TABLE OF CONTENT
TITLE PAGE … … … … … … … … i
CERTIFICATION … … … … … … … … ii
DEDICATION … … … … … … … … iii
ACKNOLEDGEMENT … … … … … … … vi
TABLE OF CONTENT … … … … … … … iv
GENERAL INTRODUCTION … … … … … …
viii
BRIEF PROFILE … … … … … … … … xii
CHAPTER ONE
1.0 RELIGIOUS NIHILISM
1.1
What is nihilism? … … … … … … … 1
1.2 Nietzsche’s conception of nihilism … … … … 3
1.3 Nietzsche’s conception of
Christianity … … … … 6
1.4 Anti-Christ … … … … … … … … 13
1.5 The death of God … … … … … … … 15
CHAPTER TWO
2.0 MORALITY IN QUESTION
2.1
Nietzsche’s conception of Morality … … … … 19
2.2 Master slave morality … … … … … … 22
2.3 Moral valuation (good and evil) … … … … … 28
2.4 Critique of the moral ideals … … … … … … 31
CHAPTER
THREE
3.0 THE REMEDIES ON NIHILISM
3.1 The
will to power … … … … … … … 34
3.2 The
ubermensch (superman) … … … … … 38
CHAPTER FOUR.
4.0
Critical evaluation … … … … … … … 45
4.0
Conclusion … … … … … … … … 55
BIBLOGRAPHY … … … … … … … … 58
GENERAL
NTRODUCTION.
Statement
of problem.
Down the
stages of the history of philosophy, the modern philosophy of consciousness,
attention has been directed to the mastery of the natural world. This is a
period whose character of rational optimism was diametrically opposed to
tradition and authority upon which stood the veracity and logic of primitive
religion. It has been a period oriented to the practical. The possession of and
ownership of the real. With Kant, the practical reason is already being
understood as will. Schopenhauer took up this indication from Kant and
conceived reality as will and idea. He opines that the world is a meaningless
and purposeless existence or will to live. Nietzsche however, finally accepts
the fundamental notion of Schopenhauer that the will is the principle of
existence, but he conceives this will not merely as the will to live, but as
the will for power.
Along the way to the will to power, the
anthropological subject has become central. This turn towards the subject
excludes any supreme value in man. Thus, when Nietzsche proclaimed and declared
the death of God, he believed that he was accomplishing the work, which other
existentialist philosophers started but were unable to complete. Little did he
realize the havoc he had caused to the contemporary man. Consequently he joined
other thinkers of his time to sweep off the hold of God on the modern man.
With “the death of God” man could
surpass himself and attain his greatness.
Now it is up to man to give
his life meaning by raising himself above the animals. Our so-called human
nature is precisely what we should do well to overcome…[1]
It becomes
succinctly comprehensible that God, the supreme value was a barrier to man’s
attainment of self-fulfillment. However, with the elimination of the idea of
God, supposedly a vacuum will be created and thus nothingness could break out
in all directions. This at least goes to show the nothingness of
religion, which it’s values and morality, find their meaning in God. This is
thus the focus of nihilism, which also involves the revaluation of these
values. Through nihilism, Nietzsche was able to posit a new value that would
replace the old and eliminated` supreme value.
Purpose of study.
This
project is necessary in the face of the present-day unscrutinized quest for
faith or religion. For this reason, it will follow a thought-pattern that will
argue for the credibility of God and religion. Thus the major task of this work
is to criticize without reservation this religious and moral demise of
Nietzsche and restore the supreme value to its place in the world.
Scope of study.
This work
does not however guarantee to exhaust the rigorous arguments concerning the
existence of God. It does not even pretend to expose the whole philosophical
thought of Nietzsche. It will evaluate and criticize Nietzsche’s arguments
concerning the existence of God.
Method of study.
For the
purpose lucidity this work will be largely critical and expository. More so, a
brief historical survey of Nietzsche is adopted to bring to limelight, his
conception about God.
Division
of work.
This work
is divided into four chapters. Apart from the introduction, the first chapter
will x-ray the meaning of nihilism for Nietzsche, and the religion and its
values as attacked and refuted by him. In chapter two, we shall be exposing the
nihilistic morality as presented by Nietzsche. Chapter three centers on the
remedies offered by Nietzsche as the ideal value after his nihilism of supreme
value. Chapter four will evaluate Nietzsche’s philosophy of nihilism.
BRIEF
PROFILE OF FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE
Friedrich
Wilhelm Nietzsche was born on October 15, 1844 at Bocken in the province of
Saxony. He was the son and grandson of Lutheran ministers. His father died at
the tender age of four and he grew up under the care of his mother Fran
Nietzsche and his sister, Elizabeth.
At the age of fourteen, he was sent to the famous
Pforta School where he studied classics, religion and German literature. In
1864, he went to the University of Bonn and studied theology. But having lost
his faith in Christian religion in 1865 he abandoned theological studies, left
Bonn and went to Leipzig where he studied philology. Here, also he came upon
Schopenhauer’s works, The World as Will and Idea, which had an influence
on him and confirmed his atheistic standpoint. He was also influenced by the
Wagnerian music he came in contact with.
His outstanding intelligence merited him the appointment
as a lecturer at the age of twenty, and later at the age of twenty-four, was
yet appointed to the chair of classical philology at the university of Basal.
He was at this school until heath forced him to resign his professorship in
1879. It was during this period that he came close to a relationship with
Wagner but thy later separated. From 1880 to 1889, he lived life of solitude.
He surprisingly became insane in 1889 and remained in that state of mental and
physical paralysis until his death on August 25, 1900 at the of fifty-five.
Nietzsche
was a prolific writer and wrote extensively even while ill. His major works
include: The Birth of Tragedy, which he wrote in 1872. Between the
periods of 1873 to 1876, he published the Untimely Meditations and Human,
All-to-Human. Then, again between the periods of 1881 to 1887, he wrote
these five books: The Dawn, The Gay Science, Thus spoke Zarathusthra, Beyond
Good and Evil and Genealogy of Morals. In 1888, he yet produced
these books: The Case of Wagner, Twilight of Idols, Anti-Christ, Ecce
Homo, Nietzsche contra Wagner and completed work, The revaluation
of all Values (The Will to Power).
[1] F.Nietzsche Thus Spoke
Zarathustra, in the portable Nietzsche Trans., ed. W. Kaufmann, (New York:
Viking, 1954), p115