Philosophy

Friedrich Neitzsche

Are ethical acts really driven by a primal response?  Are there no nobler mechanisms involved?

If fear is the mother of morality, then what is the father?

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What do you think?

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One Comment

  • ron ridenour

    I think that when we are born we have two instincts: hunger and fear. If our environment, that is, mother/father or surrogate(s) feed us, we are no longer hungry and grow. If the mother/father/surrogate(s) comfort us, hold us, protect us and the rest of the environment is not threatening our very lives then our fear is diminished. I doubt, however, that we ever lose fear at least in those environments that we know of and certainly not in the world in which we reside today.
    While Nietzsche is a cynic and, probably, misanthrope he has a good point. Whether there is a father involved or not is not a relevant point rather a quip. Nevertheless, we know that there are people and have been people who, despite hunger or fear, do offer moral aid to other people (often within their family) who are in need of protection of one kind or another. I have lived in such an environment in the 60-70s when there was a real humanitarian movement of people who fought against war and for peace and equality. Many of them offered their bodies and lives out of a sense of morality, a commitment of principle, a vision for a better world. Some of them were killed for this, others spent (spend) many years in prison. I speak of my youth in the USA but, of course, history has shown us the same in many if not all countries where evil rears its ugly head.

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