Nietzsche
once described Dostoevsky as “the only person who has ever taught
me anything about psychology” (Gide 168). Upon looking deeper into
the connection between the two men, it is apparent that both
Nietzsche and Dostoevsky had complex philosophies, and it would be
difficult, if not impossible, to compare their philosophical systems
completely. Therefore, focusing on a specific issue like redemption
will be more productive. Redemption is a topic directly connected to
larger issues of considerable importance for both Nietzsche and
Dostoevsky: morality, guilt, fear, and God. By examining the views of
Dostoevsky and Nietzsche on these issues in relation to redemption,
we will be better able to understand how Dostoevsky influenced
Nietzsche’s philosophy.
…the
judgment ‘good’ does not emanate from those to whom goodness is
shown! Instead it has been ‘the good’ themselves, meaning the
noble, the mighty, the high-placed and the high-minded, who saw and
judged themselves and their actions as good, I mean first-rate, in
contrast to everything lowly, low-minded, common and plebeian
(Nietzsche GM I 2).
according
to the law of nature, into two categories: a lower or, so to speak,
material category (the ordinary), serving solely for the reproduction
of their own kind; and people proper—that is, those who have the
gift or talent of speaking a new word in their environment
(Dostoevsky 260).
whip
themselves, because they’re so well behaved; some perform this
service for each other, and some do it with their own hands...all the
while imposing various public penances on themselves—the result is
beautiful and edifying (Dostoevsky 262).
What
does the word ‘evildoing’ mean? My conscience is clear. Of
course, a criminal act was committed; of course, the letter of the
law was broken and blood was shed; well, then, have my head for the
letter of the law…and enough! Of course, in that case even many
benefactors of mankind, who did not inherit power but seized it for
themselves, ought to have been executed at their very first steps.
But those men endured their steps, and therefore they were right
(Dostoevsky 544).
However
much value we may ascribe to truth, truthfulness, or altruism, it may
be that we need to attribute a higher and more fundamental value to
appearance, to the will to illusion, to egoism and desire. It could
even be possible that the value of those good and honoured things
consists precisely in the fact that in an insidious way they are
related to those bad, seemingly opposite things, linked, knit
together, even identical perhaps. (Nietzsche BGE I
On my
honour, friend,’ answered Zarathustra, ‘all you have spoken of
does not exist: there is no Devil and no Hell. Your soul will be dead
even before your body: therefore fear nothing any more!’ The man
looked up mistrustfully. ‘If you are speaking the truth,’ he said
then, ‘I leave nothing when I leave life. I am not much more than
an animal which has been taught to dance by blows and starvation.’
(Nietzsche Zarathustra Prologue 6)
Throughout
most of human history, punishment has not been meted out because the
miscreant was held responsible for the act…but rather it was out of
anger over some wrong which had been suffered, directed at the
perpetrator…anger held in check and modified by the idea that every
injury has its equivalent which can be paid in compensation, if only
through the pain of the person through injuries. (Nietzsche GM II 4)
But
here begins a new account, the account of a man’s gradual renewal,
the account of his gradual regeneration, his gradual transition from
one world to another, his acquaintance with a new, hitherto
completely unknown reality. It might make the subject of a new
story—but our present story is ended (Dostoevsky Epilogue)
To
redeem the past and to transform every ‘It was’ into an ‘I
wanted it thus!’ – that alone do I call redemption! Will—that
is what the liberator and bringer of joy is called: thus I have
taught you, my friends! But now learn this as well: The will itself
is still a prisoner. Willing liberates: but what is it that fastens
in fetters even the liberator? ‘It was’: that is what the will’s
teeth-gnashing and most lonely affliction is called. (Nietzsche
Zarathustra II Of Redemption).
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