Fragmentation, Experimentation and Authority
Philosophy

Consulting Process
Deconstruction

 

Nietzsche on History

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Text length: 1,600 words

Excerpts from On the Use and Abuse of History for Life , 1873

by Friedrich Nietzsche , translated by Ian C. Johnston, © 1998 by Ian C. Johnston. This text is in the public domain, released September 1998

  • The stories we tell about the past affect the future - one's attitude toward the past determines whether one will be a conservative or a revolutionary going forward
  • History is constructed - all recollection of the past is colored by a human perspective and it is important to be aware of how this perspective is used or abused
  • Data gathering must be selective - it is easy to be overwhelmed and paralyzed by information, so we must carefully select the information that helps us move forward
  • Keywords:
    History, monumental, antiquarian, critical, unhistorical, memory, past, future, health, life, inspiration, jingoism, reverence, justice, art, philosophy, innovation


    Summary

    Unlike the beasts, who live only in the present moment and completely unhistorically, humans cannot escape their own history.  We are incapable of forgetting, and carry our past around with us.  This can be both a blessing and a burden.  When used wisely and moderately, history can be used in the service of life – to raise our spirits, to conserve what is good, or to overcome past mistakes.  However, a surfeit of history can be destructive, distorting and crushing the present and future under the weight of the past.  We must learn how to live unhistorically to some extent.

    Nietzsche identifies three types of historical consciousness: monumental history that celebrates and derives inspiration from the glories of the past, antiquarian history that honors tradition and continuity, and critical history that condemns and overcomes the failures of the past.  Each has its uses – and potential abuses.  We must understand how we relate to our past in order to go forward into the future.


    Historical vs. unhistorical living

    Observe the herd which is grazing beside you. It does not know what yesterday or today is. It springs around, eats, rests, digests, jumps up again, and so from morning to night and from day to day, with its likes and dislikes closely tied to the peg of the moment, and thus neither melancholy nor weary. To witness this is hard for man, because he boasts to himself that his human race is better than the beast and yet looks with jealousy at its happiness…

    But he also wonders about himself, that he is not able to learn to forget and that he always hangs onto past things. No matter how far or how fast he runs, this chain runs with him. It is something amazing: the moment, in one sudden motion there, in one sudden motion gone, before nothing, afterwards nothing, nevertheless comes back again as a ghost and disturbs the tranquility of each later moment... 

    Thus the beast lives unhistorically, for it gets up in the present like a number without any odd fraction left over; it does not know how to play a part, hides nothing, and appears in each moment exactly and entirely what it is. Thus a beast can be nothing other than honest. By contrast, the human being resists the large and ever increasing burden of the past, which pushes him down or bows him over…

    The stronger the roots which the inner nature of a person has, the more he will appropriate or forcibly take from the past. And if we imagine the most powerful and immense nature, then we would recognize there that for it there would be no frontier at all beyond which the historical sense would be able to work as an injurious overseer... This is the specific principle which the reader is invited to consider: that for the health of a single individual, a people, and a culture the unhistorical and the historical are equally essential

    … Insofar as history stands in the service of life, it stands in the service of an unhistorical power and will therefore, in this subordinate position, never be able to (and should never be able to) become pure science, something like mathematics. However, the problem to what degree living requires the services of history generally is one of the most important questions and concerns with respect to the health of a human being, a people, or a culture. For with a certain excess of history, living crumbles away and degenerates. Moreover, history itself also degenerates through this decay.

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