![]() ![]() Nietzsche once called himself and his works a destiny, the destiny of Europe and every time we go back to read Nietzsche, he seems more and more prescient, more and more correct, that he was, in fact, our destiny. ![]() From a proposal to rearrange human psychology, it becomes a profoundly revolutionary argument across all dimensions of life, in ways that we have not yet fully come to grips with. ![]() Nietzsche’s argument that morality no longer serves any useful purpose spills out of a kind of moral argument into psychology. (Image: Igor Faun/Shutterstock) Morality and the Restriction of Our Will Friedrich Nietzsche challenges us to think about the purpose of truth, the concepts of good and evil, and how these concepts are all related to each other. By Charles Mathewes, Ph.D., University of Virginia In his book, Beyond Good and Evil, Friedrich Nietzsche’s main argument is that morality-the system that we organize our world into to identify, name, and categorize all the possible actions we could do as either good or evil-is not only simply incorrect, but it, in fact, serves no useful purpose any longer in our world. ![]()
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