To will means to keep oneself in a state of exasper-
ation and fever at any cost. The effort is exhausting,
nor does it appear that man can sustain it indefinitely.
To believe it is his responsibility to transcend his
condition and tend toward that of the superman is to
forget that he has trouble enough sustaining himself
as man, and that he succeeds only by straining his
will, that mainspring, to the maximum. And the will,
which contains a suspect and even disastrous prin-
ciple, turns against those who abuse it. To will is not
natural-or more exactly, one must will just enough
to live; as soon as one wills less than that, or more,
one either breaks down or runs down. If lack of will
is a disease, the will itself is another, and a much
worse one, for it is from the will and its excesses
rather than from its failures that all man’s miseries
derive. But if he already wills to excess in his present
state, what will become of him once he accedes to
the rank of superman? He will doubtless explode and
fall back upon himself. So that it is by a grandiose
detour that he will then be led to fall out of time in
order to enter the infra-eternity, ineluctable conclu-
sion where it matters little, ultimately, whether he
arrives by decay or by disaster.
Categories: theory, Uncategorized
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