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Among the rich veins of gold running through On the Genealogy of Morality is supposedly the methodologically distinct one of genealogy itself. This chapter presents a general articulation of what a genealogy might be. It discusses some of its consequences. The normative consequences of a given genealogy depend on the particular kind of genealogical account offered. The chapter discusses and rejects the idea that Nietzsche's particular genealogy constitutes an internal or immanent critique of morality or a revaluation of values. It argues that Nietzsche's genealogy has the normative consequence of destabilizing the moral beliefs it explains, namely by motivating the requirement to seek some further justification for those beliefs. The chapter then briefly explains the role of destabilization in Nietszche's wider project of the revaluation of values. It concludes by discussing some issues regarding genealogy as real history.
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