering had made him question

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the idea of God emotionally,

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then this gave him the intellectual grounds on which to

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construct his doubt.

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Nietzsche's loss of belief caused an immediate rift with his family.

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At Easter, he refused to attend church,

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crushing his mother's dreams

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that he would follow his father to the pulpit.

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And his sister, who had always hero-worshipped her brother,

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found her own faith thrown into chaos.

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But for Nietzsche, his journey into doubt wasn't just a source of hurt

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for those close to him.

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It was the start of an all-consuming dissection

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of the moral and religious beliefs with which he had grown up.

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He began to regard Christianity not just as a faith regretfully lost,

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but as a pernicious influence that encouraged

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an unhealthy disengagement from the world.

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Christian teaching, he argued, focused on the next life,

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with disastrous consequences.

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Earth became a place of bleak exile from God.

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Life was a thing of pain and suffering to be endured,

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not celebrated.

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And this emphasis on the life to come robbed the here and now of its

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sublime meaning.

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This was a conviction that would dominate his life and his work

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for the next two decades.

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Rejecting Christianity forced Nietzsche

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to flee his theological studies,

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and to seek out a new direction.

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Right from the start,

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Nietzsche realised that his loss of faith wasn't the path to

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a life of contentment.

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In 1865, Nietzsche wrote to his sister, and said,

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"If you wish to seek peace of mind and happiness, then believe.

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"If you wish to be a disciple of truth, then investigate."

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Nietzsche was living in an age dominated by the rise of science,

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where the search for objective truth was all-consuming.

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But what Nietzsche saw with searing clarity was that the triumph of

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objectivity deprived humanity of something fundamental.

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Without Christianity,

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there was no set of binding moral rules by which we could all live.

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There was no solution to man's fear of death.

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And perhaps most importantly,

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with eternal salvation no longer mankind's prime goal,

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life itself didn't have a higher spiritual purpose.

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It was to finding new meaning in a godless universe that Nietzsche now

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dedicated himself.

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And his first glimpse at an answer came at the age of 21.

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He decided to become a student of philology,

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the study of the ancient civilisations and the philosophies of Greece and Rome.

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And he was in a book shop when he came across a work that would

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influence the way he thought and acted for the next decade.

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It was called The World As Will and Idea,

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and it was written by a German philosopher called Schopenhauer.

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As he read it, Nietzsche was transfixed.

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Schopenhauer was an atheist,

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who had also grappled with the purpose of life.

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But his conclusions were beyond pessimistic.

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Faced with the problem of life's endless sufferings,

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Schopenhauer's bleak conclusion

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was that it was best never to be born at all.

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He argued that human beings were in a state of constant desire.

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If we didn't achieve these desires, then there was discontent,

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and even if we did, then discontent would set in anyway.

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His solution was to face up to the fact that fulfilment is impossible.

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He encouraged us not to strive for happiness

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in order to avoid the anxiety and trouble in trying to achieve it.

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The happiest man, he said,

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is the one who gets through life with the minimum of pain.

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Nietzsche said it was like looking into a mirror

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that reflected the world, life,

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and his own mind with hideous magnificence.

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But whilst he accepted Schopenhauer's diagnosis

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that life was just a cycle of suffering,

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he passionately disagreed with his life-denying,

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nihilistic conclusions,

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the idea of giving up on life and the pursuit of one's desires.

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Instead, he was determined to find a way of affirming existence

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in spite of its pain.

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In 1869,

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the brilliant Friedrich became a professor of philology

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here at Basel University at the age of only 24,

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the youngest in its history.

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With his first book, which he wrote while he was here,

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he began to gain a reputation as a radical and subversive thinker.

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In his work, which he called The Birth of Tragedy,

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he started to grapple with the issue of how to deal with suffering

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in a world devoid of God.

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And for inspiration, he turned to the ideas of the Greeks,

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and a new focus of his devotions - the German composer Richard Wagner.

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On the 22nd of May 1872,

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the foundation stone was laid for Wagner's Festival Theatre.

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One of the guests at the ceremony was Nietzsche.

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The two men had met six years before when Nietzsche was just a student,

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and immediately he was smitten.

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Wagner became both an obsession and an inspiration.

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Nietzsche would come to believe that in Wagner's work,

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he had glimpsed what it was that made life itself worthwhile - art -

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and that the greatest art form of all was music.

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DOOR OPENS

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MUSIC: Entrance of the Gods into Valhalla

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from Das Rheingold by Wagner

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Nietzsche believed Wagner to be an artistic genius

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whose music was going to bring about

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a cultural rebirth based on the classical Greek model of tragedy.

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It was an art form that Nietzsche was convinced could transform

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a world full of suffering into something beautiful and meaningful.

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How did Nietzsche come to write The Birth of Tragedy?

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What was he trying to do with this book, do you think?

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Nietzsche wrote The Birth of Tragedy after a series of incredibly intense

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conversations with Wagner.

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Wagner was developing a revolutionary theory of art,

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where art could transform society.

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Nietzsche wanted to provide the philosophy for that.

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He found in Greek tragedy a model for that thinking.

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Greek tragedy tells these extremely visceral stories of human beings

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in conflict, suffering, destructive.

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Yet it was the dominant genre of thinking about the glory of Greece.

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Consequently, he found in Greek tragedy

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a way of talking about the human being today,

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the human being's suffering, finding meaning in life,

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finding the truth.

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So what is so explosive about what he is putting down on the page?

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Well, Nietzsche structured his book around an opposition

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between two Greek gods - Apollo and Dionysus.

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Apollo stood for light, for the truth of logic, for control.

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And since the beginning of Germans' love of Greek,

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they associated Greece with rationality,

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the beginnings of philosophy.

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But Nietzsche decided he wanted to focus more on Dionysus,

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the figure who confuses boundaries,

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who discovers ecstatic group activity,

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dancing, wildness, the visceral feelings.

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And he made that the centre of his tragedy.

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So he was standing against philosophy, against his own subject,

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against that sense that logic is the way to truth.

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He wanted to find another sort of truth, another transformative power.

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But how did he think that Dionysus,

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with all his darkness, and as you say, chaos, sometimes,

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and loss of control - how is that going to help mankind?

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Nietzsche was reacting against the dominant German intellectual tradition,

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which focused on the individual hero, the Oedipuses, if you like.

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And they saw that the individual who suffered could somehow

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transcend themselves through suffering.

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A very Christian message. Nietzsche reversed that,

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and saw instead that the individual somehow lost themselves in

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the collective, and found in a group experience

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an ecstatic transformational experience.

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That's what he saw in Wagner's music,

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and that's what he saw in tragedy,

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so that somehow the suffering that was everybody's condition

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was transformed through this ecstatic experience

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into an affirmation of life, this life, here and now.

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It's a bit like that sense of a rock concert -

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the idea that you somehow lose yourself in this great, ecstatic, collective experience.

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And one should never forget that opera in the 19th century

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was the rock music of its time, and Wagner was the rock icon of his day.

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And Nietzsche believed

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that was the way that society could be transformed,

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through a sense of the collective experience,

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from which you could go out and change the world.

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Wagner's theatre was a temple to his brilliance.

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But it was also the place where Nietzsche

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fell violently out of love with his hero.

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When Nietzsche came here to watch a performance of Wagner's opera

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The Ring, he hated what he found.

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Rather than a place of revolution,

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the theatre was stuffed with the great and the good of Europe,

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and the man that he'd revered as a radical,

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who he thought would catalyse the birth of a brave new world,

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was just the hero of a self-satisfied festival of opera,

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revelling in his own glory.

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Nietzsche stormed out of the theatre mid-performance.

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It marked the beginning of the end of their friendship,

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and a new phase in Nietzsche's philosophical quest.

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Nietzsche's rejection of Wagner

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coincided with a similarly radical change in his own life and work.

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Whilst he continued to teach in Basel,

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he began to have severe doubts as to whether it was here

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that his future lay.

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He still believed that it was through liberating the creative Dionysian spirit

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that greatness could be achieved.

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But he began to doubt that the answer

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lay with the transformation of the masses.

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Instead, it was the flourishing of great visionary individuals

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that would hold the key to the future.

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And he was convinced that the petty responsibilities of academic life

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were suffocating his own creative genius.

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He conceived a deep dread of coming back here to lecture,

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to what he called the greatest curse of his life.

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Depressed and anxious, he developed what he called Baselophobia.

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Nietzsche longed to break free.

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The key to life, he wrote, was to live dangerously.

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On the 2nd of May 1879, he resigned his professorship.

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As Nietzsche left Basel, he was gripped by debilitating ill-health.

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Since childhood, he had been plagued by violent stomach pains

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and blinding headaches.

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And haunted by the fear that he, too, would be struck down by

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the disease that killed his father.

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Nietzsche's physical challenges had been the final trigger

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for his resignation.

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Although his doctors warned that excessive reading and writing

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would cause him to go blind,

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nothing was going to stop his pursuit of a life of philosophy.

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Nietzsche began to crisscross Europe,

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staying in hotels and guesthouses,

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and climates that alleviated his medical symptoms.

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He would spend the rest of his sane adult life

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in a state of nomadic solitude.

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You can just imagine him, ill, troubled, increasingly isolated,

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and yet with this extraordinary mind for company.

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Over the next decade,

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the ideas and thoughts that poured onto the page

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were simply astonishing.

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His ill-health would mean that he could only write in bursts of 20 minutes at a time,

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so his books were full of incisive aphorisms, pithy statements,

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rather than long philosophical treatises.

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And it was on a train in 1881

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that he was told about somewhere that would

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provide the inspiration for many of these great works.

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A fellow traveller recommended that he visit a place called Sils Maria.

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Just a tiny little farming village in the Swiss mountains.

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He followed their advice and discovered the place

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that would become his spiritual homeland.

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On Monday the 4th of July 1881,

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Nietzsche fell in love at first sight with Sils Maria.

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Its mountains and forests inspired his most life-affirming ideas.

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Its beauty reinforced for him the sheer magnificence of existence.

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And it was on one of his walks here, a month after he'd arrived,

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that Nietzsche had what he believed was the most important thought

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he'd ever conceived.

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He was walking by this lake when he stopped

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next to this rock and suddenly had a vision.

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This was a thought experiment that Nietzsche believed

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would help us all to analyse every action,

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every decision of our lives,

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so that we could live those to the full.

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This was his question -

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if a demon were to whisper in your ear that you had to live your life

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as lived time and time again throughout eternity,

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with all the pain and with all the greatness,

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would you fall to the ground and gnash your teeth and curse that demon,

0:25:090:25:13

or would you say that he was a god and that his utterances were divine?

0:25:130:25:19

It was an idea that became known as the eternal recurrence of the same,

0:25:240:25:29

and it formed the very essence of Nietzsche's attitude to life,

0:25:290:25:34

to both its joys and its hardships.

0:25:340:25:37

Nietzsche believed that even though we all have things that we might

0:25:390:25:42

consider failures - the break-up of a relationship,

0:25:420:25:46

or the death of a loved one - we should be happy to relive those events, too.

0:25:460:25:52

Just as a pianist learns to master improvisations, so we should

0:25:520:25:57

learn to incorporate mistakes and imperfections and sorrows

0:25:570:26:01

into the beauty of the whole.

0:26:010:26:04

We should construct our lives so we are our own heroes.

0:26:040:26:08

Basically, we should decide who we want to be,

0:26:080:26:12

how we want to live our life, and then love the choices that we've made.

0:26:120:26:16

So that the thought of reliving our existence, for good and for bad,

0:26:160:26:21

can be greeted with a life-affirming "Yes".

0:26:210:26:26

The eternal return was an exuberant and optimistic embrace of life.

0:26:290:26:35

Suffering wasn't something that you had to be redeemed from,

0:26:360:26:40

as Christianity taught,

0:26:400:26:43

or avoided at all costs, as Schopenhauer argued.

0:26:430:26:46

Instead, it was to be embraced, mastered.

0:26:470:26:51

To live life most fully, one had to risk suffering and overcome it.

0:26:510:26:58

What doesn't kill you makes you stronger

0:27:000:27:01

is one of Nietzsche's most iconic phrases.

0:27:010:27:04

And it was one that he himself

0:27:040:27:06

was just about to have to put to the test.

0:27:060:27:09

The philosopher was about to face one of the greatest disappointments

0:27:110:27:15

of his life.

0:27:150:27:17

It was in the beautiful town of Lucerne that, in the spring of 1882,

0:27:310:27:35

Nietzsche contemplated abandoning his life of seclusion

0:27:350:27:39

for a life of love with a woman he was entranced by.

0:27:390:27:44

Her name was Lou Salome.

0:27:460:27:48

She was 21, Russian born, clever, beautiful,

0:27:480:27:53

and fascinated by his ideas.

0:27:530:27:56

Nietzsche was lost.

0:27:560:27:59

Nietzsche and Lou spent hours walking together,

0:28:020:28:05

discussing philosophy, absorbed in their own world.

0:28:050:28:10

And Nietzsche brought her here,

0:28:130:28:15

to what was known as Lion Garden, in the centre of Lucerne, to propose.

0:28:150:28:20

He'd already asked for her hand in marriage once before,

0:28:220:28:25

through his friend Paul Ree, and she had refused.

0:28:250:28:29

Convinced that Ree hadn't done the job properly,

0:28:290:28:32

Nietzsche was determined to try again.

0:28:320:28:35

But Salome just wasn't interested in a conventional relationship.

0:28:350:28:40

She was feisty and original,

0:28:400:28:42

and had no intention whatsoever of being trapped in a life of Victorian

0:28:420:28:47

domesticity, and so she'd pledged never to give herself to a man.

0:28:470:28:52

So when Nietzsche proposed for a second time,

0:28:520:28:55

the answer was still no.

0:28:550:28:57

He was devastated by the rejection,

0:29:020:29:06

made worse by the fact that his meddling sister Elisabeth

0:29:060:29:10

was jealous of Lou's youth and wild charm,

0:29:100:29:14

and determined to disrupt any potential romance.

0:29:140:29:18

Elisabeth reported details of Nietzsche's passion for Lou

0:29:190:29:23

to their mother, who responded by spitting out

0:29:230:29:26

that her son was a disgrace to his father's grave.

0:29:260:29:31

Their relationship was shattered,

0:29:310:29:34

and Nietzsche was utterly despondent.

0:29:340:29:37

What followed was one of the most miserable periods in his life.

0:29:430:29:47

But one in which he had the chance

0:29:480:29:51

to test his own philosophy of suffering.

0:29:510:29:54

Nietzsche fled, in bleak mood.

0:30:010:30:05

His books weren't selling.

0:30:070:30:09

He was in bad health, and often suicidal.

0:30:090:30:13

In March 1883, Nietzsche wrote, "In the deepest part of me,

0:30:160:30:21

"an immovable black melancholy holds sway.

0:30:210:30:25

"I cannot see even a reason to live beyond six months."

0:30:250:30:29

He realised that this was a true test of his own ability

0:30:300:30:33

to face suffering and to overcome it.

0:30:330:30:36

"I am exerting every ounce of self-mastery," he wrote.

0:30:370:30:42

"Unless I can discover an alchemical trick to turn this muck into gold,

0:30:420:30:47

"I am lost."

0:30:470:30:49

But in the depths of his misery,

0:30:510:30:52

he poured himself into writing a new book,

0:30:520:30:56

one which would prove him to be just such an alchemist.

0:30:560:31:00

It was the work that he considered to be his greatest.

0:31:020:31:05

MUSIC: Also sprach Zarathustra by Richard Strauss

0:31:050:31:09

Thus Spoke Zarathustra.

0:31:090:31:11

Zarathustra had huge impact.

0:31:230:31:26

It inspired composers, like Richard Strauss, and writers,

0:31:260:31:30

from Joyce and Kafka to Yeats and Camus.

0:31:300:31:34

A parody of the Bible, that Nietzsche referred to as the fifth gospel,

0:31:340:31:38

it centred around the spiritual journey of a mysterious,

0:31:380:31:41

mystical character called Zarathustra, and in it,

0:31:410:31:45

the philosopher introduced one of his most notorious concepts -

0:31:450:31:49

the Ubermensch, or Superman.

0:31:490:31:52

The book is a parable on the importance of self overcoming.

0:32:000:32:04

The imagery is of the mountains,

0:32:060:32:09

and the figure of Zarathustra echoes Nietzsche himself.

0:32:090:32:13

Two of its four books were written here,

0:32:190:32:21

in the guesthouse where Nietzsche often stayed.

0:32:210:32:24

It is remarkable being here, isn't it?

0:32:250:32:27

Because it's in this room that Nietzsche wrote

0:32:270:32:29

one of his most groundbreaking and influential works.

0:32:290:32:33

This is the place where he first had the ideas

0:32:330:32:36

about Thus Spoke Zarathustra.

0:32:360:32:39

Zarathustra is a prophet who comes down the mountain,

0:32:390:32:42

and he wants to talk to people in the town about this great event,

0:32:420:32:48

that God is dead, that Christianity, with all its certain, universal,

0:32:480:32:54

absolute moral values, is no longer believed in,

0:32:540:32:58

and that the question of what it is to be human,

0:32:580:33:02

and how one is to live as a human, needs to be answered anew.

0:33:020:33:08

But nobody listens to Zarathustra.

0:33:080:33:11

And one of the mechanisms to deliver that is this difficult concept,

0:33:110:33:15

the Ubermensch, the Overman or the Superman.

0:33:150:33:18

Who or what exactly is that?

0:33:180:33:21

It's easier to say what it is not.

0:33:210:33:23

It's not a biological concept.

0:33:230:33:26

It's not some kind of superior human race.

0:33:260:33:29

An Ubermensch is someone who is no longer reliant

0:33:290:33:33

on inauthentic external goals society gives him or her -

0:33:330:33:39

parents, religions.

0:33:390:33:41

It's someone who is able to commit to goals that you set yourself.

0:33:410:33:47

You offer humanity goals,

0:33:470:33:49

and Nietzsche thinks it's a terrifyingly difficult task,

0:33:490:33:53

because the guidelines are missing.

0:33:530:33:55

There are no blueprints.

0:33:550:33:57

And whilst you full well know that whatever task you set yourself isn't

0:33:570:34:04

universal, isn't good for all,

0:34:040:34:07

it's nevertheless one you commit yourself to.

0:34:070:34:10

It's one you strive towards.

0:34:100:34:12

The Ubermensch is someone who can shift

0:34:120:34:15

and see that the responsibility

0:34:150:34:19

and the joy of creating life lies not with some transcendent God,

0:34:190:34:24

but lies within oneself.

0:34:240:34:25

In pouring himself into writing Zarathustra,

0:34:270:34:30

Nietzsche and not only gave his own life meaning in the face of suffering,

0:34:300:34:35

but he also began to see that suffering itself

0:34:350:34:40

was the key to unlocking the elusive secret of happiness.

0:34:400:34:44

So what do you think happiness is for Nietzsche?

0:34:450:34:48

We traditionally see happiness in opposition to pain, exertion,

0:34:480:34:52

suffering, etc. For him, that is not the case.

0:34:520:34:57

It's striving towards something,

0:34:580:35:00

it's suffering through that great task you've set yourself.

0:35:000:35:05

So just flying up onto the summit of a high mountain in a helicopter will

0:35:050:35:10

not give you the kind of feeling of happiness

0:35:100:35:14

that you experience when you have spent 15 days

0:35:140:35:18

walking towards the summit.

0:35:180:35:20

It's overcoming obstacles that resist you achieving that goal

0:35:200:35:25

that is part of the experience of happiness.

0:35:250:35:29

So it's not just pleasure, but pain that can be happiness.

0:35:290:35:32

Pain is almost an enabling condition for happiness.

0:35:320:35:36

Nietzsche never found love again.

0:35:410:35:44

But he'd succeeded in transforming his despair into a work whose vision

0:35:440:35:49

would go on to resonate with generations of artists and thinkers.

0:35:490:35:53

He'd become a living testament to his idea of the eternal return.

0:35:540:35:58

And he now turned his attention away from the loss of the meaning created

0:36:000:36:04

by the murder of God to the crisis of values left in its wake.

0:36:040:36:09

Nietzsche continued his restless journey around Europe.

0:36:180:36:21

Although his health was deteriorating,

0:36:230:36:25

it didn't stop him from writing a subversive work

0:36:250:36:29

called Beyond Good and Evil.

0:36:290:36:32

Nietzsche himself thought the book was terrifying,

0:36:350:36:38

a squid-like work that confronted

0:36:380:36:40

all the dark realities that 19th-century science had laid bare.

0:36:400:36:45

He couldn't find anybody to publish it,

0:36:460:36:49

so he paid for it to be printed himself.

0:36:490:36:51

And when it was released in 1886, the reviewers hated it.

0:36:510:36:56

They described it as dangerous dynamite.

0:36:560:36:59

Both this book and his next, The Genealogy of Morality,

0:37:020:37:06

were fired by Nietzsche's utter dismay at the persistence of

0:37:060:37:10

Christianity's moral values.

0:37:100:37:12

Whilst many 19th-century intellectuals

0:37:130:37:16

had rejected the faith, they maintained its values.

0:37:160:37:19

For Nietzsche, this was a catastrophe.

0:37:210:37:23

For him, they no longer just lacked divine authority -

0:37:250:37:29

they were a threat to the future of humanity itself.

0:37:290:37:33

Why should we try to understand this book of his, Beyond Good and Evil,

0:37:350:37:38

if we're going to try to understand Nietzsche?

0:37:380:37:40

Well, this is the book where he really begins his incredibly intense

0:37:400:37:43

campaign against Christianity.

0:37:430:37:46

And he says, the real logic of Christianity

0:37:460:37:49

is a hatred of our own human, all too human nature.

0:37:490:37:53

That is, we have various drives, according to Nietzsche -

0:37:530:37:56

sexual drives, aggressive drives, drives to dominate.

0:37:560:38:00

And Christianity says those drives are an affront to God.

0:38:000:38:03

We need to push those drives down.

0:38:030:38:05

But for Nietzsche, that means we need to push ourselves down.

0:38:050:38:09

So he thinks that Christianity teaches us kind of a self-evisceration, a self-hatred.

0:38:090:38:14

That is his critique of Christianity.

0:38:140:38:17

And what does he think is wrong

0:38:170:38:19

with a fundamental Christian moral value?

0:38:190:38:22

Well, he looks at Christianity,

0:38:220:38:24

and he very disparagingly calls it slave morality.

0:38:240:38:26

And he calls it slave morality because he thinks it's a morality

0:38:260:38:29

that is focused on the worst off.

0:38:290:38:31

That is, the slaves of ancient Rome, who were the weak ones,

0:38:310:38:35

and needed a religion that gave them a sense of meaning,

0:38:350:38:39

a sense of power.

0:38:390:38:41

But they had no power in this world, so they tried to...

0:38:410:38:43

He says, and he puts it so powerfully,

0:38:430:38:46

they lie their weakness into a strength.

0:38:460:38:48

So he thinks these Christian values - humility, poverty, meekness -

0:38:480:38:53

he thinks these are values that make it safe for the weakest in society,

0:38:530:38:58

but he thinks eventually,

0:38:580:39:00

when these values triumph and become everyone's values,

0:39:000:39:03

they inevitably make for mediocrity.

0:39:030:39:06

But his criticism of the weak really troubles me,

0:39:060:39:09

because these are works that have no time, it seems to me, for the weak,

0:39:090:39:13

-for compassion.

-Yeah.

0:39:130:39:15

It's not that Nietzsche thought we should step on the weak.

0:39:150:39:18

What he thought is, we shouldn't be obsessed with the weak.

0:39:180:39:20

And that is so strange to us, because we think, "And what's wrong with compassion?"

0:39:200:39:24

But he did have a problem with compassion.

0:39:240:39:26

Is this one of the reasons that

0:39:260:39:28

he is so anti the emerging isms of the day?

0:39:280:39:30

So socialism, communism...

0:39:300:39:32

Well, a lot of communists,

0:39:320:39:34

a lot of socialists, may no longer believe in God,

0:39:340:39:38

but they still have this core Christian value of compassion.

0:39:380:39:42

And Nietzsche says, when you're obsessed with compassion,

0:39:420:39:44

when you're obsessed with how the worst off are doing,

0:39:440:39:47

that gets you into a mentality where what is valued is contentment.

0:39:470:39:51

He calls that herd happiness, and he says that is only worthy of animals.

0:39:510:39:55

We are worthy of so much more.

0:39:550:39:57

He says, if you gear everything to making the worst off as well as

0:39:570:40:01

possible, you take your eyes off the idea of the great individuals who

0:40:010:40:06

often are extremely egotistical, we would say selfish.

0:40:060:40:10

But he says they need that selfishness to make their achievements,

0:40:100:40:13

because it's their achievements that really drive civilisation and culture at its highest peaks.

0:40:130:40:19

Christian morality was something that Nietzsche believed

0:40:200:40:23

was positively dangerous for the future of mankind.

0:40:230:40:27

If humanity was to survive, it needed the great individuals,

0:40:270:40:31

the very geniuses that he thought the slave morality of Christian culture was holding down.

0:40:310:40:37

But there was a system of values that he did admire.

0:40:400:40:43

He also talks about master morality.

0:40:440:40:47

What's going on there?

0:40:470:40:49

He's harkening back to the world of the ancient Romans and the ancient Greeks.

0:40:490:40:53

They were both massive slave-owning societies.

0:40:530:40:55

He said, these people were masterful in a way that, with their gods,

0:40:550:40:59

they celebrated themselves.

0:40:590:41:01

Someone like Achilles, the great warrior - he could worship Ares,

0:41:010:41:05

the God of War, but in doing that, he was worshipping himself.

0:41:050:41:08

So he says, the masters have a religion that affirms themselves,

0:41:080:41:13

whereas the slaves have a religion of Christianity

0:41:130:41:17

which actually disavows their nature.

0:41:170:41:20

The master morality of the Greeks, as Nietzsche saw it,

0:41:220:41:25

glorified ambition, strength and power, and despised compassion.

0:41:250:41:31

Nietzsche was convinced that a revision of moral values

0:41:330:41:36

was needed for a post-Christian future,

0:41:360:41:39

and that such a morality needed moral legislators.

0:41:390:41:43

In his letters, he announced that his next task was a magnum opus,

0:41:450:41:49

in which he would lay out a new value system to fill the void.

0:41:490:41:55

But it wasn't to be.

0:41:560:41:58

In April 1888, Nietzsche moved to Turin.

0:42:090:42:12

This would be his home for the rest of his sane life.

0:42:140:42:18

When he arrived here, he was at his most brilliantly productive.

0:42:180:42:22

In an almost constant state of euphoria,

0:42:220:42:24

he produced four books in a year,

0:42:240:42:27

and as he walked through the city, he said he felt like a god.

0:42:270:42:31

But it was in the beauty of this Italian city

0:42:340:42:37

that Nietzsche's mind began to decay.

0:42:370:42:40

And it's in the letters he wrote at the start of 1888

0:42:420:42:45

that the very first signs of his madness can be glimpsed.

0:42:450:42:48

These letters give us a troubling insight

0:42:530:42:55

into Nietzsche's state of mind at the time.

0:42:550:42:58

Rather than the brilliance that once poured onto the page,

0:42:580:43:02

these are bizarre and deranged.

0:43:020:43:05

Here he is writing to Bismarck,

0:43:060:43:08

one of the most powerful statesmen in Prussia,

0:43:080:43:10

but he signs himself the Antichrist.

0:43:100:43:14

On others, he calls himself Dionysus, the Greek god.

0:43:140:43:17

And here he simply ends, "the crucified one".

0:43:170:43:22

Nietzsche had megalomaniac tendencies,

0:43:260:43:28

claiming that he was preparing an event which had the potential

0:43:280:43:32

to split the history of humanity into two halves.

0:43:320:43:36

The owners of the house where he was staying were alarmed

0:43:380:43:41

by his ecstatic piano playing.

0:43:410:43:43

Sometimes they could just about make out that he was

0:43:430:43:46

leaping about his room stark naked, yelling,

0:43:460:43:49

as if he was recreating a Dionysian orgy.

0:43:490:43:52

Events came to a climax in one of Turin's piazzas.

0:43:590:44:03

Nietzsche saw a coachman thrashing his horse with a whip.

0:44:040:44:08

He flung his arms around the animal's neck,

0:44:080:44:11

and with tears streaming, collapsed to the ground.

0:44:110:44:14

The final sane act of a man who had spent his life criticising

0:44:150:44:20

the weakness of human compassion

0:44:200:44:22

was one of profound pity.

0:44:220:44:25

Seven days later, he was incarcerated in an asylum in Basel.

0:44:290:44:34

Nietzsche never regained his sanity.

0:44:460:44:48

At the age of 44,

0:44:500:44:51

one of the most searing philosophical minds in human history

0:44:510:44:55

had disintegrated.

0:44:550:44:57

For the next decade, until his death in 1900, he'd write nothing.

0:44:580:45:03

When he arrived at the clinic, the friend who brought him wrote,

0:45:060:45:09

"He suffers from delusions of infinite grandeur.

0:45:090:45:12

"It's hopeless.

0:45:120:45:14

"I've never seen such a horrific picture of destruction."

0:45:140:45:18

No-one knows exactly what caused Nietzsche's descent into madness.

0:45:280:45:34

But while Nietzsche's mind collapsed,

0:45:340:45:36

his work started to take on a life of its own.

0:45:360:45:40

In 1887, Nietzsche was brought here, to his sister Elisabeth's house,

0:46:010:46:06

to live out his remaining years.

0:46:060:46:09

Declared clinically insane, until his death,

0:46:260:46:30

Elisabeth would be his sole carer.

0:46:300:46:32

While Nietzsche lived here,

0:46:340:46:35

Elisabeth treated her brother like an attraction in a sideshow.

0:46:350:46:39

She invited visitors in to stare at him,

0:46:390:46:41

and she held soirees for his disciples,

0:46:410:46:44

while his disturbed groaning could be heard from upstairs.

0:46:440:46:48

Today the house is a shrine to Nietzsche,

0:46:500:46:52

created by his younger sister,

0:46:520:46:54

who dressed him in white as if a prophet.

0:46:540:46:57

Yet its pristine rooms are chillingly devoid of any trace of his personality.

0:46:570:47:02

Elisabeth collected together Nietzsche's writings,

0:47:050:47:08

including notebooks for an unpublished masterwork

0:47:080:47:11

that Nietzsche had planned before his mind shut down.

0:47:110:47:16

Notebooks he'd never intended the world to see.

0:47:170:47:21

What exactly is it that we're looking at here?

0:47:240:47:27

So here we're looking at two notebooks of Nietzsche's,

0:47:270:47:30

in which he is working up to this great work called The Will to Power,

0:47:300:47:35

a work of tremendous ambition, because what he's attempting,

0:47:350:47:38

you can see from this notebook here, is a revaluation of all values.

0:47:380:47:42

I mean, it's extraordinarily exciting to see this,

0:47:420:47:45

because here he is trying to overturn the whole of Western morality,

0:47:450:47:49

because people deep down no longer believe in it,

0:47:490:47:52

though they are going on, like the herd, as he calls most of us,

0:47:520:47:56

living their lives by it, but there is no longer a god to back it up.

0:47:560:48:00

So he's saying, we need to find a new morality,

0:48:000:48:03

and that's his fundamental task.

0:48:030:48:06

Is it as simple as it sounds?

0:48:060:48:07

The Will to Power - is he saying that power is the identifying,

0:48:070:48:11

organising principle for humanity?

0:48:110:48:13

He's saying, actually,

0:48:130:48:15

if we look at how people live and behave and strive,

0:48:150:48:19

really what they're after in life, from infancy onwards, is power.

0:48:190:48:23

And therefore, any morality that's going to fit with human nature needs

0:48:230:48:27

to be a morality that sees power as the goal that we all seek,

0:48:270:48:32

albeit in very different ways.

0:48:320:48:34

So it's more than just something -

0:48:340:48:36

because we've got Darwin at this time, with his survival of the fittest.

0:48:360:48:40

-We do.

-But Nietzsche is taking that idea way beyond what Darwin is saying.

0:48:400:48:43

He is. Superficially they sound similar, but in fact,

0:48:430:48:46

they're profoundly different.

0:48:460:48:47

Nietzsche despised Darwin,

0:48:470:48:51

and he has contempt for any way of living life that simply seeks to

0:48:510:48:57

preserve yourself and your progeny.

0:48:570:49:00

And the real difference is that the will to power

0:49:000:49:03

is concerned that human beings should do more than

0:49:030:49:05

merely preserve themselves.

0:49:050:49:07

They should aim for great things.

0:49:070:49:10

They should aim to be great statesmen,

0:49:100:49:13

or to be great philosophers, and design new worlds, as it were.

0:49:130:49:16

And that might involve sacrificing preservation.

0:49:160:49:19

It might involve an early death.

0:49:190:49:20

It might involve leaving no children.

0:49:200:49:22

For him, the will to power is about seeking the exceptional.

0:49:220:49:27

But Nietzsche seems to have recognised the flaw in his own idea.

0:49:290:49:33

Perhaps his last sane act was the decision

0:49:340:49:38

not to publish what he'd written.

0:49:380:49:41

Nietzsche was himself against all philosophies

0:49:410:49:44

that attempted to reduce the world to one principle,

0:49:440:49:48

whatever that principle might be.

0:49:480:49:50

And in a sense, his attempt to reduce the world to the will to power was,

0:49:500:49:55

as he would put it, intellectually unclean,

0:49:550:49:58

and I think that's why this work ultimately failed.

0:49:580:50:02

Because he realised that he was being untrue to himself.

0:50:020:50:07

And what clues are in these notebooks themselves

0:50:070:50:11

that he has given up?

0:50:110:50:13

Well, I mean, there are small signs

0:50:130:50:15

- for example, here, in this version,

0:50:150:50:17

he's written a shopping list over these profound thoughts.

0:50:170:50:22

And here we have the word toothbrush. Zahnburste.

0:50:220:50:25

So I think if you start writing shopping lists over your great

0:50:250:50:28

masterworks, that suggests that you no longer have respect for them.

0:50:280:50:32

But the work he abandoned WAS published,

0:50:360:50:39

with devastating consequences.

0:50:390:50:42

Nietzsche died here of a stroke in 1900.

0:50:430:50:46

But his death gave Elisabeth the opportunity

0:50:470:50:50

to appropriate not just the dog days of his life,

0:50:500:50:54

but his life's work.

0:50:540:50:56

Elisabeth had hero-worshipped her brother,

0:50:570:51:00

and lived her life in his shadow.

0:51:000:51:02

Now, as literary executor,

0:51:040:51:06

she set about publishing Nietzsche's notebooks,

0:51:060:51:09

in a collection entitled Will to Power.

0:51:090:51:12

Although she worked with various editors,

0:51:140:51:16

she simply dismissed them if they disagreed with her.

0:51:160:51:20

Nietzsche's work was edited and manipulated

0:51:200:51:23

to suit her own political ends.

0:51:230:51:27

Elisabeth was a supporter of the Nazis,

0:51:290:51:31

and began to court the party's leaders.

0:51:310:51:35

In 1934, Adolf Hitler visited this house,

0:51:350:51:39

and she even gave him her brother's walking stick.

0:51:390:51:42

Elisabeth was so extraordinarily successful in promoting her brother

0:51:450:51:49

and his works that by the end of the 1930s,

0:51:490:51:53

Nietzschean thought and themes pervaded German society.

0:51:530:51:58

And this was disturbingly reflected in one of the most compelling

0:52:000:52:03

propaganda films of all time.

0:52:030:52:06

In 1934, Nazi supporters gathered in Nuremberg

0:52:180:52:22

to hear their leader speak.

0:52:220:52:25

It was a moment captured in a film commissioned by Hitler himself.

0:52:280:52:33

Terrifying, electrifying,

0:52:330:52:35

the words and rituals of the Nazis echo Nietzschean thought.

0:52:350:52:40

It was called Triumph of the Will.

0:52:410:52:44

The film begins with Hitler descending from the clouds,

0:52:500:52:53

echoing Zarathustra,

0:52:530:52:55

an Ubermensch coming down from the mountains

0:52:550:52:58

with his new morality to be greeted by the herd.

0:52:580:53:01

An Ubermensch offering a system of morality

0:53:030:53:05

in which traditional Christian values are to be inverted.

0:53:050:53:09

Where the state will exert the will of the most powerful,

0:53:170:53:19

and the weak and the helpless will be destroyed

0:53:190:53:22

to generate a greater humanity.

0:53:220:53:24

So closely associated had Nietzsche's ideas become with the aims of

0:53:370:53:41

the National Socialists that one of its most influential thinkers,

0:53:410:53:45

Alfred Baeumler, said, "When we call out heil Hitler,

0:53:450:53:50

"we greet with the same cry Friedrich Nietzsche."

0:53:500:53:54

And yet, had he lived to see this, Nietzsche would have been horrified.

0:53:570:54:02

His Ubermensch wasn't a master of eugenics.

0:54:040:54:07

He was he was a symbol of man's potential.

0:54:070:54:10

His will to power was not a call to nationalism, which he despised,

0:54:100:54:15

but a recognition of our drive to overcome our limitations.

0:54:150:54:20

And he was vocally opposed to anti-Semitism.

0:54:200:54:24

The Nietzsche of the Nazis was a hideous parody.

0:54:240:54:28

Just months before his final collapse, Nietzsche wrote,

0:54:340:54:37

"I confess that the deepest objection to the eternal recurrence,

0:54:370:54:41

"my truly most abysmal thought, is always Mother and Sister."

0:54:410:54:47

How prophetic his words turned out to be.

0:54:490:54:51

And yet perhaps the blame for his misuse is not entirely Elisabeth's.

0:54:540:54:58

Nietzsche would never have advocated Hitler's Final Solution,

0:54:590:55:03

but he was naive if he thought that his work would not be misunderstood.

0:55:030:55:09

Evil loves nothing better than a void, and the philosopher's clever,

0:55:090:55:15

ambiguous aphorisms could easily be put to the service of evil.

0:55:150:55:20

Even when he was entirely sane,

0:55:200:55:21

Nietzsche said that bad would be done in his name.

0:55:210:55:25

The sister and the brother must share responsibility

0:55:260:55:30

for the life that his work took on after his death.

0:55:300:55:35

A century after Nietzsche's death,

0:55:470:55:50

the crisis created by the murder of God

0:55:500:55:52

may seem exaggerated to us today.

0:55:520:55:55

The modern world hasn't collapsed.

0:55:570:56:00

God as the unchallengeable source of moral values seems to have stepped

0:56:000:56:04

aside relatively quietly.

0:56:040:56:06

But maybe that's because we lack Nietzsche's unsettling prophetic vision,

0:56:080:56:13

his wild imagination.

0:56:130:56:15

If we choose to wear the blinkers of the herd,

0:56:150:56:18

could it be that we are staring with unseeing eyes into the very abyss

0:56:180:56:24

that he predicted?

0:56:240:56:25

He believed that what would fill the void was

0:56:280:56:31

a chaos of cultural preferences.

0:56:310:56:34

A mess, an overload of personal choices.

0:56:340:56:38

Pernicious, in Nietzsche's eyes,

0:56:380:56:41

because they perpetuated the empty values

0:56:410:56:43

of the herd that he so despised.

0:56:430:56:47

And perhaps Nietzsche's most chilling vision

0:56:500:56:52

was of the humanity that would populate this post-Christian world.

0:56:520:56:57

These people he called the last men, and for them,

0:56:590:57:03

he reserved his most fervent fury.

0:57:030:57:06

These were men and women

0:57:070:57:09

who'd turned their backs on challenging ideals,

0:57:090:57:12

but felt they were content.

0:57:120:57:14

They had a banal existence.

0:57:150:57:18

They did everything in their powers to limit excesses of joy or sorrow.

0:57:180:57:22

Their concern was the trivial and the narcissistic,

0:57:240:57:28

and so they lived lives of timid mediocrity,

0:57:280:57:32

fooling themselves that they were happy.

0:57:320:57:34

They bought into what Nietzsche described

0:57:360:57:39

as the religion of comfortableness.

0:57:390:57:42

Could this be a devastating description of the modern world?

0:57:440:57:48

A world that shies from the risk of striving for greatness.

0:57:480:57:52

A world that shuns higher values and celebrates the mundane.

0:57:520:57:57

The last men are Nietzsche's greatest fear.

0:57:570:58:00

They look at a star,

0:58:010:58:03

by which he means the fiery potential of beautiful lives fully lived,

0:58:030:58:08

the meaning of all existence,

0:58:080:58:10

and they have no desire even to pursue it.

0:58:100:58:14

They merely blink.

0:58:150:58:17

Before Nietzsche fell into madness he wrote,

0:58:190:58:22

"If you stare long enough into the abyss,

0:58:220:58:25

"the abyss will stare back into you."

0:58:250:58:28

The chaos that confronted Nietzsche in his final moments of sanity is

0:58:310:58:36

arguably our own.

0:58:360:58:37

The question of not just how we should live,

0:58:380:58:42

but the point of our lives,

0:58:420:58:44

is still one of the greatest challenges of the modern world.

0:58:440:58:49

If the mind of Nietzsche has made you think,

0:58:590:59:01

then explore further with the Open University

0:59:010:59:03

to discover how other great minds have influenced our world today.

0:59:030:59:07

Go to the address at the bottom of the screen

0:59:070:59:09

and follow the links to the Open University.

0:59:090:59:12

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