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The Ego & His Own
Right1 is the spirit of society.
If society has a will this will is simply right: society
exists only through right. But, as it endures only exercising
a sovereignty over individuals, right is its SOVEREIGN
WILL. Aristotle says justice is the advantage of society.
All existing right is -- foreign
law; some one makes me out to be in the right, "does
right by me." But should I therefore be in the right if all
the world made me out so? And yet what else is the right that
I obtain in the State, in society, but a right of those
foreign to me? When a blockhead makes me out in the right,
I grow distrustful of my rightness; I don't like to receive it
from him. But, even when a wise man makes me out in the right,
I nevertheless am not in the right on that account. Whether I
am in the right is completely independent of the fool's making
out and of the wise man's.
All the same, we have coveted this
right till now. We seek for right, and turn to the court for that
purpose. To what? To a royal, a papal, a popular court, etc. Can
a sultanic court declare another right than that which the sultan
has ordained to be right? Can it make me out in the right if I
seek for a right that does not agree with the sultan's law? Can
it, e. g., concede to me high treason as a right, since
it is assuredly not a right according to the sultan's mind? Can
it as a court of censorship allow me the free utterance of opinion
as a right, since the sultan will hear nothing of this my
right? What am I seeking for in this court, then? I am seeking
for sultanic right, not my right; I am seeking for -- foreign
right. As long as this foreign right harmonizes with mine, to
be sure, I shall find in it the latter too.
The State does not permit pitching
into each other man to man; it opposes the duel. Even
every ordinary appeal to blows, notwithstanding that neither of
the fighters calls the police to it, is punished; except when
it is not an I whacking away at a you, but, say, the head
of a family at the child. The family is entitled
to this, and in its name the father; I as Ego am not.
The Vossische Zeitung presents
to us the "commonwealth of right." There everything
is to be decided by the judge and a court. It ranks the
supreme court of censorship as a "court" where "right
is declared." What sort of a right? The right of the censorship.
To recognize the sentences of that court as right one must regard
the censorship as right. But it is thought nevertheless that this
court offers a protection. Yes, protection against an individual
censor's error: it protects only the censorship-legislator against
false interpretation of his will, at the same time making his
statute, by the "sacred power of right," all the firmer
against writers.
Whether I am in the right or not
there is no judge but myself. Others can judge only whether they
endorse my right, and whether it exists as right for them too.
In the meantime let us take the
matter yet another way. I am to reverence sultanic law in the
sultanate, popular law in republics, canon law in Catholic communities.
To these laws I am to subordinate myself; I am to regard them
as sacred. A "sense of right" and "law-abiding
mind" of such a sort is so firmly planted in people's heads
that the most revolutionary persons of our days want to subject
us to a new "sacred law," the "law of society,"
the law of mankind, the "right of all," and the like.
The right of "all" is to go before my right.
As a right of all it would indeed be my right among the rest,
since I, with the rest, am included in all; but that it is at
the same time a right of others, or even of all others, does not
move me to its upholding. Not as a
right of all will I defend it, but as my right;
and then every other may see to it how he shall likewise maintain
it for himself. The right of all (e. g., to eat) is a
right of every individual. Let each keep this right unabridged
for himself, then all exercise it spontaneously; let
him not take care for all though -- let him not grow zealous for
it as for a right of all.
But the social reformers preach
to us a "law of society". There the individual
becomes society's slave, and is in the right only when society
makes him out in the right, i.e. when he lives
according to society's statutes and so is -- loyal.
Whether I am loyal under a despotism or in a "society"
à la Weitling, it is the same absence of right
in so far as in both cases I have not my right but foreign
right.
In consideration of right the question
is always asked, "What or who gives me the right to it?"
Answer: God, love, reason, nature, humanity, etc. No, only your
might, your power gives you the right (your reason, e.
g.,, may give it to you).
Communism, which assumes that men
"have equal rights by nature," contradicts its own proposition
till it comes to this, that men have no right at all by nature.
For it is not willing to recognize, e. g., that parents
have "by nature" rights as against their children, or
the children as against the parents: it abolishes the family.
Nature gives parents, brothers, etc., no right at all. Altogether,
this entire revolutionary or Babouvist principle2 rests on a religious,
i. e., false, view of things. Who can ask after "right"
if he does not occupy the religious standpoint himself? Is not
"right" a religious concept, i.e. something
sacred? Why, "equality of rights", as the Revolution
propounded it, is only another name for "Christian equality,"
the "equality of the brethren," "of God's children,"
"of Christians"; in short, fraternité.
Each and every inquiry after right deserves to be lashed with
Schiller's words:
When the Revolution stamped equality
as a "right," it took flight into the religious domain,
into the region of the sacred, of the ideal. Hence, since then,
the fight for the "sacred, inalienable rights of man."
Against the "eternal rights of man" the "well-earned
rights of the established order" are quite naturally, and
with equal right, brought to bear: right against right, where
of course one is decried by the other as "wrong." This
has been the contest of rights3 since the Revolution.
You want to be "in the right"
as against the rest. That you cannot; as against them you remain
forever "in the wrong"; for they surely would not be
your opponents if they were not in "their right" too;
they will always make you out "in the wrong." But, as
against the right of the rest, yours is a higher, greater, more
powerful right, is it not? No such thing! Your right is not
more powerful if you are
not more powerful. Have Chinese subjects a right to freedom? Just
bestow it on them, and then look how far you have gone wrong in
your attempt: because they do not know how to use freedom they
have no right to it, or, in clearer terms, because they have not
freedom they have not the right to it. Children have no right
to the condition of majority because they are not of age, i.e.
because they are children. Peoples that let themselves be kept
in nonage have no rights to the condition of majority; if they
ceased to be in nonage, then only would they have the right to
be of age. This means nothing else than "What you have the
power to be you have the right to." I derive
all right and all warrant from me ; I am entitled
to everything that I have in my power. I am entitled to overthrow
Zeus, Jehovah, God, etc., if I can ; if I cannot, then
these gods will always remain in the right and in power as against
me, and what I do will be to fear their right and their power
in impotent "god-fearingness," to keep their commandments
and believe that I do right in everything that I do according
to their right, about as the Russian boundary-sentinels
think themselves rightfully entitled to shoot dead the suspicious
persons who are escaping, since they murder "by superior
authority," i.e. "with right." But I am
entitled by myself to murder if I myself do not forbid it to myself,
if I myself do not fear murder as a "wrong." This view
of things lies at the foundation of Chamisso's poem, "The
Valley of Murder," where the gray-haired Indian murderer
compels reverence from the white man whose brethren he has murdered.
The only thing I am not entitled to is what I do not
do with a free cheer, i. e. what I do not entitle myself
to.
I decide whether it is the right
thing in me; there is no right outside me. If it
is right for me,4 it is right. Possibly this may not
suffice to make it right for the rest; i. e., their care,
not mine: let them defend themselves. And if for the whole world
something were not right, but it were right for me, i. e.,
I wanted it, then I would ask nothing about the whole world. So
every one does who knows how to value himself, every
one in the degree that he is an egoist; for might goes before
right, and that -- with perfect right.
Because I am "by nature"
a man I have an equal right to the enjoyment of all goods, says
Babeuf. Must he not also say: because I am "by nature"
a first-born prince I have a right to the throne? The rights of
man and the "well-earned rights" come to the same thing
in the end, i.e. to nature, which gives
me a right, i. e. to birth (and, further, inheritance,
etc.). "I am born as a man" is equal to "I am born
as a king's son." The natural man has only a natural right
(because he has only a natural power) and natural claims: he has
right of birth and claims of birth. But nature cannot
entitle me, i.e. give me capacity or might, to that to
which only my act entitles me. That the king's child sets himself
above other children, even this is his act, which secures to him
the precedence; and that the other children approve and recognize
this act is their act, which makes
them worthy to be -- subjects.
Whether nature gives me a right,
or whether God, the people's choice, etc., does so, all of i.
e., the same foreign right, a right that I do not
give or take to myself.
Thus the Communists say, equal labor
entitles man to equal enjoyment. Formerly the question was raised
whether the "virtuous" man must not be "happy"
on earth. The Jews actually drew this inference: "That it
may go well with thee on earth." No, equal labor does not
entitle you to it, but equal enjoyment alone entitles you to equal
enjoyment. Enjoy, then you are entitled to enjoyment. But, if
you have labored and let the enjoyment be taken from you, then
-- "it serves you right."
If you take the enjoyment,
it is your right; if, on the contrary, you only pine for it without
laying hands on it, it remains as before, a, "well-earned
right" of those who are privileged for enjoyment. It is their
right, as by laying hands on it would become your right.
The conflict over the "right
of property" wavers in vehement commotion. The Communists
affirm5 that "the earth belongs rightfully to him who tills
it, and its products to those who bring them out." I think
it belongs to him who knows how to take it, or who does not let
it be taken from him, does not let himself be deprived of it.
If he appropriates it, then not only the earth, but the right
to it too, belongs to him. This is egoistic right: i.e.
it is right for me, therefore
it is right.
Aside from this, right does have
"a wax nose." The tiger that assails me is in the right,
and I who strike him down am also in the right. I defend against
him not my right, but myself.
As human right is always something
given, it always in reality reduces to the right which men give,
i.e. "concede," to each other. If the right
to existence is conceded to new-born children, then they have
the right; if it is not conceded to them, as was the case among
the Spartans and ancient Romans, then they do not have it. For
only society can give or concede it to them; they themselves cannot
take it, or give it to themselves. It will be objected, the children
had nevertheless "by nature" the right to exist; only
the Spartans refused recognition to this right. But then
they simply had no right to this recognition -- no more than they
had to recognition of their life by the wild beasts to which they
were thrown.
People talk so much about birthright
and complain:
There
is alas! -- no mention of the rights
That
were born with us.6
What sort of right, then, is there
that was born with me? The right to receive an entailed estate,
to inherit a throne, to enjoy a princely or noble education; or,
again, because poor parents begot me, to -- get free schooling,
be clothed out of contributions of alms, and at last earn my bread
and my herring in
the coal-mines or at the loom? Are these not birthrights, rights
that have come down to me from my parents through birth?
You think -- no; you think these are only rights improperly so
called, it is just these rights that you aim to abolish through
the real birthright. To give a basis for this you go
back to the simplest thing and affirm that every one is by birth
equal to another -- to wit, a man. I will grant
you that every one is born as man, hence the new-born are therein
equal to each other. Why are they? Only because they
do not yet show and exert themselves as anything but bare -- children
of men, naked little human beings. But thereby they are at
once different from those who have already made something out
of themselves, who thus are no longer bare "children of man,"
but -- children of their own creation. The latter possesses more
than bare birthrights: they have earned rights. What
an antithesis, what a field of combat! The old combat of the birthrights
of man and well-earned rights. Go right on appealing to your birthrights;
people will not fail to oppose to you the well-earned. Both stand
on the "ground of right"; for each of the two has a
"right" against the other, the one the birthright of
natural right, the other the earned or "well-earned"
right.
If you remain on the ground of right,
you remain in -- Rechthaberei7. The other cannot give
you your right; he cannot "mete out right" to you. He
who has might has -- right; if you have not the former,
neither have you the latter. Is this wisdom so hard to attain?
Just look at the mighty and their doings! We are talking here
only of China and Japan, of course. Just try it once, you Chinese
and Japanese, to make them out in the wrong, and learn by experience
how they throw you into jail. (Only do not confuse with this the
"well-meaning counsels" which -- in China and Japan
-- are permitted, because they do not hinder the mighty one, but
possibly help him on.) For him who should want to make
them out in the wrong there would stand open only one way thereto,
that of might. If he deprives them of their might, then
he has really made them out in the wrong, deprived them
of their right; in any other case he can do nothing but clench
his little fist in his pocket, or fall a victim as an obtrusive
fool.
In short, if you Chinese or Japanese
did not ask after right, and in particular if you did not ask
after the rights "that were born with you," then you
would not need to ask at all after the well-earned rights either.
You start back in fright before
others, because you think you see beside them the ghost of
right, which, as in the Homeric combats, seems to fight as
a goddess at their side, helping them. What do you do? Do you
throw the spear? No, you creep around to gain the spook over to
yourselves, that it may fight on your side: you woo for the ghost's
favor. Another would simply ask thus: Do I will what my opponent
wills? "No!" Now then, there may fight for him a thousand
devils or gods, I go at him all the same!
The "commonwealth of right,"
as the Vossische Zeitung among others stands for it,
asks that office-holders be removable only by the judge,
not by the administration. Vain illusion! If it were
settled by law that an office-holder who is once seen drunken
shall lose his office, then the judges would have to condemn him
on the word of the witnesses. In short, the law-giver would only
have to state precisely all the possible grounds which entail
the loss of office, however laughable they might be
(e. g. he who laughs in his superiors' faces, who does
not go to church every Sunday, who does not take the communion
every four weeks, who runs in debt, who has disreputable associates,
who shows no determination, etc., shall be removed. These things
the law-giver might take it into his head to prescribe, e.
g., for a court of honor); then the judge would solely have
to investigate whether the accused had "become guilty"
of those "offenses," and, on presentation of the proof,
pronounce sentence of removal against him "in the name of
the law."
The judge is lost when he ceases
to be mechanical, when he "is forsaken by the rules
of evidence." Then he no longer has anything but an opinion
like everybody else; and, if he decides according to this opinion,
his action is no longer an official action. As judge
he must decide only according to the law. Commend me rather to
the old French parliaments, which wanted to examine for themselves
what was to be matters of right, and to register it only after
their own approval. They at least judged according to a right
of their own, and were not willing to give themselves
up to be machines of the law-giver, although as judges they must,
to be sure, become their own machines.
It is said that punishment is the
criminal's right. But impunity is just as much his right. If his
undertaking succeeds, it serves him right, and, if it does not
succeed, it likewise serves him right. You make your bed and lie
in it. If some one goes foolhardily into dangers and perishes
in them, we are apt to say, "It serves him right; he would
have it so." But, if he conquered the dangers, i.e.
if his might was victorious, then he would be in the
right too. If a child plays with the knife and gets cut,
it is served right; but, if it doesn't get cut, it is served right
too. Hence right befalls the criminal, doubtless, when he suffers
what he risked; why, what did he risk it for, since he knew the
possible consequences? But the punishment that we decree against
him is only our right, not his. Our right reacts against his,
and he is -- "in the wrong at last" because -- we get
the upper hand.
But what is right, what is matter
of right in a society, is voiced too -- in the law.8
Whatever the law may be, it must
be respected by the -- loyal citizen. Thus the law-abiding mind
of Old England is eulogized. To this that Euripidean sentiment
(Orestes, 418) entirely corresponds: "We serve the gods,
whatever the gods are." Law as such, God as such,
thus far we are today.
People are at pains to distinguish
law from arbitrary orders, from an ordinance: the former comes from
a duly entitled authority. But a law over human action (ethical
law, State law, etc.) is always a declaration of will,
and so an order. Yes, even if I myself gave myself the law, it
would yet be only my order, to which in the next moment I can
refuse obedience. One may well enough declare what he will put
up with, and so deprecate the opposite of the law, making known
that in the contrary case he will treat the transgressor as his
enemy; but no one has any business to command my actions,
to say what course I shall pursue and set up a code to govern
it. I must put up with it that he treats me as his enemy,
but never that he makes free with me as his creature,
and that he makes his reason, or even unreason, my plumb-
line.
States last only so long as there
is a ruling will and this ruling will is looked upon
as tantamount to the own will. The lord's will is -- law. What
do your laws amount to if no one obeys them? What your orders,
if nobody lets himself be ordered? The State cannot forbear the
claim to determine the individual's will, to speculate and count
on this. For the State it is indispensable that nobody have an
own will ; if one had, the State would have to exclude
(lock up, banish, etc.) this one; if all had, they would do away
with the State. The State is not thinkable without lordship and
servitude (subjection); for the State must will to be the lord
of all that it embraces, and this will is called the "will
of the State."
He who, to hold his own, must count
on the absence of will in others is a thing made by these others,
as
the master is a thing made by the servant. If submissiveness ceased,
it would be over with all lordship.
The own will of Me is the
State's destroyer; it is therefore branded by the State as "self-will."
Own will and the State are powers in deadly hostility, between
which no "eternal peace" is possible. As long as the
State asserts itself, it represents own will, its ever-hostile
opponent, as unreasonable, evil; and the latter lets itself be
talked into believing this -- nay, it really is such, for no more
reason than this, that it still lets itself be talked into such
belief: it has not yet come to itself and to the consciousness
of its dignity; hence it is still incomplete, still amenable to
fine words, etc.
Every State is a despotism,
be the despot one or many, or (as one is likely to imagine about
a republic) if all be lords, i. e. despotize one over
another. For this is the case when the law given at any time,
the expressed volition of (it may be) a popular assembly, is thenceforth
to be law for the individual, to which obedience
is due from him or toward which he has the duty
of obedience. If one were even to conceive the case that every
individual in the people had expressed the same will, and hereby
a complete "collective will" had come into being, the
matter would still remain the same. Would I not be bound today
and henceforth to my will of yesterday? My will would in this
case be frozen. Wretched stability! My creature
-- to wit, a particular expression of will -- would have become
my commander. But I in my will, I the creator, should be hindered
in my flow and my dissolution. Because I was a fool yesterday
I must remain
such my life long. So in the State-life I am at best -- I might
just as well say, at worst -- a bondman of myself. Because I was
a willer yesterday, I am today without will: yesterday voluntary,
today involuntary.
How change it? Only be recognizing
no duty, not binding myself nor letting myself
be bound. If I have no duty, then I know no law either.
"But they will bind me!"
My will nobody can bind, and my disinclination remains free.
"Why, everything must go topsy-turvy
if every one could do what he would!" Well, who says that
every one can do everything? What are you there for, pray, you
who do not need to put up with everything? Defend yourself, and
no one will do anything to you! He who would break your will has
to do with you, and is your enemy. Deal with him as such.
If there stand behind you for your protection some millions more,
then you are an imposing power and will have an easy victory.
But, even if as a power you overawe your opponent, still you are
not on that account a hallowed authority to him, unless he be
a simpleton. He does not owe you respect and regard, even though
he will have to consider your might.
We are accustomed to classify States
according to the different ways in which "the supreme might"
is distributed. If an individual has it -- monarchy; if all have
it -- democracy; etc. Supreme might then! Might against whom?
Against the individual and his "self-will." The State
practices "violence," the individual must not do so.
The State's behavior is violence, and it calls its violence "law";
that of the
individual, "crime." Crime, then9 -- so the individual's
violence is called; and only by crime does he overcome10 the State's
violence when he thinks that the State is not above him, but he
is above the State.
Now, if I wanted to act ridiculously,
I might, as a well-meaning person, admonish you not to make laws
which impair my self-development, self-activity, self-creation.
I do not give this advice. For, if you should follow it, you would
be unwise, and I should have been cheated of my entire profit.
I request nothing at all from you; for, whatever I might demand,
you would still be dictatorial law-givers, and must be so, because
a raven cannot sing, nor a robber live without robbery. Rather
do I ask those who would be egoists what they think the more egoistic
-- to let laws be given them by you, and to respect those that
are given, or to practice refractoriness, yes, complete
disobedience. Good-hearted people think the laws ought to prescribe
only what is accepted in the people's feeling as right and proper.
But what concern is it of mine what is accepted in the nation
and by the nation? The nation will perhaps be against the blasphemer;
therefore a law against blasphemy. Am I not to blaspheme on that
account? Is this law to be more than an "order" to me?
I put the question.
Solely from the principle that all
right and all authority belong to the collectivity
of the people do all forms of government arise. For none
of them lacks this appeal to the collectivity, and the despot,
as
well as the president or any aristocracy, acts and commands "in
the name of the State." They are in possession of the "authority
of the State," and it is perfectly indifferent whether, were
this possible, the people as a collectivity (all individuals)
exercise this State -- authority, or whether it is only
the representatives of this collectivity, be there many of them
as in aristocracies or one as in monarchies. Always the collectivity
is above the individual, and has a power which is called legitimate,
i.e. which is law.
Over against the sacredness of the
State, the individual is only a vessel of dishonor, in which "exuberance,
malevolence, mania for ridicule and slander, frivolity,"
etc., are left as soon as he does not deem that object of veneration,
the State, to be worthy of recognition. The spiritual haughtiness
of the servants and subjects of the State has fine penalties against
unspiritual "exuberance."
When the government designates as
punishable all play of mind against the State, the moderate
liberals come and opine that fun, satire, wit, humor, must have
free play anyhow, and genius must enjoy freedom. So not
the individual man indeed, but still genius,
is to be free. Here the State, or in its name the government,
says with perfect right: He who is not for me is against me. Fun,
wit, etc. -- in short, the turning of State affairs into a comedy
-- have undermined States from of old: they are not "innocent."
And, further, what boundaries are to be drawn between guilty and
innocent wit, etc.? At this question the moderates fall into great
perplexity, and everything reduces itself to the prayer that the
State (government) would please not be so sensitive, so ticklish
; that it would not immediately scent malevolence in "harmless'
things, and would in general be a little "more tolerant."
Exaggerated sensitiveness is certainly a weakness, its avoidance
may be praiseworthy virtue; but in time of war one cannot be sparing,
and what may be allowed under peaceable circumstances ceases to
be permitted as soon as a state of siege is declared. Because
the well-meaning liberals feel this plainly, they hasten to declare
that, considering "the devotion of the people," there
is assuredly no danger to be feared. But the government will be
wiser, and not let itself be talked into believing anything of
that sort. It knows too well how people stuff one with fine words,
and will not let itself be satisfied with the Barmecide dish.
But they are bound to have their
play-ground, for they are children, you know, and cannot be so
staid as old folks; boys will be boys. Only for this playground,
only for a few hours of jolly running about, they bargain. They
ask only that the State should not, like a splenetic papa, be
too cross. It should permit some Processions of the Ass and plays
of fools, as the church allowed them in the Middle Ages. But the
times when it could grant this without danger are past. Children
that now once come into the open, and live through an
hour without the rod of discipline, are no longer willing to go
into the cell. For the open is now no longer a supplement
to the cell, no longer a refreshing recreation, but its
opposite, an aut-aut. In short, the State must
either no longer put up with anything, or put up with
everything and perish; it must be either sensitive through and
through, or, like a dead man, insensitive. Tolerance is done with.
If the State but gives a finger, they take the whole hand at once.
There can be no more "jesting," and all jest, such as
fun, wit, humor, becomes bitter earnest.
The clamor of the Liberals for
freedom of the press runs counter to their own principle, their
proper will. They will what they do not will,
i.e. they wish, they would like. Hence it is too that
they fall away so easily when once so-called freedom of the press
appears; then they would like censorship. Quite naturally. The
State is sacred even to them; likewise morals. They behave toward
it only as ill-bred brats, as tricky children who seek to utilize
the weaknesses of their parents. Papa State is to permit them
to say many things that do not please him, but papa has the right,
by a stern look, to blue-pencil their impertinent gabble. If they
recognize in him their papa, they must in his presence put up
with the censorship of speech, like every child.
If you let yourself be made out
in the right by another, you must no less let yourself be made
out in the wrong by him; if justification and reward come to you
from him, expect also his arraignment and punishment. Alongside
right goes wrong, alongside legality crime. What are
you? -- You are a -- criminal!
"The criminal is in the utmost
degree the State's own crime!" says Bettina.11 One may let
this sentiment pass, even if Bettina herself does not understand it exactly
so. For in the State the unbridled I -- I, as I belong to myself
alone -- cannot come to my fulfillment and realization. Every
ego is from birth a criminal to begin with against the people,
the State. Hence it is that it does really keep watch over all;
it sees in each one an -- egoist, and it is afraid of the egoist.
It presumes the worst about each one, and takes care, police-care,
that "no harm happens to the State," ne quid respublica
detrimenti capiat. The unbridled ego -- and this we originally
are, and in our secret inward parts we remain so always -- is
the never-ceasing criminal in the State. The man whom his boldness,
his will, his inconsiderateness and fearlessness lead is surrounded
with spies by the State, by the people. I say, by the people!
The people (think it something wonderful, you good-hearted folks,
what you have in the people) -- the people is full of police sentiments
through and through. -- Only he who renounces his ego, who practices
"self-renunciation," is acceptable to the people.
In the book cited Bettina is throughout
good-natured enough to regard the State as only sick, and to hope
for its recovery, a recovery which she would bring about through
the "demagogues";12 but it is not sick; rather is it
in its full strength, when it puts from it the demagogues who
want to acquire something for the individuals, for "all."
In its believers it is provided with the best demagogues (leaders
of the people). According to Bettina, the State is to13
"develop mankind's germ of freedom; otherwise it is a raven-mother14
and caring for raven-fodder!" It cannot do otherwise, for
in its very caring for "mankind" (which, besides, would
have to be the "humane" or " free" State to
begin with) the "individual" is raven-fodder for it.
How rightly speaks the burgomaster, on the other hand:15 "What?
the State has no other duty than to be merely the attendant of
incurable invalids? -- that isn't to the point. From of old the
healthy State has relieved itself of the diseased matter, and
not mixed itself with it. It does not need to be so economical
with its juices. Cut off the robber-branches without hesitation,
that the others may bloom. -- Do not shiver at the State's harshness;
its morality, its policy and religion, point it to that. Accuse
it of no want of feeling; its sympathy revolts against this, but
its experience finds safety only in this severity! There are diseases
in which only drastic remedies will help. The physician who recognizes
the disease as such, but timidly turns to palliatives, will never
remove the disease, but may well cause the patient to succumb
after a shorter or longer sickness." Frau Rat's question,
"If you apply death as a drastic remedy, how is the cure
to be wrought then?" isn't to the point. Why, the State does
not apply death against itself, but against an offensive member;
it tears out an eye that offends it, etc.
"For the invalid State the
only way of salvation is to make man flourish in it."16
If one here, like Bettina, understand by man the concept "Man,"
she
is right; the "invalid" State will recover by the flourishing
of "Man," for, the more infatuated the individuals are
with "Man," the better it serves the State's turn. But,
if one referred it to the individuals, to "all" (and
the authoress half-does this too, because about "Man"
she is still involved in vagueness), then it would sound somewhat
like the following: For an invalid band of robbers the only way
of salvation is to make the loyal citizen nourish in it! Why,
thereby the band of robbers would simply go to ruin as a band
of robbers; and, because it perceives this, it prefers to shoot
every one who has a leaning toward becoming a "steady man."
In this book Bettina is a patriot,
or, what is little more, a philanthropist, a worker for human
happiness. She is discontented with the existing order in quite
the same way as is the title-ghost of her book, along with all
who would like to bring back the good old faith and what goes
with it. Only she thinks, contrariwise, that the politicians,
place-holders, and diplomats ruined the State, while those lay
it at the door of the malevolent, the "seducers of the people."
What is the ordinary criminal but
one who has committed the fatal mistake of endeavoring after what
is the people's instead of seeking for what is his? He has sought
despicable alien goods, has done what believers do who
seek after what is God's. What does the priest who admonishes
the criminal do? He sets before him the great wrong of having
desecrated by his act what was hallowed by the State, its property
(in which, of course, must be included even the life of those
who belong to the State); instead of this,
he might rather hold up to him the fact that he has befouled himself
in not despising the alien thing, but thinking it worth stealing;
he could, if he were not a parson. Talk with the so-called criminal
as with an egoist, and he will be ashamed, not that he transgressed
against your laws and goods, but that he considered your laws
worth evading, your goods worth desiring; he will be ashamed that
he did not -- despise you and yours together, that he was too
little an egoist. But you cannot talk egoistically with him, for
you are not so great as a criminal, you -- commit no crime! You
do not know that an ego who is his own cannot desist from being
a criminal, that crime is his life. And yet you should know it,
since you believe that "we are all miserable sinners";
but you think surreptitiously to get beyond sin, you do not comprehend
-- for you are devil-fearing -- that guilt is the value of a man.
Oh, if you were guilty! But now you are "righteous."17
Well -- just put every thing nicely to rights18 for your master!
When the Christian consciousness,
or the Christian man, draws up a criminal code, what can the concept
of crime be there but simply -- heartlessness?
Each severing and wounding of a heart relation, each
heartless behavior toward a sacred being, is crime. The
more heartfelt the relation is supposed to be, the more scandalous
is the deriding of it, and the more worthy of punishment the crime.
Everyone who is subject to the lord should love him; to deny this
love is a high treason worthy of death. Adultery is a heartlessness
worthy of punishment; one has no heart, no enthusiasm, no pathetic
feeling for the sacredness of marriage. So long as the heart or
soul dictates laws, only the heartful or soulful man enjoys the
protection of the laws. That the man of soul makes laws means
properly that the moral man makes them: what contradicts
these men's "moral feeling," this they penalize. How,
e. g., should disloyalty, secession, breach of oaths
-- in short, all radical breaking off, all tearing asunder
of venerable ties -- not be flagitious and criminal in
their eyes? He who breaks with these demands of the soul has for
enemies all the moral, all the men of soul. Only Krummacher and
his mates are the right people to set up consistently a penal
code of the heart, as a certain bill sufficiently proves. The
consistent legislation of the Christian State must be placed wholly
in the hands of the -- parsons, and will not become pure
and coherent so long as it is worked out only by -- the parson-ridden,
who are always only half-parsons. Only then will every
lack of soulfulness, every heartlessness, be certified as an unpardonable
crime, only then will every agitation of the soul become condemnable,
every objection of criticism and doubt be anathematized; only
then is the own man, before the Christian consciousness, a convicted
-- criminal to begin with.
The men of the Revolution often
talked of the people's "just revenge" as its "right."
Revenge and right coincide here. Is this an attitude of an ego
to an ego? The people cries that the opposite party has committed
"crimes" against it. Can I assume that one commits a
crime against me, without assuming
that he has to act as I see fit? And this action I call the right,
the good, etc.; the divergent action, a crime. So I think that
the others must aim at the same goal with me; i.e.,
I do not treat them as unique beings19 who bear their law in themselves
and live according to it, but as beings who are to obey some "rational"
law. I set up what "Man" is and what acting in a "truly
human" way is, and I demand of every one that this law become
norm and ideal to him; otherwise he will expose himself as a "sinner
and criminal." But upon the "guilty" falls the
"penalty of the law"!
One sees here how it is "Man"
again who sets on foot even the concept of crime, of sin, and
therewith that of right. A man in whom I do not recognize "man"
is "sinner, a guilty one."
Only against a sacred thing are
there criminals; you against me can never be a criminal, but only
an opponent. But not to hate him who injures a sacred thing is
in itself a crime, as St. Just cries out against Danton: "Are
you not a criminal and responsible for not having hated the enemies
of the fatherland?" --
If, as in the Revolution, what "Man"
is apprehended as "good citizen," then from this concept
of "Man" we have the well-known "political offenses
and crimes."
In all this the individual, the
individual man, is regarded as refuse, and on the other hand the
general man, "Man," is honored. Now, according to how
this ghost is named -- as Christian, Jew, Mussulman, good citizen,
loyal subject, freeman, patriot, etc. -- just so do those who
would like to carry through a divergent concept of man, as well
as those who want to put themselves through, fall before
victorious "Man."
And with what unction the butchery
goes on here in the name of the law, of the sovereign people,
of God, etc.!
Now, if the persecuted trickily
conceal and protect themselves from the stern parsonical judges,
people stigmatize them as St. Just, e. g., does those
whom he accuses in the speech against Danton.20 One is to be a
fool, and deliver himself up to their Moloch.
Crimes spring from fixed ideas.
The sacredness of marriage is a fixed idea. From the sacredness
it follows that infidelity is a crime, and therefore
a certain marriage law imposes upon it a shorter or longer penalty.
But by those who proclaim "freedom as sacred" this penalty
must be regarded as a crime against freedom, and only in this
sense has public opinion in fact branded the marriage law.
Society would have every one
come to his right indeed, but yet only to that which is sanctioned
by society, to the society-right, not really to his right.
But I give or take to myself the right out of my own plenitude
of power, and against every superior power I am the most impenitent
criminal. Owner and creator of my right, I recognize no other
source of right than -- me, neither God nor the State nor nature
nor even
man himself with his "eternal rights of man," neither
divine nor human right.
Right "in and for itself."
Without relation to me, therefore! "Absolute right."
Separated from me, therefore! A thing that exists in and for itself!
An absolute! An eternal right, like an eternal truth!
According to the liberal way of
thinking, right is to be obligatory for me because it is thus
established by human reason, against which my reason
is "unreason." Formerly people inveighed in the name
of divine reason against weak human reason; now, in the name of
strong human reason, against egoistic reason, which is rejected
as "unreason." And yet none is real but this very "unreason."
Neither divine nor human reason, but only your and my reason existing
at any given time, is real, as and because you and I are real.
The thought of right is originally
my thought; or, it has its origin in me. But, when it has sprung
from me, when the "Word" is out, then it has "become
flesh," it is a fixed idea. Now I no longer get
rid of the thought; however I turn, it stands before me. Thus
men have not become masters again of the thought "right,"
which they themselves created; their creature is running away
with them. This is absolute right, that which is absolved or unfastened
from me. We, revering it as absolute, cannot devour it again,
and it takes from us the creative power: the creature is more
than the creator, it is "in and for itself."
Once you no longer let right run
around free, once you draw it back into its origin, into you,
it is your right; and that is right which suits you.
Right has had to suffer an attack
within itself, i.e. from the standpoint of right; war
being declared on the part of liberalism against "privilege."21
Privileged and endowed
with equal rights -- on these two concepts turns a stubborn
fight. Excluded or admitted -- would mean the same. But where
should there be a power -- be it an imaginary one like God, law,
or a real one like I, you -- of which it should not be true that
before it all are "endowed with equal rights," i.
e., no respect of persons holds? Every one is equally dear
to God if he adores him, equally agreeable to the law if
only he is a law- abiding person; whether the lover of God and
the law is humpbacked and lame, whether poor or rich, etc., that
amounts to nothing for God and the law; just so, when you are
at the point of drowning, you like a Negro as rescuer as well
as the most excellent Caucasian -- yes, in this situation you
esteem a dog not less than a man. But to whom will not every one
be also, contrariwise, a preferred or disregarded person? God
punishes the wicked with his wrath, the law chastises the lawless,
you let one visit you every moment and show the other the door.
The "equality of right"
is a phantom just because right is nothing more and nothing less
than admission, a matter of grace, which, be it said,
one may also acquire by his desert; for desert and grace are not
contradictory, since even grace wishes to be "deserved"
and our gracious smile falls only to him who knows how to force
it from us.
So people dream of "all citizens
of the State having to stand side by side, with equal rights."
As citizens of the State they are certainly all equal for the
State. But it will divide them, and advance them or put them in
the rear, according to its special ends, if on no other account;
and still more must it distinguish them from one another as good
and bad citizens.
Bruno Bauer disposes of the Jew
question from the standpoint that "privilege" is not
justified. Because Jew and Christian have each some point of advantage
over the other, and in having this point of advantage are exclusive,
therefore before the critic's gaze they crumble into nothingness.
With them the State lies under the like blame, since it justifies
their having advantages and stamps it as a "privilege."
or prerogative, but thereby derogates from its calling to become
a "free State."
But now every one has something
of advantage over another -- viz., himself or his individuality;
in this everybody remains exclusive.
And, again, before a third party
every one makes his peculiarity count for as much as possible,
and (if he wants to win him at all) tries to make it appear attractive
before him.
Now, is the third party to be insensible
to the difference of the one from the other? Do they ask that
of the free State or of humanity? Then these would have to be
absolutely without self-interest, and incapable of taking an interest
in any one whatever. Neither God (who divides his own from the
wicked) nor the State (which knows how to separate good citizens
from bad) was thought of as so indifferent.
But they are looking for this very
third party that bestows no more "privilege." Then it
is called perhaps the free State, or humanity, or whatever else
it may be.
As Christian and Jew are ranked
low by Bruno Bauer on account of their asserting privileges, it
must be that they could and should free themselves from their
narrow standpoint by self-renunciation or unselfishness. If they
threw off their "egoism," the mutual wrong would cease,
and with it Christian and Jewish religiousness in general; it
would be necessary only that neither of them should any longer
want to be anything peculiar.
But, if they gave up this exclusiveness,
with that the ground on which their hostilities were waged would
in truth not yet be forsaken. In case of need they would indeed
find a third thing on which they could unite, a "general
religion," a "religion of humanity," etc.; in short,
an equalization, which need not be better than that which would
result if all Jews became Christians, by this likewise the "privilege"
of one over the other would have an end. The tension22
would indeed be done away, but in this consisted not the essence
of the two, but only their neighborhood. As being distinguished
from each other they must necessarily be mutually resistant,23
and the disparity will always remain. Truly it is not a failing
in you that you stiffen24 yourself against me and assert your
distinctness or peculiarity: you need not give way or renounce
yourself.
People conceive the significance
of the opposition too formally and weakly when they want
only to "dissolve" it in order to make room for a third
thing that shall "unite." The opposition deserves rather
to be sharpened. As Jew and Christian you are in too
slight an opposition, and are contending only about religion,
as it were about the emperor's beard, about a fiddlestick's end.
Enemies in religion indeed, in the rest you still remain
good friends, and equal to each other, e. g. as men.
Nevertheless the rest too is unlike in each; and the time when
you no longer merely dissemble your opposition will be
only when you entirely recognize it, and everybody asserts himself
from top to toe as unique.25 Then the former opposition
will assuredly be dissolved, but only because a stronger has taken
it up into itself.
Our weakness consists not in this,
that we are in opposition to others, but in this, that we are
not completely so; that we are not entirely severed from
them, or that we seek a "communion," a "bond,"
that in communion we have an ideal. One faith, one God, one idea,
one hat, for all! If all were brought under one hat, certainly
no one would any longer need to take off his hat before another.
The last and most decided opposition,
that of unique against unique, is at bottom beyond what is called
opposition, but without having sunk back into "unity"
and unison. As unique you have nothing in common with the other
any longer, and therefore nothing divisive or hostile either;
you are not seeking to be in the right against him before a third party,
and are standing with him neither "on the ground of right"
nor on any other common ground. The opposition vanishes in complete
-- severance or singleness.26 This might indeed be regarded
as the new point in common or a new parity, but here the parity
consists precisely in the disparity, and is itself nothing but
disparity, a par of disparity, and that only for him who institutes
a "comparison."
The polemic against privilege forms
a characteristic feature of liberalism, which fumes against "privilege"
because it itself appeals to "right." Further than to
fuming it cannot carry this; for privileges do not fall before
right falls, as they are only forms of right. But right falls
apart into its nothingness when it is swallowed up by might, i.e.
when one understands what is meant by "Might goes before
right." All right explains itself then as privilege, and
privilege itself as power, as -- superior power.
But must not the mighty combat against
superior power show quite another face than the modest combat
against privilege, which is to be fought out before a first judge,
"Right," according to the judge's mind?
Now, in conclusion, I have still
to take back the half-way form of expression of which I was willing
to make use only so long as I was still rooting among the entrails
of right, and letting the word at least stand. But, in fact, with
the concept the word too loses its meaning. What I called "my
right" is
no longer "right" at all, because right can be bestowed
only by a spirit, be it the spirit of nature or that of the species,
of mankind, the Spirit of God or that of His Holiness or His Highness,
etc. What I have without an entitling spirit I have without right;
I have it solely and alone through my power.
I do not demand any right, therefore
I need not recognize any either. What I can get by force I get
by force, and what I do not get by force I have no right to, nor
do I give myself airs, or consolation, with my imprescriptible
right.
With absolute right, right itself
passes away; the dominion of the "concept of right"
is canceled at the same time. For it is not to be forgotten that
hitherto concepts, ideas, or principles ruled us, and that among
these rulers the concept of right, or of justice, played one of
the most important parts.
Entitled or unentitled -- that does
not concern me, if I am only powerful, I am of myself
empowered, and need no other empowering or entitling.
Right -- is a wheel in the head,
put there by a spook; power -- that am I myself, I am the powerful
one and owner of power. Right is above me, is absolute, and exists
in one higher, as whose grace it flows to me: right is a gift
of grace from the judge; power and might exist only in me the
powerful and mighty.
Now, in conclusion, I have still
to take back the half-way form of expression of which I was willing
to make use only so long as I was still rooting among the entrails
of right, and letting the word at least stand. But, in fact, with
the concept the word too loses its meaning. What I called "my
right" is
no longer "right" at all, because right can be bestowed
only by a spirit, be it the spirit of nature or that of the species,
of mankind, the Spirit of God or that of His Holiness or His Highness,
etc. What I have without an entitling spirit I have without right;
I have it solely and alone through my power.
I do not demand any right, therefore
I need not recognize any either. What I can get by force I get
by force, and what I do not get by force I have no right to, nor
do I give myself airs, or consolation, with my imprescriptible
right.
With absolute right, right itself
passes away; the dominion of the "concept of right"
is canceled at the same time. For it is not to be forgotten that
hitherto concepts, ideas, or principles ruled us, and that among
these rulers the concept of right, or of justice, played one of
the most important parts.
Entitled or unentitled -- that does
not concern me, if I am only powerful, I am of myself
empowered, and need no other empowering or entitling.
Right -- is a wheel in the head,
put there by a spook; power -- that am I myself, I am the powerful
one and owner of power. Right is above me, is absolute, and exists
in one higher, as whose grace it flows to me: right is a gift
of grace from the judge; power and might exist only in me the
powerful and mighty.
1 [This word has also, in German, the meaning of "common law," and will sometimes be translated "law" in the following paragraphs.]
2 Cf. "Die Kommunisten in der Schweiz," committee report,p. 3.
3 [Rechtsstreit,a word which usually means "lawsuit."]
4 [A common German phrase for "it suits me."]
5 A. Becker, "Volksphilosophie,",p. 22f.
6 [Mephistopheles in "Faust."]
7 "I beg you, spare my lungs! He who insistson proving himself right, if he but has one of those things calledtongues, can hold his own in all the world's despite!" [Faust'swords to Mephistopheles, slightly misquoted. -- For Rechthabereisee note on p. 185.]
8 [Gesetz,statute; no longer the same German word as "right"]
9 [Verbrechen]
10 [brechen]
11 "This Book Belongs to the King,", p. 376.
12 P. 376.
13 P. 374.
14 [An unnatural mother]
15 P. 381.
16 P. 385
17 [Gerechte]
18 [macht Alles hübsch gerecht]
19 [Einzige]
20 See "Political Speeches," 10, p. 153
21 [Literally, "precedent right."]
22 [Spannung]
23 [gespannt]
24 [spannen]
25 [Einzig]
26 [Einzigkeit]
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