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9 - Nietzsche's virtue ethics

from PART I - NORMATIVE THEORY

Christine Swanton
Affiliation:
University of Auckland
Stan van Hooft
Affiliation:
Deakin University, Australia
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Summary

For many, to speak of Nietzsche's virtue ethics is an oxymoron. Even now, Nietzsche is seen as an egoist in the worst sense, indeed an immoralist. Furthermore, even if he can be understood as having some sort of ethics it cannot be understood as an ethics within an objectivist tradition, where virtue ethics is characteristically seen as belonging. Yet not only are Nietzsche's texts replete with virtue and vice concepts, but he seems to be a moral reformer, arguing that traditional conceptions of virtue legitimized by the “slave revolt” in morals should be overturned. In that (Christian) revolt not only, for example, is cowardly fear transformed into the virtue of humility, the understanding of humility as a virtue is itself skewed. It is now a form of self-abasement as opposed to a sense of one's place in the world that is not tainted by forms of overweening pride.1 For Nietzsche there should be a “revaluation of values” where genuine virtue expresses life affirmation and strength as opposed to weakness and life denial.

There are two ways of reconciling this apparent tension. The first is to say that the “revaluation of values” is indeed a revaluation, but one that constitutes a deeply unattractive immoralist egoism. The second is to argue that Nietzsche's new way of thinking about ethics should be taken seriously, because his self-styled “egoism” is a virtuous form of egoism.

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Publisher: Acumen Publishing
Print publication year: 2013

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