Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by youngbullind 2828 days ago
Yeah, it's not been going too well for him since 1900.
3 comments

Nietzsche is one of the great poeple of history. Such people often live short or troubled lives. Ie, Alexander, Joan of Arc, Mdm Curie or Van Gogh.

Often, the tragedy and the greatness are deeply connected.

This is, I think, the motivation behind formulating the idea of the Will to Power.

The question, if you can chose: What is better, to be a great person, one that makes a lasting (hopefully positive) mark on the world, or to be a happy nobody, instantly forgotten when you die?

Everyone is entitled to their own answer to that question.

Iliad, book 9, Achilles speaking:

  My fates long since by Thetis were disclosed,
  And each alternate, life or fame, proposed:
  Here if I stay, before the Trojan town,
  Short is my date, but deathless my renown;
  If I return, I quit immortal praise
  For years on years, and long-extended days.
  Convinced, though late, I find my fond mistake,
  And warn the Greeks the wiser choice to make;
  To quit these shores, their native seats enjoy,
  Nor hope the fall of heaven-defended Troy.
Good example. This has concerned people throughout the ages. And if you reject Heaven and reincarnation, it may be the only path to eternal "life".
Which did he choose in the end?
Achilles is mortally wounded in Troy by an arrow through his heel.
His renown lasts until this day, 3000 years later. The answer is in the quoted text.
There isn't a "better" life. It's all the same in the end, we'll all be nobodies.
In the future, we'll have "Elon Musk's Guide to Better Living", and then there'll be the same debate.
I think of Elon more as a modern Nocola Tesla. (As does, it seems, Elon himself.)

The closest current analogy to Nietzsche would be Jordan Peterson, I think. Their problem definitions are very similar (ie to fight nihilsm), but it seems to me that Nietzsche's proposed path is more heroic, but also harder.

I agree completely on Elon; that’s probably the same fate other tech greats will be granted as well.

While Peterson’s most basic premise to “fight against nihilism”, is respectable I don’t think he is philosophically well-equipped enough to have the same lasting effect as Nietzsche—if you listen to his arguments it’s clear that he’s quite ignorant of a whole swath of philosophical developments that have occurred in the past few decades. His arguments are not sophisticated. Someone with a basic education in the humanities can craft them just as easily. His whining about the death of individuality is also shallow—he doesn’t even realize the very shape of the concept of induiviudality itself has changed over time. He’s praying for the ressurection if old concepts, which is a method the ignores the particularités and needs of our own historical situation. Part of this could be a result of his trying to reach a wide audience, part of it could be his lack of capability, idk. At any rate, even though Nietzsche has an aphorism about writing for your readers it’s clear he himself didn’t do so, and his reknown partly stems from the uniqueness of his style, which is impeccable. In this regard Peterson doesn’t hold a candle to Nietzsche. Of course he may still be remembered, given he’s speaking for a different era, but idk, lacking argumentative or stylistic ingenuity typically doesn’t net you a spot in the hall of fame.

It sounds like you know more of this than me. Do you have any specifics in mind about the change in the concept of individuality?

That said, I also see Peterson as clearly adding much less than Nietzsche (if anything at all) on pure philosophy. He is a psychologist, first and foremost, that happens to draw on some concepts from philosophy and biology (developed by others) for the purpose of providing a path for people (mostly young men) that have lost the sense of purpose.

In this confrontation with the inner emptiness, he seems to grapple with the same problem as Nietzsche, but with a more practical approach.

Indeed, as a clinical psychologist, his task is precisely to formulate it in a way that can reach people.

For those who have never had any serious struggles with the problem (nihilism, lack of purpose), he probably looks like a quack.

Nicola Tesla actually invented thing. AFAIK, Musk didn't; he's above all a successful businessman but has little to no technical competencies.
There is a lot of technical work to turning an invention into an affordable and dependable product.

In fact, I would wager the majority of engineering/math/physics/etc happens after the proof of concept phase.

In that case, Tesla would have lived and died happier if he'd had a Musk around to help him find a way to scalably and sustainably bring what he invented to the world.
You are right. Maybe Edison would be a better example.
I disagree that Nietzsche is one of the great people of history. I believe he's currently fashionable at the moment because of the West's love affair with narcissistic self-imagining, but the obsession will pass when we grow up and get over it.

Jane Austen made greater contributions to the Western dialectic but we tend to dismiss her as a 'mere' novelist. I submit that we'll have grown up as a society when we start to recognize that Austen, with her emotional maturity and capacity to give her characters real, palpable depth, was the far greater figure.

In what sense?

He's been one of the most influential philosophers in the 20th century, both through Heidegger's influence -- especially in France, and through neo-Marxist (Frankfurt school) engagement with him. Finally there's Freud and his school of psychoanalysis, who took a lot of inspiration from N.

> Finally there's Freud and his school of psychoanalysis, who took a lot of inspiration from N.

That doesn't really play to his advantage either.

   That doesn't really play to his 
   advantage either.
Could you elaborate on this?

The parts of Freudian psychoanalysis that have not passed the test of time (e.g. Oedipus complex, sexual differentiation, theory of homosexuality) clearly don't come via Nietzsche, whereas Freud's approach to memory and its malleability by our desires and hopes, which is most clearly from N, is not only alive and kicking, but as far as I can tell, now (in suitably modernised form) the dominant understanding of memory in contemporary psychology.

> whereas Freud's approach to memory and its malleability by our desires and hopes, which is most clearly from N, is not only alive and kicking, but as far as I can tell, now (in suitably modernised form) the dominant understanding of memory in contemporary psychology.

It's like saying that homeopathy principles are sound because vaccines are also based on `things that make you sick`.

I'd rather suggest you try to get a copy of `the black book of psychoanalysis` as I completely subscribe to the views developed in it and it'd be more on the point than any tldr; I might give you. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2005/sep/25/books.france

I don't understand what you are trying to say. I merely pointed to the undisputed popularity of psychoanalysis in much of the 20th century, and Nietzsche's undisputed influence on it, especially the conception of memory. This is orthogonal to questions of whether psychoanalysis is right or wrong. The

Guardian article adds nothing to my claims about popularity and influence.

That's not what you say about memory.

The Guardian article is to tease you into getting the book.

You're judging Nietzsche using circular logic.

You're saying that because he's respected by some academics, he is objectively worthy of respect. But that's contingent on those very same academics being worthy of respect. And I'm not sure that they are, personally.

This is a major problem in academia and other areas. The academics end up being judged by fellow academics, and any claim to merit becomes completely circular. That's how you end up with things like Brutalist architecture -- it's because the architects are seeking approval from fellow architects; and not the people who have to live in, and around, what they build.

Even worse, those academics who "suck up" to other academics end up having the favour returned to them. He scratches your back, you scratch his, then he scratches yours again... You end up with citation rings.

See Taleb's Skin In The Game.

   worthy of respect. 
I did not speak of "respect" or "merit", I was discussing "influence". They are distinct concepts. What is gained by conflating them?
OK, fair enough.
The person you're responding to never made a claim to objectivity. The fact that someone is one of the most influential figures in the history of twentieth century thought and culture is, in my view, a very good reason to engage with them. If you care about our common world, and its history, then you may well want to understand Nietzsche.
It probably wasn't much better before.