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Tuesday, 6 December 2016

Book commentary; Life Lessons from Nietzsche, Armstrong




Aims: Profundity through clarity. Funniness through self mockery, understatement and kindness

It's the journey, yeah?

Interesting man, difficult to read, particularly in his own language. I've poked about different secondary stuff over the years - books, podcasts etc. This little thing might shed some light.

Ch 1: How to find your best self

We can do it.
The path to it involves suffering, annoyance with oneself, disappointment, envy and frustration.
We look at those we admire but don't see how they got there.
Insight into this helps us see that suffering is not failure, but a necessary part of the process of becoming our best self.

Ch 2: on Visiting the Pyramids

I think his point here (Armstrong's, the writer of the book - what you're getting from me is tertiary commentary) is that when travelling (physically or mentally) we should regard (value) our lives (our attention and devotion) as valuable resources that should not be wasted...

The old chestnut of why go to Spain? For sun, sea, sand, sangria etc or to walk in a Spaniard's shoes and get a weak feel for what it's like to be Spanish...



"I walk a mile in your shoes
And now I'm a mile away
And I've got your shoes".




For me; obviously both... 

My history and my choice enable me to value the latter, even if my Spanish is fairly rudimentary, and I look and behave more like an Anglo-Saxon than a Spaniard. But that's just me.

So chapters 1 and 2 refer to deciding you can do it and then deciding what you are going to do. For anyone who's read Stephen Covey's 7 habits, that's his first two chapters.

Or am I and Armstrong super-imposing this upon him. 

I don't know.

Who cares anyhow?

If I'm right, the next chapter will be about managing oneself to get the results one desires...

Funnily enough, Ch 3 is Dealing with Conflict:

He talks of the realms of Apollo (dreams, the rational, orderly etc) and Dionysius (drunkenness, intuition, revelry - Kings of Leon again, Only by the Night)

His initial point was the need to live the latter in a world in which the former predominates. Later he talks more about the importance of balancing the two, controlling the two, controlling oneself.

Clearly that is what you have to do if you are going to achieve what you set out to.

I've been giving my Dionysius a longer reign, recently. When balanced with Apollo I shall be superman.

Or is that cheap?

Depends on your superman

More later.

Armstrong's final thought on Dealing with conflict: 'We can find dignity by giving honourable names to both sides of the conflict'

Like Bob and Charmain?

Anyone read The Chimp Paradox? Clear parallels here with Nietzsche’s conflict. Though there are multiple similar divisions; science and art, left and right brain, intellect and emotion, brain and heart...


Though I've not read it, the title gives it away...Comes in handy when waiting at airports. Far easier to ride the fear when you've told those that matter how you feel recently, I find.

Though you don't want them to feel your fear for you either.


Covey's 4th-6th habits are about applying yourself to and for others. Nietzsche doesn't address this much - I haven't read much of him except when quoted by other people, but I do believe that he doesn't address much outside of the individual, when most normal people, I would have thought, do think about things like love and trust and respect and communication and teamwork. Leadership requires followers, preferably some that love you rather than fear you. Unless they can ride the fear and give you honest feedback despite it, though I can't help thinking that fearing your leader must be a bad thing on principle. We probably won't learn about this in Nietzsche.



 Ch 4 The Troubled Path to Freedom and Maturity - I suspect this is going to be difficult.

Freedom involves separation, a hard but consoling lesson
For a loving person (adult or child) to break bonds is so hard they might have to be violent and cruel. This is not because they hate you but because they love you.

I suspect that a lot of this, in his case, is justification after the event...

The point is not that we should learn the same things as him but that we should try to understand what it is that we have learned...

Then we can appreciate more... e.g. (mine) one's own backyard, clear of muck

Ch 5: On changing one's mind (about a person)

Important to understand why e.g. because of their renunciation of optimism as was Nietzsche's reason, so I understand, for rejecting Schopenhauer and Wagner.

Ch 6: The merits of shock therapy

Of considering certain things might not be good - public spiritedness, benevolence, consideration, industriousness, moderation, modesty, forbearance, pity.
Of considering prioritising individualism over group morality.
Of considering it a task like war (to get beauty and wisdom to prevail in the world)
Of imagining oneself like this and needing friends like this
(I'm not on his wavelength here. Love and kindness seem to me to have the edge though I see the benefits of thought games)
  
Ch 7 Be a noble not a slave
Pro-activity vs Passivity
Don't mistake actual weakness for fake morality (him)
Armstrong: There are lots of decent people. Compete harder rather than blaming others e.g. bankers, politicians
'Do the right thing' (me, seems a bit weak but helpful)

Ch 8: Don't pull your punches

Try and understand the person who annoys and irritates and then go for it...

Getting perspective/the bigger picture
 
·         God is dead (and God's shadow): the rejection of religious conviction is not the end of the matter... think what a belief is and what a belief is for
·         Eternal recurrence: get serious now!
·         Ease with which we get despondent: Be an 'aeronaut of the spirit' 🚀.

The journal/diary/notebook/log as places of hope
Nietzsce as a balancing agent

Aphorisms

·         Bad spectating, not appreciating that it is not just you?
·         The warlike man in peace, turns on himself
·         Punishment for virtues, keep this in mind when being punished
·         Conversation through midwifery; takes two and involves conflict

Superman

I said I'd return. Obvious really - control over your (powerful) self

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