Part 1
Friedrich Nietzsche, A Fighter Against his Time
PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION (1895)
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HEN I BECAME
acquainted with the works of Friedrich
Nietzsche six years ago, ideas had already formed within me which were
similar to his. Independently, and from completely different directions,
I came to concepts which were in harmony with those Nietzsche expressed in
his writings:
Zarathustra,
Jenseits von Gut and Böse, Beyond Good and Evil,
Genealogie der Moral, Genealogy of Morals,
and
Götzendämmerung, Twilight of Idols.
In my little book which appeared in 1886,
Erkenntnistheorie der Goetheschen Weltanschauung,
The Theory of Knowledge in Goethe's World Conception,
this same way
of implicit thinking is expressed as one finds in the works of Nietzsche
mentioned above.
This is why I feel myself
impelled to draw a picture of Nietzsche's life of reflection and feeling.
I believe that such a picture will be most like Nietzsche when it is
created according to his last writings. This I have done. The earlier
writings of Nietzsche show him as a searcher. He presents himself
to us as a restless striver toward the heights. In his last writings
we see him when he has reached the summit, and at a height commensurate
with his very own spiritual quality. In most of the writings which have
appeared about Nietzsche up to now, this development is represented
as if in the various periods of his writing he had more or less contradictory
opinions. I have tried to show that there is no question of a change
of opinion in Nietzsche, but rather of a movement upward, of a development
of a personality in a manner fitting to it, which had not yet found
a form of expression in accord with his innate points of view in those
first works.
The final goal of Nietzsche's
creativity is the description of the “superman.” I considered
my chief task in this writing to be the characterization of this type.
My characterization of the superman is exactly the opposite of the caricature
developed in the currently popular book about Nietzsche by Frau Lou
Andreas Salomé. One cannot put into the world anything more contrary
to Nietzsche's spirit than the mystical monster she has made out of
the superman. My book shows that in Nietzsche's ideas nowhere is the
least trace of mysticism to be found. I did not allow myself to be drawn
into the refutation of Frau Salomé's opinion that Nietzsche's
thoughts in
Menschliches, All-zumenschliches,
Human, All Too Human,
were influenced by the works of Paul Rée, the editor of
Psychological Observations,
and
The Origin of Moral Feelings,
etc. Such an average brain as that of Paul Rée could make no
important impression on Nietzsche. Even now I would not touch upon these
things at all if the book of Frau Salomé had not contributed
so much toward the spreading of downright disagreeable judgments about
Nietzsche. Fritz Koegel, the excellent publisher of Nietzsche's works,
bestowed upon this bungled piece of work its deserved treatment in the
Magazine for Literature.
I cannot conclude this short
preface without giving hearty thanks to Nietzsche's sister, Frau
Foerster-Nietzsche, for the many friendly deeds I experienced
from her during the period in which this book developed. I owe to her
the hours spent in the Nietzsche Archives, and the mood out of which
the following thoughts were written.
RUDOLF STEINER
Weimar, April 1895.
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