To this time belongs my entrance into that circle of spiritual
experience in which Nietzsche lingered.
My first acquaintance with Nietzsche's writings belongs to the year
1889. Previous to that I had never read a line of his. Upon the
substance of my ideas as these find expression in The Philosophy of
Spiritual Activity, Nietzsche's thought had not the least
influence. I read what he had written with the feeling of being drawn
on by the style which he had developed out of his relation to life. I
felt that his soul was a being that was impelled by reason of
inheritance and attraction to give attention to everything which the
spiritual life of his age had brought forth, but which always felt
within: What has this spiritual life to do with me? There must
be another world in which I can live; so much does life in this world
jar upon me. This feeling made him a spiritually incensed critic
of his time; but a critic who was by his own criticism reduced to
illness who had to experience illness and could only dream of health
of his own health. At first he sought for means to make his dream of
health the content of his own life; and thus he sought with Richard
Wagner, with Schopenhauer, with modern positivism to dream as if he
wished to make the dream in his soul into a reality. One day he
discovered that he had only dreamed. Then he began with every power
belonging to his spirit to seek for realities realities which must
lie somewhere or other. He found no roads to these
realities, but only yearnings. Then these yearnings became to him
realities. He dreamed again, but the mighty power of his soul created
out of these dreams realities of the inner man which, without that
heaviness which had so long characterized the ideas of humanity,
floated within him in a mood of soul joyful but resting upon
foundations contrary to the spirit of the age, the
Zeitgeist.
It was thus that I viewed Nietzsche. The freely floating weightless
character of his ideas attracted me. I found that this free-floating
element in him had brought to maturity many thoughts that bore a
resemblance to those which had shaped themselves in me by ways quite
unlike those of Nietzsche's mind.
Thus it was possible for me to write in 1895 in the preface to my book
Nietzsche, ein Kämpfer gegen seine Zeit(1),
As early as 1886 in my little volume, The Theory of Knowledge
in Goethe's World-Conception, the same sentiment is
expressed that is, the same as appears in certain works of
Nietzsche. But what attracted me particularly was that one could read
Nietzsche without coming upon anything which strove to make the reader
a dependant of Nietzsche's. One could gladly experience
without reserve his spiritual illumination; in this experience one
felt oneself to be wholly free; for one had the impression that his
words began to laugh if one had attributed to them the intention of
being assented to, as is the case when one reads Haeckel or Spencer.
Thus I ventured to explain my relationship to Nietzsche in the book
mentioned above by using the words which he himself had used in his
book on Schopenhauer: I belong among those readers of Nietzsche,
who, after having read their first page from him, know for a certainty
that they will read every page and listen to every word which he has
ever uttered. My confidence in him continued from that time on ... I
understood him as if he had written for me, in order to express me
intelligibly, but immodestly, foolishly. Shortly before I began
the actual writing of that book, Nietzsche's sister, Elizabeth
Förster-Nietzsche, appeared one day at the Goethe and Schiller
Institute. She was taking the preliminary steps toward the
establishment of a Nietzsche Institute, and wished to learn how the
Goethe and Schiller Institute was managed. Soon afterward there came
to Weimar the editor of Nietzsche's works, Fritz Koegel, and I made
his acquaintance.
Later I got into a serious disagreement with Frau Elizabeth
Förster-Nietzsche. Her emotional and lovable spirit claimed at that
time my deepest sympathy. I suffered inexpressibly by reason of the
disagreement. A complicated situation had brought this to pass; I was
compelled to defend myself against accusations; I know that it was all
necessary, that the happy hours I was permitted to spend among the
Nietzsche archives in Naumburg and Weimar should now lie under a veil
of bitter memories; yet I am grateful to Frau Förster-Nietzsche for
having taken me, on the first of many visits I made to her, into the
chamber of Friedrich Nietzsche. There he lay on a lounge enveloped in
darkness, with his beautiful forehead-artist's and thinker's forehead
in one. It was early afternoon. Those eyes which in their blindness
yet revealed the soul, now merely mirrored a reflection of the
surroundings which could find no longer any way to reach the soul. One
stood there and Nietzsche knew it not. And yet one could have
believed, looking upon that brow permeated by the spirit, that this
was the expression of a soul which had all the forenoon long been
shaping thoughts within, and which now would fain rest a while. An
inner shudder which seized my soul may have signified that this also
underwent a change in sympathy with the genius whose gaze was directed
toward me and yet failed to rest upon me. The passivity of my gaze so
long fixed won in return a comprehension of his own gaze: his longing
always in vain to enable the soul-forces of the eye to work.
And so there appeared before my soul the soul of Nietzsche, hovering
above his head, boundless in its spiritual light; surrendered wholly
to the spiritual worlds, longing after its environment but failing to
discover it; and yet chained to the body, which would have to do with
the soul only so long as the soul longed for this present world.
Nietzsche's soul was still there, but only from without could it hold
to the body, that body which so long as the soul remained within it
had offered resistance to the full unfolding of its light.
I had ere this read the Nietzsche who had written; now I perceived the
Nietzsche who bore within his body ideas drawn from widely extended
spiritual regions ideas which still sparkled in their beauty even
though they had lost on the way their primal illuminating powers. A
soul which from previous earthly lives bore rich wealth of light, but
which could not in this life cause all its light to shine. I had
admired what Nietzsche wrote; but now I saw a luminous form behind
that which I had admired.
In my thoughts I could only stammer over what I then beheld; and this
stammering is in effect my book, Nietzsche as the Adversary of His
Age. That the book is no more than a stammering conceals what is
none the less true, that the form of Nietzsche I beheld inspired the
book. Frau Förster-Nietzsche then requested me to set Nietzsche's
library in order. In this way I was enabled to spend several weeks in
the Nietzsche archives at Naumburg. In this way also I formed an
intimate friendship with Fritz Koegel. It was a beautiful task which
placed before my eyes the books in which Nietzsche himself had read.
His spirit lived in the impressions which these volumes made upon me a
volume of Emerson's filled throughout with marginal comments showing
all the signs of an absorbing study; Guyau's writing bearing the same
indications; books containing violent critical comments from his
hand a great number of marginal comments in which one could see his
ideas in germinal form. A penetrating conception of Nietzsche's final
creative period shone clearly before me as I read his marginal
comments on Eugen Dühring's chief philosophical work. Dühring there
develops the thought that one can conceive the cosmos at a single
moment as a combination of elementary parts. Thus the history of the
world would be the series of all such possible combinations. When once
these should have been formed, then the first would have to return,
and the whole series would be repeated. If anything thus exists in
reality, it must have occurred innumerable times in the past, and must
occur again innumerable times in future. Thus we should arrive at the
conception of the eternal repetition of similar states of the cosmos.
Dühring rejects this thought as an impossibility Nietzsche reads this;
he receives from it an impression, which works further in the depths
of his soul and finally take form within him as the return of
the similar, which, together with the idea of the
superman, dominates his final creative period.
I was profoundly impressed indeed shocked by the impression which
I received from thus following Nietzsche in his reading. For I saw
what an opposition there was between the character of Nietzsche's
spirit and that of his contemporaries. Dühring, the extreme
positivist, who rejects everything which is not the result of a system
of reasoning directed with cold and mathematical regularity, considers
the eternal repetition of the similar as an absurdity, and
sets up the idea only to show its impossibility; but Nietzsche must
take this up as his solution of the world-riddle, as an intuition ,
arising from the depths of his own soul.
Thus Nietzsche stands in absolute opposition to much which pressed in
upon him as the content of the thought and feeling of his age. This
driving pressure he so receives that it pains him deeply, and it is in
grief, in inexpressible sorrow of spirit, that he shapes the content
of his own soul. This was the tragedy of his creative work.
This reached its climax while he was sketching the outlines for his
last work,
Willen zur Macht, eine Umwertung aller Werte(2).
Nietzsche was impelled to bring up in purely spiritual
fashion everything which he thought or experienced in the depth of his
soul. To create a world-concept from the spiritual events in which the
soul itself participates this was the tendency of his thought. But the
positivistic world conception of his age, the age of natural science,
swept in upon him. In this conception there was nothing but the purely
materialistic world, void of spirit. What remained of the spiritual
way of thought in the conception was only the remains of ancient ways
of thinking, and these no longer found him. Nietzsche's unlimited
sense for truth would expunge all this. In this way he came to think
as an extreme positivist. A spiritual world behind the material became
to him a lie. But he could create only out of his own soul so create
that true creation seemed to him to have meaning only when it holds
before itself in idea the content of the spiritual world. Yet this
content he rejected. The natural-scientific world-content had so
firmly gripped his soul he would create this as if in spiritual
fashion. Lyrically, in dionysiac rush of soul, does his mind soar
aloft in Zarathustra. In wonderful fashion does the spiritual
hover there, but it is a wonderful spiritual dream woven out of the
stuff of material reality. The spirit strews this about in its effort
to escape because it does not find itself but can only live in a
seeming reality in that dream reflected from the material.
In my own mind I dwelt much during those Weimar days in the
contemplation of Nietzsche's type of mind. In my own spiritual
experience this type of mind had also its place. My spiritual
experience could enter sympathetically into Nietzsche's struggles,
into his tragedy. What had this to do with the positivistic forms in
which Nietzsche proclaimed the conclusions of his thought?
Others looked upon me as a Nietzschean, merely because I
could unreservedly admire what was entirely opposed to my own way of
thinking. I was impressed by the way in which Nietzsche's mind
revealed itself; in just this aspect I felt myself close to him, for
in the content of his thought he was close to no one; as to the
experience of the spiritual way of thought he felt himself isolated
both from men and from his age.
For a long time I was in frequent intercourse with the editor of
Nietzsche's works, Fritz Koegel. We discussed in detail many things
pertaining to the publication of Nietzsche's works. I never had any
official relation to the Nietzsche archives or the publication of his
works. When Frau Förster Nietzsche wished to offer me such a
relationship, this led to a conflict with Fritz Koegel which at once
rendered it impossible that I should have any share in the Nietzsche
archives. My connection with the Nietzsche archives constituted a very
stimulating episode in my life at Weimar, and the final rupture of
this relationship caused me deep regret. Out of the various activities
in connection with Nietzsche, there remained with me a view of his
personality that of one whose fate it was to share tragically in the
life of the age of natural science covering the latter half of the
nineteenth century and finally to be shattered by his impact with that
age. He sought in that age, but nothing could he find. As to myself, I
was only confirmed by my experience with him in the conviction that
all seeking for reality in the data of natural science would be vain
except as it directed its view, not within these data, but through
them into the world of spirit.
It was thus that Nietzsche's work brought the problem of natural
science before my mind in a new form. Goethe and Nietzsche stood in
perspective before me. Goethe's strong sense for reality directed him
toward the essential being and processes of nature. He desired to
remain within nature He restricted himself to pure perceptions of the
plant, animal, and human forms. But, while he kept his mind moving
among these forms, he came everywhere upon spirit. For within the
material he found everywhere dominant the spirit. All the way to the
actual perception of the spirit living and controlling he would not
advance. A spiritual sort of natural science was what he constructed,
but he paused before arriving at the knowledge of pure spirit lest he
should lose his hold upon reality.
Nietzsche proceeded from the vision of the spiritual after the manner
of myths. Apollo and Dionysos were spiritual forms which he
experienced in vital fashion. The history of the human spiritual
seemed to him to have been a history of co-operation and also of
conflict between Dionysos and Apollo. But he got only as far as the
mythical conception of such spiritual forms. He did not press forward
to the perception of real spiritual being. Beginning with the
spiritual in myth, he made a path for himself to nature. In
Nietzsche's thought Apollo had to represent the material after the
manner of natural science; Dionysos had to be conceived as symbolizing
the forces of nature. But thus was Apollo's beauty dimmed; thus was
the world-emotion of Dionysos paralysed into the regularity of natural
law.
Goethe found the spirit in the reality of nature; Nietzsche lost the
spirit-myth in the dream of nature in which he lived.
I stood between these two opposites. The experiences of soul through
which I had passed in writing my book Nietzsche as the Adversary of
His Age could at first make no advance; on the contrary, in the
last period of my life in Weimar, Goethe became once more dominant in
my reflections. I wished to indicate the road by which the life of
humanity had expressed itself in philosophy up to the time of Goethe,
in order to conceive the philosophy of Goethe as proceeding out of
this life. This endeavour I made in the book
Goethes Weltanschauung(3)
which was published in 1897. In this
book it was my purpose to bring to light how Goethe, wherever he
directed his eyes to the understanding of nature, saw shining forth
everywhere the spiritual; but I did not touch upon the manner in which
Goethe related himself to spirit as such. My purpose was to
characterize that part of Goethe's philosophy which expressed itself
vitally in a spiritual view of nature.
Nietzsche's ideas of the eternal repetition and of
supermen remained long in my mind. For in these was
reflected that which a personality must feel concerning the evolution
and essential being of humanity when this personality is kept back
from grasping the spiritual world by the restricted thought in the
philosophy of nature characterizing the end of the nineteenth century.
Nietzsche perceived the evolution of humanity in such a way that
whatever happened at any moment has already happened innumerable times
in precisely the same form, and will happen again innumerable times in
future. The atomistic conception of the cosmos makes the present
moment seem a certain definite combination of the smallest entities;
this must be followed by another, and this in turn by yet another
until, when all possible combinations have been formed, the first must
again appear. A human life with all its individual details has been
present innumerable times; it will return with all its details in
innumerable times.
The repeated earth-lives of humanity shone darkly in
Nietzsche's subconsciousness. These lead the individual human life
through human evolution to life-stages at which overruling destiny
causes men to pass, not to a repetition of the earth-life, but by ways
spiritually determined to a traversing in many forms through the
course of the world. Nietzsche was fettered by the natural-scientific
conception. What this conception could make of repeated earth-lives
this exercised a fascination upon his mind. This he vitally
experienced; for he felt his own life to be a tragedy filled with the
bitterest experiences, weighed down by grief. To live such a life
countless times this was what he dwelt upon instead of the
liberating experience which is to follow upon such a tragedy in the
further unfolding of future lives.
Nietzsche felt also that in the man who is living through one earthly
existence another man is revealed, a superman, who is able to form but
a fragment of his whole life in a bodily existence on earth. The
natural-scientific conception of evolution caused him to view this
superman, not as the spirit dominant within the sense-physical, but as
that which is shaping itself through a merely natural process of
evolution. As man has evolved out of the animal, so will the
superman evolve out of man. The natural scientific view
drew Nietzsche's eyes away from the spiritual man to the natural man,
and dazzled him with the thought of a higher natural man.
What Nietzsche had experienced in this way of thought was present in
the utmost vividness in my mind during the summer of 1896. At that
time Fritz Koegel gave me his collection of Nietzsche's aphorisms
concerning the eternal repetition to look through. The
opinions I formed at that time of this process of Nietzsche's thought
were expressed in an article published in 1900 in the Magazin für
Literatur. Certain statements occurring in that article fix
definitely my reactions at that time to Nietzsche and to natural
science. I will transcribe those thoughts of mine here, freed from the
polemics with which they were there associated.
There is no doubt that Nietzsche wrote these single aphorisms in
a series without any order ... I still maintain the conviction I then
expressed, that Nietzsche grasped this idea when reading
Eugen Dühring's Kursus der Philosophie als streng Wissenschaftlicher
Weltanschauung und Lebensgestaltung(4)
(Leipzig, 1875)
and under the influence of this book. On page 84 of this work the
thought is quite clearly expressed; but it is there as energetically
opposed as Nietzsche defends it. This book is in Nietzsche's library.
It was read very eagerly by Nietzsche, as is evident from numerous
pencil marks on the margins ... Dühring says: The profound logical
basis of all conscious life demands in the strongest sense of the word
an inexhaustibleness of forms. Is this endlessness, by virtue
of which ever new forms will appear, a possibility? The mere number of
the parts and of the force elements would in itself preclude the
unending multiplication of combinations but for the fact that the
perpetual medium of space and time promises a limitlessness in
variations. Moreover, of that which can be counted only a limited
number of combinations is possible. But from that which cannot
according to its nature be conceived as enumerable it must be possible
for a limitless number of states and relationships to come to pass.
This limitlessness, which we are considering with reference to the
destiny of forms in the universe, is compatible with any sort of
change and even with intervals of approximation to fixity or
precise repetitions (italics are mine) but not with the
cessation of all variation. Whoever would cherish the conception of an
existence which contradicts the primal state of things ought to
reflect that the evolution in time has but a single true tendency, and
that causality is always in line with this tendency. It is easier to
abandon the distinction than to maintain it, and it then requires but
little effort to leap over the chasm and imagine the end as analogous
with the beginning. But we ought to guard against such superficial
haste; for the once given existence of the universe is not merely an
unimportant episode between two states of night, but rather the sole
firm and illuminated ground from which we may infer the past and
forecast the future ... Dühring feels also that an everlasting
repetition of states holds no incentive for living. He says: Now it
is self-evident that the principle of an incentive for living is
incompatible with the eternal repetition of the same form ...
Nietzsche was forced by the logic of the natural-scientific conception
to a conclusion from which Dühring turned back because of mathematical
considerations and the repellent prospect which these represented for
human life.
To quote further from my article: ... if we set up the postulate
that with the material parts and the force-elements a limited number
of combinations is possible, then we have the Nietzschean ideal of the
return of the similar.
Nothing less than a defence of a contradictory idea taken from
Dühring's view of the matter occurs in Aphorism 203 (Vol. XII in
Koegel's edition, and Aphorism in Horneffer's work,
Nietzsche's Lehre von der ewigen Wiederkunft(5)).
The amount of
the all-force is definite, not something endless: we must beware of
such prodigality in conceptions! Accordingly the number of stages,
modifications, combinations, and evolutions of this force, though vast
and practically immeasurable, is yet always definite and not endless:
that is, the force is eternally the same and eternally active even
to this very moment already an endlessness has passed, which means
that all possible evolutions must already have occurred. Therefore,
the momentary evolution must be a repetition, and likewise that which
brought it forth and that which arises from it, and so on both
forwards and backwards! Everything has been innumerable times insofar
as the sum total of the stages of all forces is repeated ... And
Nietzsche's feeling in regard to these thoughts is precisely the
opposite of that which Dühring experienced. To Nietzsche this thought
is the loftiest formula in which life can be affirmed. Aphorism 43 (in
Horneffer; 234 in Koegel's edition) runs: Future history will ever
more combat this thought, and never believe it, for according to its
nature it must die forever! Only he remains who considers his
existence capable of endless repetitions: among such, however, a state
is possible to which no Utopian has ever attained. It can be proven
that many of Nietzsche's thoughts originated in a manner similar to
that of the eternal repetition. Nietzsche formed an idea opposite to
any idea then present before him. At length this same tendency led to
the production of his masterpiece,
Umwertung aller Werte.(6)
It was then clear to me that in certain of his thoughts which strove
to reach the world of spirit Nietzsche was a prisoner of his
conception of nature. For this reason I was strongly opposed to the
mystical interpretation of his thought of repetition. I agreed with
Peter Gast, who wrote in his edition of Nietzsche's work: The
doctrine to be understood in a purely mechanical sense of
limitedness and consequent repetition in cosmic molecular
combinations. Nietzsche believed that a lofty thought must be
brought up from the foundations of natural science. That was the way
in which he had to sorrow because of his age. Thus in my glimpse of
Nietzsche's soul in 1896 there appeared before me what one who looked
toward the spirit had to suffer from the conception of nature
prevailing at the end of the nineteenth century.
- Nietzsche as the Adversary of His Age.
- The Will to Power, a Transvaluation of all Values.
- Goethe's World-Conception.
- The Course of Philosophy as a Strictly Scientific World-Conception
and Shaping of Life
- Nietzsche's Doctrine of the Eternal Repetition.
- The Will to Power, a Transvaluation of all Values.
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