From
Clark Kent to Superman
Nietzsche’s main idea in the first
part of Thus Spoke Zarathustra, is
the evolution of humanity towards the Übermensch,
which in German translates literally into the Overman, but is commonly
understood and translated as, the Superman. Thus Nietzsche starts off his book
with a short prologue introducing Zarathustra, the prophet of the Übermensch,
and his attempt to speak to the world about his revelation. But in order to
truly understand Thus Spoke Zarathustra,
and the message Nietzsche is trying to communicate to our frail species, one
must first understand the man himself. Nietzsche is considered one of the
premier philosophers of the 19th century. Possessing a strong
dislike of organized religion, and a special hatred for Christianity (so much
so that he in fact declared himself to be the antichrist in his book aptly
titled The Antichrist), much of his
work revolves around a central concept: the death of God. Not literally of
course, because Nietzsche never believed that God lived in the first place, but
that the concept of god is unbelievable in a world of technological
advancements. With God’s death comes the death of the values that God laid down
for humanity, first through the Ten Commandments, then through the prophets.
According to Nietzsche, new values are needed to replace the old ones, and
that’s where Thus Spoke Zarathustra comes
into play. In the novel, Zarathustra serves as a new kind of prophet, preaching
the coming of the Übermensch,
and the new values that follow it. Thus
Spoke Zarathustra serves as his bible, communicating Nietzsche’s values through
the words of Zarathustra.
Personally,
I find Nietzsche’s new values fascinating. Many of his writings are
pessimistic, directed toward his ultimate goal of nihilism, the rejection of
all religion and moral principles that were “taught” to us by God. The Übermensch serves as the ultimate goal
for this nihilism, the evolution of mankind passed the need for Gods.
Zarathustra speaks of the three stages of metamorphosis one must undertake in
order to move back gone, the camel, the lion, and the child. As a camel, one
renounces all of life’s comforts and exercises self-discipline and control over
their actions for the sake of knowledge. Once one has done that, the camel
transforms into a lion, a fierce and proud ego-centric beast, which rejects outside
influence and thoughts that are not their own. The child, which directly succeeds
it, represents man reborn. As a child is the beginning of life, so is it the
end of life, and the birth of the Übermensch.
The child is the most important stage, it is new creation. Man bust be created
anew to allow for the coming of the Übermensch,
and the values he teaches. The values that he dictates, make up the rest of
part one, and emphasize the shift away from the slave morality of the Abrahamic
religions, and towards the reclamation of the master moralities and values that
are represented by Superman and his teachings of nihilism.
So, we discussed what you were thinking about the other day -- you were going to look compare Superman the character with this ideal "Superman"?
ReplyDeleteThis sounds really cool! Usually I can’t stand Nietzsche, in spite of the fact that we share some ideas (I consider myself a semi-nihilist). He comes off to me as very smug, as seen in how he disdains Christianity for “celebrating mediocrity.” However, you will be happy to know that your post made me want to read the book. My dislike of him notwithstanding, I find the ideas really interesting, especially that of the “metamorphosis.” The placement of the lion in the progression seems weird to me, but I guess I’ll just have to read the book to understand it. You didn’t say in the post what you were going to do your essay on, but I think that basically anything you got from the book could make a great project. I like the idea that Ms. Romano mentioned in the previous comment, and you could do any number of things jumping off of nihilism, atheism, existentialism, etc. I guess our projects will be somewhat similar, as Nietzsche’s ideas work very well with postwar disillusionment and I plan to talk a lot about nihilism in my project. I look forward to seeing how your project turns out!
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