Existentialism







These are essays from my book en.light.en.ment:





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Friedrich Nietzsche is famous for his "God is dead" statement, in view of his studies of The Enlightenment; he believed the philosophies of the times did away with the need for God and by extension, religions.


Another statement of his is very pertinent to me, "He who has a why to live can bear almost any how".



More from Nietzsche: “To live is to suffer ... to survive is to find some meaning in the suffering”.


Also: "What doesn't kill you makes you stronger".




Amor Fati


Nietzsche, regret and amor fati, from: The School of Life

theschooloflife.com/article/nietzsche-regret-and-amor-fati/


amor fati has been linked to Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius,

however … it found its most explicit expression in Nietzsche



One of the strangest yet most intriguing aspects of Friedrich Nietzsche’s ideas is his repeated enthusiasm for a concept that he called amor fati (translated from Latin as ‘a love of one’s fate’, or as we might put it, a resolute, enthusiastic acceptance of everything that has happened in one’s life). The person of amor fati doesn’t seek to erase anything of their past, but rather accepts what has occurred, the good and the bad, the mistaken and the wise, with strength and an all-embracing gratitude that borders on a kind of enthusiastic affection.


This refusal to regret and retouch the past is heralded as a virtue at many points in Nietzsche’s work. In his book, The Gay Science(German: Die fröhliche Wissenschaft) written during a period of great personal hardship for the philosopher, Nietzsche writes:

“I want to learn more and more to see as beautiful what is necessary in things; then I shall be one of those who makes things beautiful. Amor fati: let that be my love henceforth! I do not want to wage war against what is ugly. I do not want to accuse; I do not even want to accuse those who accuse. Looking away shall be my only negation. And all in all and on the whole: some day I wish to be only a Yes-sayer.”


And, a few years later, in Ecce Homo Nietzsche writes:


“My formula for greatness in a human being is amor fati: that one wants nothing to be different, not forward, not backward, not in all eternity. Not merely bear what is necessary, still less conceal it … but love it.”


In most areas of life, most of the time, we do the very opposite. We kick violently against negative events - and do not accept their role in our lives. We do not love and embrace the flow of events. We spend a huge amount of time taking stock of our errors, regretting and lamenting the unfortunate twists of fate - and wishing that things could have gone differently. We are typically mighty opponents of anything that smacks of resignation or fatalism. We want to alter and improve things - ourselves, politics, the economy, the course of history - and part of this means refusing to be passive about the errors, injustices and ugliness of our own and the collective past.


Nietzsche himself, in some moods, knows this defiance full well. There is much emphasis in his work on action, initiative and self-assertion. His concept of the Will to Power (German, Wille zur Macht), embodies just this attitude of vitality and conquest over obstacles.


However, it is one of the most beautiful aspects of Nietzsche’s thinking that he is aware that, in order to lead a good life, we need to keep in mind plenty of opposing ideas and marshall them as and when they become relevant. We don’t - in Nietzsche’s eyes - need to be consistent, we need to have the ideas to hand that can salve our wounds. Nietzsche isn’t therefore asking us to choose between glorious fatalism on the one hand or a vigorous willing on the other. He allows us to have recourse to either intellectual move depending on the occasion. He wishes our mental toolkit to have more than one set of ideas: to have, as it were, both a hammer and a saw.


Certain occasions particularly need the wisdom of a will-driven philosophy; others demand that we know how to accept, embrace and stop fighting the inevitable.

In Nietzsche’s own life, there was much that he had tried to change and overcome. He had fled his restrictive family in Germany and escaped to the Swiss Alps; he had tried to get away from the narrowness of academia and become a freelance writer; he had tried to find a wife who could be both a lover and an intellectual soulmate.


But a lot in this project of self-creation and self-overcoming had gone terribly wrong. He couldn’t get his parents - especially his mother and sister - out of his head. What were, in his eyes, their maddening attitudes and prejudices (anti-semitism in particular) seemed to have spread across the whole of bourgeois Europe. His books sold dismally and he was forced more or less to beg from friends and family in order to keep going.


Meanwhile his halting, gauche attempts to seduce women were met by ridicule and rejection. There must have been so many lamentations and regrets running through his mind in his walks across the Upper Engadine and his nights in his modest wooden chalet in Sils Maria: if only I had stuck with an academic career; if only I’d been more confident around certain women; if only I’d written in a more popular style; if only I’d been born in France.


It was because such thoughts - and every one of us has our own distinct variety of them - can ultimately be so destructive and soul-sapping that the idea of amor fati grew compelling to Nietzsche. Amor fati was the idea that he needed in order to regain sanity after hours of self-recrimination and criticism. It’s the idea we ourselves may need at 4 a.m. finally to quieten a mind that has started gnawing into itself shortly after midnight. It’s an idea with which a troubled spirit can greet the first signs of dawn.


At the height of the mood of amor fati, we recognise that things really could not have been otherwise, because everything we are and have done is bound closely together in a web of consequences that began with our birth - and which we are powerless to alter at will. We see that what went right and what went horribly wrong are as one, and we commit ourselves to accepting both, to no longer destructively hoping that things could have been otherwise.


We were headed to a degree of catastrophe from the start. We know why we are the desperately imperfect beings we are; and why we had to mess things up as badly as we did. We end up saying, with tears in which there mingle grief and a sort of ecstasy, a large yes to the whole of life, in its absolute horror and occasional moments of awesome beauty.


In a letter to a friend written in the summer of 1882, Nietzsche tried to sum up the new spirit of acceptance that he had learnt to lean on to protect him from his agony:


“I am in a mood of fatalistic ‘surrender to God’ - I call it amor fati, so much so, that I would be willing to rush into a lion’s jaws”.


And that is where, after too much regret, we should learn sometimes to join him.


















 

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