Nietzsche was the father of a particular ideology too. That statement is directly tied to the philosophy that birthed that ideology and was a catalyst for events that show the absolute worst side of human nature. The capacity for evil is expanded when denying that good and evil exists and that is the framework that Nietzsche laid down in his writing.
Civilization is civilized. If you speak in simply dominance and submission and try to apply the laws of nature to an industrialized society, you really really make a mess with some faulty logic and in the end personify evil by being possessed by "the shadow".
EDIT:
Downvote all you want goobers. I have the books and have read them. You probably haven't.
DR_BLACKTHORNE t1_isl2wk7 wrote
Reply to comment by odiouscontemplater in Philip Kitcher argues that morality is a social technology designed to solve problems emerging from the fragility of human altruism. Morality can be evaluated objectively, but without assuming moral truths. The view makes sense against a Darwinian view of life, but it is not social Darwinism. by Ma3Ke4Li3
Nietzsche was the father of a particular ideology too. That statement is directly tied to the philosophy that birthed that ideology and was a catalyst for events that show the absolute worst side of human nature. The capacity for evil is expanded when denying that good and evil exists and that is the framework that Nietzsche laid down in his writing.
Civilization is civilized. If you speak in simply dominance and submission and try to apply the laws of nature to an industrialized society, you really really make a mess with some faulty logic and in the end personify evil by being possessed by "the shadow".
EDIT: Downvote all you want goobers. I have the books and have read them. You probably haven't.