Beyond Good and Evil

by

Friedrich Nietzsche

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Themes and Colors
Good and Evil Theme Icon
Knowledge, Truth, and Untruth Theme Icon
The Individual and the Crowd Theme Icon
The Dark Side of Modernity Theme Icon
Women and Men Theme Icon
LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in Beyond Good and Evil, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.

Good and Evil

As the title of the book suggests, Nietzsche finds that moral philosophy’s central problem lies in the question of good and evil. Nietzsche believes that modern conceptions of good and evil are a historical novelty and, rather than expressing fundamental truths about human nature, they actually repress and distort our true values. To Nietzsche, the approach that European and Judeo-Christian philosophy has taken to good and evil is not only wrong, but actively harmful. Nietzsche…

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Knowledge, Truth, and Untruth

Nietzsche criticizes the philosophers that came before him not only for their moral biases, but also for the way that these biases prevented them from asking truly difficult and rewarding questions about knowledge, truth, and untruth. Because practically all philosophy has accepted the moral schema of good and evil, it has replicated this binary way of thinking in other areas, too. As Nietzsche rejects good and evil, he wonders to what extent opposites exist at…

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The Individual and the Crowd

In his criticisms of modern society and philosophy, Nietzsche stresses the importance of the tension between the individual and the crowd. While he believes that an antagonism between the two has always existed, older societies within different moralities—without good and evil—naturally separated “noble” individuals from the working masses. Nobles can never fit in with the crowd and must be apart—or above—in order to think higher thoughts. Their greater physical and philosophical strength allowed them…

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The Dark Side of Modernity

Nietzsche is a harsh, aggressive critic of European modernity and its moral and philosophical values, namely that of “progress,” which he sees as corrosive and destructive to human nature and frustrating the true advancement of humankind. Because of the morality in which Europeans have been immersed, however, they are unable to recognize the damaging effects of modern life. Written in the late 19th century, Nietzsche’s criticisms are very much against the grain of their historical…

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Women and Men

Nietzsche argues that the relationship between women and men is one of fundamental antagonism, an antagonism which the emancipation of women in modernity has distorted and disguised but not abolished. Indeed, Nietzsche firmly believes that this antagonism cannot be abolished, nor should one attempt to do so. Nietzsche believes that the general attitude towards women in Europe has been distorted by the women’s movements’ attempts to explain the meaning of “woman as such.” Nietzsche believes…

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