Friedrich Nietzsche was a nineteenth century
philosopher who is most remembered for his killer quotes and incredibly large mustache. The main goal of his work was aimed to uncover
the fact that there is no universal truth, and that the human condition is in a constant
state of overcoming our animalistic urges. He came up with many amazing quotes that we
still use to this very day, including “What doesn’t kill me makes me stronger”, and
“God is dead”. While he is often misunderstood, and his work
has been used for the justification of evil over the past hundred years, the philosophy
of Friedrich Nietzsche truly has changed the way people live in the 21st Century. Today, we’re going to talk about his life,
philosophy, and legacy. Early Life and Influences to His Philosophy
Friedrich Nietzsche was born on October 15th, 1844 in Saxony, Prussia, which is now apart
of modern-day Germany. He just so happened to be born on the same
birthday as King Friedrich Wilhelm IV, which is why his parents decided to name him after
their ruler. He grew up in a very strict Protestant family. His father was a priest, and his grandfather
published books defending Lutheranism. His father contracted an excruciatingly painful
brain disease that lasted for a year before he died. And in 1849, Friedreich's younger brother,
Ludwig, died when he was only 2 years old. By the time he started going to Kindergarten,
Nietzsche had seen so much death and suffering in his young life, he was already a very serious
person. He was nearsighted and got constant headaches
from a condition called myopia, so he already wore glasses as a young child. He looked and acted like a tiny professor
who was too grown-up for childish games. Obviously, he wasn’t very popular with his
classmates, and he didn’t make very many friends. Most of his childhood was spent surrounded
by women. His mother, grandmother, and two aunts all
shared in the responsibilities of raising him. In 1956, Friedrich Nietzsche, his sister Elisabeth,
and his mother moved to their own house in Naumburg, Germany. That house would become the place where he
wrote his most important work, and the property has been preserved today as a museum. Nietzsche attended a Christian prep school,
and later transferred to a boarding school. He never got particularly good grades, but
his father had a state job before he passed away, which meant that he got a full scholarship
to any college of his choice. He chose to study theology and philosophy
at Bonn University. He originally wanted to become a priest, like
his father. After just two semesters, he realized that
his personal beliefs were in direct conflict with the theological curriculum, and he often
got into arguments with his professors. He had to transfer to The University of Leipzig,
and he studied the ancient languages of Latin and Greek, instead. As a student, Nietzsche contracted syphilis
from a prostitute at a brothel, which made him physically weak and in constant pain for
the rest of his life. Syphilis is also known for causing people
to fall into madness, which did happen to him, eventually. At that time, there wasn’t a cure for syphilis. Today, it’s treated with penicillin, but
that would not be invented until 1923, after his death. Nietzsche spent much of his free time listening
to live performances of orchestras and operas. The music was so beautiful, it helped him
to forget about his pain. He was particularly fascinated by the work
of composer Richard Wagner, and he would pay to see each new performance 3 or 4 times in
a row. He was completely inspired by the tragedy
of the characters in Wagner’s operas, and he eventually got to meet the composer. They became very good friends, and Richard
Wagner was like a father figure to Nietzsche. When he was 24 years old, he worked as a full-time
professor of languages at the University of Basel. He taught for several years, even though he
claimed that he was not all that happy in the classroom. He decided to volunteer his time as an orderly
at the hospital after school. But he ended up contracting dysentery and
diphtheria from the patients. His health continued to decline so dramatically,
he would sometimes end up bedridden for several days straight. He chose to retire from being a professor
in his 30’s, and lived on a very modest pension. For Nietzsche, simply staying alive was a
constant battle. He spent so much time in bed with nothing
to do, so he was always thinking about the meaning of life and humanity. This is when he began to write books on his
philosophy. The Crux of Nietzsche’s Philosophy
Friedrich Nietzsche believed that there is no absolute truth, and that people should
not have blind faith in their church or political leaders. Today, this sounds like common sense, but,
back in the 1800’s, people were raised that there were absolute right and wrong answers,
and nothing in-between. By telling people to inquire rather than to
just blindly accept something, he inspired future generations to completely change the
way we think. One of his most famous quotes, “God is Dead”
is used by Atheists everywhere, but it is actually misunderstood, and taken out of context. What he really said, was, “God is dead. God remains dead. And we have killed him. How shall we comfort ourselves, the murderers
of all murderers?” He wasn’t celebrating the death of God,
though. He was making a statement that more and more
people were losing faith all the time, and he believed that without Christianity, mankind
didn’t know how to figure out right and wrong. Without the existence of religion, people
often look up to their political leaders and royal families with god-like reverence, instead. He knew that people needed something else
to take its place. He wanted people to embrace the arts like
music, literature, and theater, instead, and that Shakespeare had just as much value to
human morality as the Bible, without giving away their ability to think for themselves. He believed that rules of society were developed
to keep people down, and maintain the status quo. For example, in Christianity, it is taught
that people should be like Jesus Christ, and not have a desire for material things. Nietzsche believes that this is only taught
to the poor to manipulate them to accept their station in life. If people are taught to feel shame for feeling
envious of others and desiring more, they may not try to achieve a higher status. And, therefore, if they’re happy with less,
they won’t cause a revolution against their government to demand more. Nietzsche tells us to own our selfish desires,
and that the rules of society are something that need to be overcome in order to get to
the real truth of our lives. Nietzsche believed that every individual person
should be in the process of “selbst uberwindung” or “self-overcoming”. If we are envious of someone else, this is
just a sign of what we really need in order to become our true selves. For example, if you feel envious of guys who
look muscular, it’s a sign you should go to the gym. If you’re jealous of someone who is rich,
you could find a job that makes more money...etcetera, etcetera. Everyone has their own dream, and if we refuse
to acknowledge these desires, we’re only going to make ourselves miserable. And even if we fail to achieve our goals,
at least we have the satisfaction of knowing we tried. Nietzsche said that if someone has succeeded
in overcoming obstacles while also accepting their failures with grace, they have become
an “ubermensch” or “superman”. He claimed that every man should aspire to
become like this. He said that most people are stuck in-between
their animal instincts, and the “ubermensch”, and there is a constant struggle between the
two impulses. He was one of the first people to come up
with the concept that “ignorance is bliss”, and that it’s easy to be happy as a human
if you just accept the status quo. He admits that the quest for knowledge and
to become the ubermensch might make him miserable along the way, but it was a life he chose
to pursue, nonetheless. Many people have read his concept of “ubermensch”
and misinterpreted it as the ability to become someone who is superior to the rest of humanity. Others, like the Nazis, would see this as
proof that certain races were more civilized, and therefore, more human than others. Personal Life Even though Friedrich Nietzsche is a household
name today, his work would not be translated into other languages until the 1890’s, and
by that point, he was already too sick to enjoy his new popularity. So, while his philosophy was well-known in
Germany, he wasn’t exactly becoming rich and famous. In fact, his philosophy made him very unpopular,
and it ruined his friendship with Richard Wagner, who thought he was going mad. Nietzsche decided to isolate himself in the
Swiss Alps, where he could spend a lot of time in nature. He often went on long walks thinking of nothing
but philosophy, only to go home and write his new ideas for his next book. He wrote several volumes of his ideas, and
sometimes got letters in the mail from fellow philosophers and people who wanted to be his
friend. He met a psychoanalyst named Lou Andreas-Salomé. When she read Nietzsche’s work, she felt
that his philosophy perfectly aligned with everything she had already been thinking. She was only 20 years old at that time, but
Nietzsche considered her to be his protege. Lou was trying to challenge the norms of society
by experimenting to see if men and women can truly be friends without sex getting in the
way. In 1882, Nietzsche decided to go on a year-long
vacation with Italy with Lou Andreas-Salomé, and their mutual friend, Paul Rée, who was
also a philosopher. The three friends wanted to buy an old monastery
and start an academic commune together so that they could live in a society that was
only filled with other like-minded intellectuals. Friedrich Nietzsche was excited, and hoped
that he could finally have a group of friends who understood him, but his family was totally
against it. His sister, Elisabeth, was always writing
him letters telling him to stop trying to make a cult. There was a bit of a love triangle, because
Friedrich and Paul were both in love with Lou, and they were competing to win her heart. Paul proposed to her first, but she rejected
him, saying that she liked him enough for them to live together, but more like “brother
and sister”. She claimed that sex got in the way of thinking
clearly, and she used Nietzsche’s own philosophy, saying said that society demands that women
get married, but she personally wished to remain celibate and focus on her academic
work. Even though he agreed to be friends, Friedrich
Nietzsche was still only human, and the more he got to know her, the more he was falling
in love. After all, Lou seemed to be the only woman
on the planet who completely understood his life’s work. He proposed to her, but she put him in the
friend zone, just like Paul Ree. In her defense, Nietzsche did have syphilis,
and marrying him would have meant that she would have contracted the disease, as well. But she continued to live with him- flirting,
teasing, and leading him on. He remained hopeful that she would eventually
come around, and he proposed to her two more times. No amount of intellectual reasoning could
overcome his human desire, and this situation became way too uncomfortable for the three
of them. His dream of starting a commune never happened,
and Lou and Paul rode away on their horse-drawn carriage, leaving Friedrich behind. It’s probably best that he got out of that
situation, though, because she later broke up with Paul Ree and married a man named Friedrich
Carl Andreas. They apparently remained celibate throughout
the entire course of their marriage. She actually did have sexual affairs, though,
which is just a bit hypocritical. She also had an emotional affair with none
other than Sigmund Freud. It turns out that all of this was one big
experiment to her, and in 1910, she published a book called The Erotic, where we learn that
she spent most of her life trying to analyze and document the differences between men and
women when it came to sex. Nietzsche’s Final Days
The relationship with Lou Andreas-Salomé completely traumatized Friedrich Nietzsche,
and he never got married. He often wrote about love, and how it can
make the most logical person feel like they’re going crazy. Instead of writing about his own life, Nietzsche
expressed his feelings in a book called Thus Spoke Zarathustra, about a man who isolated
himself in the mountains to find all of the wisdom in the world, but he could not find
any disciples to listen to him or follow him. So, he becomes one of the most lonely men
in the world. Since he was rejecting Christianity, Nietzsche
knew that mankind needed some kind of moral compass to live by. So he wrote Beyond Good and Evil, and addressed
all of the issues of what makes something good or bad. In 1888, he could feel his mind and body betraying
him. His last book was called The AntiChrist, where
he expressed his “transvaluation of all values”, where he was trying to come up
with a set of rules for morality that could replace Christianity. He saw himself as a martyr who was making
a sacrifice for the human race. In 1889, he was only 44 years old, and he
had a nervous breakdown. He was triggered into hysteria when he was
walking in the street of Turin, Italy, and he saw a man beating his horse with a whip. He ran to the horse, hugging its neck to protect
it. He was sobbing, and saying, “I understand
you.” His landlord, David Fino, had to usher him
out of the street, and get him back to his room. He spent the next two days laying on the couch
in a catatonic state, so Fino arranged for him to get home to Basel, Germany. Even though they had a falling out, Richard
Wagner and his wife were still his true friends. They were the ones to help him get into a
mental hospital. During one of the last moments where he was
responsive, he started to sketch a picture of a man and a woman hugging one another in
a long embrace, before he slipped into a permanent catatonic state. It was almost as if he was trying to say that
all of his philosophical work was nothing without someone to share it with, and that
at the end of his life, love was the one thing he truly wanted more than anything else. At the hospital, he was diagnosed with paralytic
dementia, which was a direct result of his battle with syphilis for over 20 years. But many people believe that the pressure
he put on himself to find the answer to morality without God, and to unravel the inner workings
of the human condition is what ultimately made him go crazy. He slipped into madness, and was unresponsive
when people tried to speak to him. He eventually died in the year 1900. The Dangers of Studying Nietzsche
Soon after his death, Friedrich Nietzsche’s work was being translated into multiple languages,
and it began to inspire people around the world. However, many people would read his work and
completely misunderstand what he was trying to say. Even his sister, Elisabeth, was a pseudo-Nazi,
and later re-published a second edition of his books. She rewrote certain sections of his work to
glorify the German race as being superior to the rest of the world. Because of this, Nietzsche has been blamed
for starting not just one, but two world wars. Before World War I, even priests were preaching
Nietzsche’s philosophy at their pulpits, relating it to their own countries. This caused a lot of national pride, especially
in Germany. Adolf Hitler became a fan of Nietzsche, and
he took this as a sign that Germans were far more evolved than the rest of the human race. During the rise of the Third Reich in the
1930’s, fascists often quoted Nietzsche, especially with his idea of the “ubermensch”. They wanted to make an entire race of the
supermen. Nietzsche’s sister welcomed Adolf Hitler
to the museum, where they posed together for a photograph next to the bust of Friedrich
Nietzsche. Even today, many critics of Nietzsche’s
work consider his books to be too dangerous for young people to read. Since his main philosophy is to question everything,
this can often manifest in acts of rebellion in teenagers. After all, if they question their teachers,
parents, and government, they are more likely to lash out. In the 1924, this happened in the case of
Leopold and Loeb. They were two college students from Chicago
who thought that they were so much smarter than everyone else, and that they were the
example of the “ubermensch” Nietzsche was writing about. They believed that they could commit the “perfect
crime”. So, they murdered a 14-year old boy. Their defense lawyer cited Nietzsche as the
reason why they committed murder. Yes, this is a ridiculous excuse, because
plenty of people read Nietzsche, and they don’t become serial killers. But the jury actually bought it, and the young
men got away with murder, because they considered his philosophy be just that dangerous. Despite his criticisms, civilization of the
20th and 21st century were completely changed by Nietzsche's teachings, and they continue
on to this day. Now, it is very normal to think critically
and question the world around us, and it is often the basis of liberal arts education. And for those of us who do not go to church,
we tend to learn about right and wrong from what we see on TV and in the movies. Whether we realize it or not, we are living
in a very Nietzsche world. It’s just a shame he didn’t live to see
it.