Tag Archive for 'truth'

Nietzsche’s Duplicities

Note: While this may be rather long reading, it servers two purposes: to introduce a particular reading of Nietzsche and to give some background study on Deleuze who is the next subject of my “Faith Problems” series. One cannot read Deleuze without knowing Nietzsche.

How does one read ? Is there a way to remain faithful to Nietzsche’s thought? In what ways is one a “Nietzschean”? Reading Nietzsche requires seeing a philosophy of contradictions, duplicities, and inconsistencies.

In Thus Spoke Zarathustra, Nietzsche depicts noon as the time “when man stands in the middle of his way between beast and overman.”1 Noon is the period of transition between many things; one is neither one or the other but a multiplicity. This idea of the “Great Noon” runs throughout Nietzsche’s writings and presents a lens through which Nietzsche can be understood. Throughout his writings, Nietzsche presents a of singularity where a person is never exactly one thing but always in the state of . This lens should not be seen as a looking-glass to understand Nietzsche completely; Nietzsche’s philosophy has made it impossible to view from some kind of “objective” point of view.

Just as Nietzsche’s genealogies trace the presuppositions of a concept, we can also trace the presuppositions of his writings and philosophy; and sometimes these are contradictory. One cannot read his critique of without also seeing his defense of truth; it is not “Dionysius versus the Crucified” as a battle of two different things but rather a struggle of two extremes of the same thing within a person. This is how he paints his concept of the and the Crucified.

Critiquing Truth
One focus of Nietzsche’s thought is that of truthfulness. It is sometimes deeply buried within Nietzsche’s works and often missed on casual readings. Yet he begins the preface to Beyond Good and Evil with the question “Supposing truth is a woman—what then?”2 He also hints at his take on her: “What is certain is that she has not allowed herself to be won”3–truth is to be pursued, but it is a difficult task. This is because truth is a multiplicity—between two extremes of the same concept.

Nietzsche consistently affirms truth and knowledge. He thinks that he has found a radically new view of truth: “Perhaps nobody yet has been truthful enough about what ‘truthfulness is.’”4 So, what has he found that no other philosopher has found before? One extreme of truth that he sees is the idea of a transcendent, objective, universal truth—the “truth” of science. All philosophers have treated their discoveries as this great “truth”: “They all pose as if they had discovered and reached their real opinions through the self-development of a cold, pure, divinely unconcerned dialectic.”5 For Nietzsche, it is clear that none have truly plumbed the depths of knowledge and found any kind of truth fit to be called transcendent. These philosophers have instead “[stood] truth on her head and [denied] perspective, the basic condition of all life.”6 Ironically, however, Nietzsche claims his own critique of this inversion to be “objective”!7 This is because of the opposite extreme, perspectivism: “Supposing that this also is only interpretation—and you will be eager enough to make this objection—well, so much the better.”8 This is an instantiation of truth as an individual’s truthfulness, which Nietzsche ultimately affirms as the highest virtue.9

This analysis of truth now exposes “everything that has hitherto been called ‘truth’…as the most harmful, insidious, and subterranean form of lie.”10 Here, Nietzsche begins to unearth the myththe stories—behind all things held as “true.” Truth cannot be anything objective because that concept involves a contradictio in adjecto—these “immediate certainties” are subject to an unquestioned I that performs the thinking. Nietzsche’s response to such a thought is “it is improbable that you are not mistaken; but why insist on the truth?”11 All truth is in reality an of truth, which Nietzsche implies in his fragment “On Truth and Lie in an Extramoral Sense”:

What, then, is truth? A mobile army of metaphors, metonyms, and anthropomorphisms—in short, a sum of human relations, which have been enhanced, transposed, and embellished poetically and rhetorically, and which after long use seem firm, canonical, and obligatory to a people: truths are illusions about which one has forgotten that this is what they are; metaphors which are worn out and without sensuous power; coins which have lost their pictures and now matter only as metal, no longer as coins.12

We can see here Nietzsche’s one extreme of in its full splendor. As metaphor, truth is unable to be transcendent because it is bound by human language and experience.

Affirming Reality
The birth of the overman is intrinsically tied to the death of God. The duplicity of life and death is, for Nietzsche, tied together at their roots. The first time Nietzsche writes about the death of God, the news is delivered by a madman to the marketplace; yet the more shocking part is that God was murdered by men.13 Ironically, however, the madman never answers his questions as to how or why men killed God. The answers to these questions are the ugly truths which only truthful men can bring.

The death of God is something that must be overcome not synthesized into a Hegelian dialectic. It is not a singular point of objective, transcendent truth; it is a multiplicity. God dies many kinds of deaths, as is fitting for all gods.14 First and foremost, “God died of his pity for man.”15 Later in Thus Spoke Zarathustra, Zarathustra expands upon this while talking to the retired pope: pity strangled God because God could not bear the sight of man hanging on the cross.16 This may answer how God has died, but it does not yet face the ugly truth of why God has died. For this, Nietzsche turns to morality: “I have already in the fourth act killed all the Gods—for the sake of morality!”17

It is not enough to see the death of God as an act against Christianity for it must also be seen as the capstone in the revaluation of all values. The death of God is so the overman can live; it is the symbol of truthfulness, of morality, and of redemption. Nietzsche’s of values is a new creation that stands in contrast to the old values: “We free spirits are nothing less than a ‘revaluation of all values,’ an incarnate declaration of war and triumph over all the ancient conceptions of ‘true’ and ‘untrue.’”18

Nietzsche’s new values are found in what he calls the , the artistic and anti-Christian manner of valuing life.19 It is in Greek tragedy that Nietzsche finds the supreme affirmation and valuation of life which has been perverted and inverted in Socratic and Christian thought. Within tragedy, Nietzsche sees the duplicity of the Apollonian and Dionysian forms of art. Here, the truth of reality is portrayed as “the Dionysian chorus which ever anew discharges itself in an Apollonian world of images.”20 Greek tragedy transforms the man into a satyr and is able to experience the wisdom of nature.21 Nietzsche’s new values are in reality the oldest values of the earth.

It is Nietzsche who, by perceiving the truth with all of its beauty and ugliness, rediscovers this and fights to bring truth back into philosophy and morality. Where is it that Nietzsche finds this lost truth? Within himself: “Revaluation of all values: that is my formula for an act of supreme self-examination on the part of humanity, become flesh and genius in me.”22

Duplicity of Singularity
Through his self-examination, Nietzsche finds not a being or any agent of action but a flux of becoming. It is not a self that is unified through time—a transcendent self—but a self that is always between multiplicities. He sees himself in multiple ways as different selves that are the same: “I am a Doppelgänger, I have a ’second’ face in addition to the first. And perhaps also a third.”23 This is the multiplicity of becoming that any conception of “being” in the former sense loses meaning because “whatever has being does not become; whatever becomes does not have being.”24 Nietzsche is the first philosopher to fully reject the task of ontology and transvalue all ontological philosophy into the philosophy of becoming and multiplicity.

By now, the answer should be obvious as to how one should read Nietzsche. His writings are full of multiplicities and contradictions. He cannot be read as a coherent singularity that revolves around one focus; it is always many, five or six, three or two, but never one. In between these points, however, Nietzsche’s sense becomes apparent and felt. Nietzsche’s contradictions form the basis of his thought; they cannot be explained away in the service of a systematic Nietzschean thought. His immorality is a method of returning to morality. His affirmations are negations and his negations are affirmations. Nietzsche’s singularity is in his duplicity.

Nietzsche is not to be followed at all: “I want no ‘believers’; I think I am too malicious to believe in myself; I never speak to masses.— I have a terrible fear that one day I will be pronounced holy: you will guess why I publish this book before; it shall prevent people from doing mischief with me.”25 To truly follow Nietzsche means that one must reject him and lose him.26 Only then can one affirm his philosophy. To accept Nietzsche without rejecting him, without overcoming him, is to misread Nietzsche.

—-

1F. Nietzsche, Thus Spoke Zarathustra (TSZ) I, “On the Gift-Giving Virtue,” 3 in W. Kaufmann, The Portable Nietzsche.
2F. Nietzsche, Beyond Good and Evil (BGE), Preface in W. Kaufmann, Basic Writings of Nietzsche.
3BGE Preface.
4BGE 177.
5BGE 5.
6BGE Preface.
7F. Nietzsche, The Antichrist (AC), 20 in W. Kaufmann, The Portable Nietzsche.
8BGE 22.
9F. Nietzsche, Ecce Homo (EH), “Why I Am a Destiny,” 3 in in W. Kaufmann, Basic Writings of Nietzsche.
10EH, “Why I am a Destiny,” 8.
11BGE 16.
12F. Nietzsche, “On Truth and Lies in an Extramoral Sense” (TL) in W. Kaufmann, The Portable Nietzsche.
13F. Nietzsche, The Gay Science (GS), 125.
14TSZ IV “Retired.”
15TSZ II “On the Pitying.”
16TSZ IV “Retired.”
17GS 153.
18AC 13.
19F. Nietzsche, The Birth of Tragedy (BT), Attempt at Self-Criticism (ASC) 5.
20BT 8.
21BT 9.
22EH, “Why I am a Destiny,” 1.
23EH “Why I am so Wise,” 3.
24TI “’Reason’ in Philosophy,” 1.
25EH, “Why I am a Destiny,” 1.
26TSZ I “On the Gift-Giving Virtue,” 3.

Part II–Telling the truth while intentionally communicating an untruth (aka How to not get caught lying)

It is hard to tell the truth in such a way that your hearer actually understands what you want him to understand. On the other hand, it is fairly easy to tell the truth in such a way that your hearer understands something other than what you actually say. Politicians are particularly good at this, especially the fictitious Sir Humphrey from Yes, (Prime) Minister.

Here are some ways folks avoid telling the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth and pretty much get away with it.

  • Lack of precision, sloppy reporting, vagueness. “I’ll be gone for quite a while, so don’t wait up” really means “I’m planning on staying out all night but I don’t want you to know that.
  • Exaggeration. “Everyone—absolutely everyone I’ve talked to is will be going.” Trouble is, I only talked to two people.
  • Technical truth. A famous example is Bill Clinton saying: “I did not have sex with that woman!” Due to the sophomoric and narrow definition of sex Clinton was using, he was technically telling the truth.
  • Partial truth, also called cherry picking. “I’ll be a Suzie’s. Here’s her mom’s phone number” is only partially true because I plan to go to a party at Joe’s before going to Suzie’s house.
  • True, but misleading. The statement is true, but the implied information is not. Depending on the speaker’s motive, we either accept or reject this type of speech. Some examples
  • “I’ll see you all Friday at the ballgame.” True, I do plan to see my friends at the ballgame on Friday. But, misleading because I also plan to see them all before Friday at the Thursday surprise party one of them is organizing for her spouse.
  • “I have three blogs.” That statement is true but is misleading because I actually have four blogs.
  • “There’s a man down on his motorcycle over by the Travis Building. Please come!” While there really was a man down on his motorcycle, it was a staged event—staged to get our doctor out of his clinic and over to another building for a surprise 50th birthday party for him.
  • You ask me, “How did you get my address?” and I answer “Haven’t you heard of the internet?” implying I easily found it online when really I got his address from a mailing label.
  • “I sent a letter to my first wife.” She is his first wife, but is also his only wife.
  • Speaking ambiguously. “If you leave me, someone will be sorry.” Is that a threat to the person leaving? Is it a confession of affection? I can say one thing and intentionally expect the person not to really know what I meant.
  • Sidestep/evasion. You ask “How did you get my address?” and I answer “Who said I have your address?” Or, “I’m not even going to lower myself to answer such a stupid question” because I don’t want to admit something.
  • Spin. Spin is to speech as makeup is to a corpse. It can include several of the above tactics being used at one time to avoid telling a negative truth by obscuring it with positive half-truths.
  • Backtracking. “Yes, that is what I said, but what I really meant was …”

Tune in next week for

Part III–Telling the truth–or not

Telling the Truth—A Technical Guide in Three Parts

Introduction

The goal of Zeal for Truth is to find truth. If that were such an easy thing to do, we wouldn’t even need this blog and forum for there would be nothing to discuss, let alone argue or disagree about. The search for philosophical truth, Truth with a capital T, can be a lofty, life-long pursuit for some. Some of us might say even Pilate couldn’t find it when it was staring him in the face.

But my point here is no where near that lofty. I’m just talking about the technicalities of verbally telling the truth (telling the truth while writing is a different can of worms). Spoken communication is so full of potential pitfalls it is a wonder anyone is ever able to get their point across!

Part I — Telling the truth while accidentally communicating an untruth

There are many ways to accidentally tell an untruth. When this happens, an untruth is communicated, but it isn’t a lie. Lying implies the speaker has the motive of deceiving the hearer. In the cases I’m illustrating below, the hearer gets the wrong message, in spite of the pure motives of the speaker.

  • Mistaken facts, when the speaker has no reason to suspect the thing he says is other than true. For example, “We can’t go to the library today because the library is closed on Tuesdays.” But in reality, the library schedule changed for the summer and is open on Tuesdays.
  • Forgotten facts, when the speaker simply forgot. For example, I say, “I went to the mall on Tuesday” but in fact, I went to the mall on Wednesday–I just forgot what day I actually went.
  • Assumed facts, when the speaker represents something as known for certain, but really the fact was deduced. “They went to the parade on the fourth of July.” They actually didn’t go, but the speaker assumed they had gone because they had gone every year in the past.
  • Repeated untruths, originally told by someone else assumed to be trustworthy. For example, “Mom says we can’t go to the library today because it isn’t open on Tuesdays.” Another example, “If you go swimming right after eating you will get a stomach cramps.”
  • Phonetic ambiguity, when a difference in idiolects causes miscommunication. For example, my husband once said “I’m going over to Don’s house” but I heard “I’m going over to “Dawn’s house.” This happened because in my husband’s dialect the words Don and Dawn are pronounced identically, whereas in my dialect they are distinguished.
  • Recutting/reanalysis, when words are misunderstood to be other words by putting the word or morpheme breaks in the wrong place. For example, I said “My friend is Parvaneh Fakeri” but you heard, “My friend is part of a canary.” Another example from singing in church: “And he walks with me, and he talks with me” but someone thinks we are singing “Andy walks with me, Andy talks with me.”
  • Ambiguity caused by lack of semantic precision. For example, he said to me: “I like you that way.” Does that mean the liking is in a certain way or does it mean he likes me to be a certain way?
  • Ambiguity caused by sloppy grammar. For example, “I want to hire a woman to take care of my mother who does not smoke or drink.” OK, who is it with the virtuous lifestyle—the woman to be hired or the mother?
  • Ambiguity caused by unclear pronoun referent. For example, “Suzie told Sally that they would take her away.” Who is being taken away–Suzie or Sally?

Stop by next week for

Part II–Telling the truth while intentionally communicating an untruth (aka How to not get caught lying)

 


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