ื‘ืก״ื“

Kavanot: Man and Superman

Thoughts on Tanach and the Davening

๐Ÿšง๐Ÿ—๏ธ Page Still Under Construction

ื™ื‘ ืื“ื ื‘ืœื™ืขืœ ืื™ืฉ ืื•ืŸ; ื”ื•ืœืš ืขืงืฉื•ืช ืคื”ืƒ ื™ื’ ืงืจืฅ ื‘ืขื™ื ื• ืžืœืœ ื‘ืจื’ืœื•; ืžืจื” ื‘ืืฆื‘ืขืชื™ื•ืƒ ื™ื“ ืชื”ืคื›ื•ืช ื‘ืœื‘ื• ื—ืจืฉ ืจืข ื‘ื›ืœ ืขืช; ืžื“ื™ื ื™ื ื™ืฉืœื—ืƒ ื˜ื• ืขืœ ื›ืŸ ืคืชืื ื™ื‘ื•ื ืื™ื“ื•; ืคืชืข ื™ืฉื‘ืจ ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžืจืคืืƒ

ืžืฉืœื™ ืคืจืง ื•

ืžื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืื“ื ื‘ืœื™ืขืœ ื”ืคื•ืจืง ืขื•ืœ ืฉืžื™ื ืžืขืœื™ื• ื‘ืžืฆื•ืช ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ืื“ื ืœืžืงื•ื, ื•ื‘ืžืฆื•ืช ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ืื“ื ืœื—ื‘ืจื• ื”ื•ื ืื™ืฉ ืื•ืŸ. ื”ืื™ืฉ ื”ื–ื” ื—ื˜ืื• ื ื™ื›ืจ ื‘ื–ืณ ื“ื‘ืจื™ื: ื] ื‘ื›ืœื™ ื”ื“ื‘ื•ืจ ื”ื•ืœืš ืขืงืฉื•ืช ืคื”, ืฉืžื“ื‘ืจ ืขืงืฉื•ืช ื ื’ื“ ื—ืงื™ ื”ื—ื›ืžื”, ืฉืคื” ืžืจืžื– ืขืœ ื”ื—ื›ืžื”, ื‘] ื‘ื›ืœื™ ื”ืžืขืฉื”, ื ื’ื“ ื”ืขื™ื ื™ื ืืžืจ ืงื•ืจืฅ ื‘ืขื™ื ื™ื•, ื”ืคืš ืžืžื” ืฉื›ืชื•ื‘ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื˜ื• ืœื˜) ื•ึฐืœึนื ืชึธืชื•ึผืจื•ึผ [ืึทื—ึฒืจึตื™ ืœึฐื‘ึทื‘ึฐื›ึถื ื•ึฐ]ืึทื—ึฒืจึตื™ ืขึตื™ื ึตื™ื›ึถื, ื’] ื‘ื›ืœื™ ื”ืชื ื•ืขื” ืžื•ืœืœ ื‘ืจื’ืœื™ื•, ืžืจืžื– ืžืœื™ื ื‘ืจื’ืœื™ื• ืœืจื•ืข, ื“] ื‘ื™ื“ื™ื ืžื•ืจื” ื‘ืืฆื‘ืขื•ืชื™ื•, ื”] ื ื’ื“ ื”ืžื—ืฉื‘ื”, ืชื”ืคื•ื›ื•ืช ื‘ืœื‘ื•, ื‘ืขื ื™ื ื™ ื”ืืžื•ื ื” ื—ื•ืฉื‘ ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื”ืคืš ื”ืืžื•ื ื”, ื•ื‘ืขื ื™ื ื™ ื‘ื ื™ ืื“ื ื—ื•ืจืฉ ืจืข ื ื’ื“ ื—ื‘ืจื•, ื–] ืžื“ื ื™ื ื™ืฉืœื— ื‘ื™ืŸ ืื“ื ืœื—ื‘ืจื•

ืžืœื‘ื™ื, ืžืฉืœื™ ื•:ื™ื‘-ื™ื“

ื˜ื– ืฉืฉ ื”ื ื” ืฉื ื ื”ืณ; ื•ืฉื‘ืข ืชื•ืขื‘ืช ื ืคืฉื•ืƒ ื™ื– ืขื™ื ื™ื ืจืžื•ืช ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืฉืงืจ; ื•ื™ื“ื™ื ืฉืคื›ื•ืช ื“ื ื ืงื™ืƒ ื™ื— ืœื‘ ื—ืจืฉ ืžื—ืฉื‘ื•ืช ืื•ืŸ; ืจื’ืœื™ื ืžืžื”ืจื•ืช ืœืจื•ืฅ ืœืจืขื”ืƒ ื™ื˜ ื™ืคื™ื— ื›ื–ื‘ื™ื ืขื“ ืฉืงืจ; ื•ืžืฉืœื— ืžื“ื ื™ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ืื—ื™ืืƒ

ืžืฉืœื™ ืคืจืง ื•

ืฉืฉ ื”ื ื”: ื”ืฉืฉื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื™ื ืฉื—ืฉื‘โ€ ืฉื ื ื”ืณโ€œ, ื•ื”ืฉื‘ืข ืฉื”ื•ื โ€ืžื“ื ื™ื ื™ืฉืœื—โ€œ ืฉื”ื™ื ื”ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ืช, ื”ื™ื ืชื•ืขื‘ืช ื ืคืฉื•, ืฉื”ื™ื ื’ืจื•ืข ืžื›ื•ืœื ื›ื™ ืžืฉื—ื™ืช ืืช ื”ืงื™ื‘ื•ืฅ ื‘ื›ืœืœ.

ืžืœื‘ื™ืดื, ืžืฉืœื™ ื•:ื˜ื–

[ื•ืื ืขื“ ืืœื” ืœื ืชืฉืžืขื• ืœื™ ื•ื™ืกืคืชื™ ืœื™ืกืจื” ืืชื›ื] ืฉื‘ืข ืขืœ ื—ื˜ืืชื™ื›ื: ื›ืœื•ืžืจ: ื”ืจื‘ื” ืžื›ื•ืช ืขืœ ื—ื˜ืืชื™ื›ื. ื›ืžื• (ืžืฉืœื™ ื›ื“:ื˜ื–): ื›ึผึดื™ ืฉืึถื‘ึทืขโ€‰ ื™ึดืคึผื•ึนืœ ืฆึทื“ึผึดื™ืง ื•ึธืงึธื; (ื™ืฉืขื™ื”ื• ืœ:ื›ื•) ื•ึฐืื•ึนืจ ื”ึทื—ึทืžึผึธื” ื™ึดื”ึฐื™ึถื” ืฉืึดื‘ึฐืขึธืชึทื™ึดื; (ื™ืฉืขื™ื”ื• ื“:ื) ื•ึฐื”ึถื—ึฑื–ึดื™ืงื•ึผ ืฉืึถื‘ึทืข ื ึธืฉืึดื™ื.

ืจืฉื‘ืดื,ื•ื™ืงืจื ื›ื•:ื™ื—

ื’ ื›ื” ืืžืจ ื”ืณ ืขืœ ืฉืœืฉื” ืคืฉืขื™ ื“ืžืฉืง ื•ืขืœ ืืจื‘ืขื” ืœื ืืฉื™ื‘ื ื•; ืขืœ ื“ื•ืฉื ื‘ื—ืจืฆื•ืช ื”ื‘ืจื–ืœ ืืช ื”ื’ืœืขื“ืƒโ€ฆ ื™ื ื›ื” ืืžืจ ื”ืณ ืขืœ ืฉืœืฉื” ืคืฉืขื™ ืื“ื•ื ื•ืขืœ ืืจื‘ืขื” ืœื ืืฉื™ื‘ื ื•; ืขืœ ืจื“ืคื• ื‘ื—ืจื‘ ืื—ื™ื• ื•ืฉื—ืช ืจื—ืžื™ื• ื•ื™ื˜ืจืฃ ืœืขื“ ืืคื• ื•ืขื‘ืจืชื• ืฉืžืจื” ื ืฆื—ืƒ

ืขืžื•ืก ืคืจืง ื

ื“ ื›ื” ืืžืจ ื”ืณ ืขืœ ืฉืœืฉื” ืคืฉืขื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื•ืขืœ ืืจื‘ืขื” ืœื ืืฉื™ื‘ื ื•; ืขืœ ืžืืกื ืืช ืชื•ืจืช ื”ืณ ื•ื—ืงื™ื• ืœื ืฉืžืจื• ื•ื™ืชืขื•ื ื›ื–ื‘ื™ื”ื ืืฉืจ ื”ืœื›ื• ืื‘ื•ืชื ืื—ืจื™ื”ืืƒโ€ฆ ื• ื›ื” ืืžืจ ื”ืณ ืขืœ ืฉืœืฉื” ืคืฉืขื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื•ืขืœ ืืจื‘ืขื” ืœื ืืฉื™ื‘ื ื•; ืขืœ ืžื›ืจื ื‘ื›ืกืฃ ืฆื“ื™ืง ื•ืื‘ื™ื•ืŸ ื‘ืขื‘ื•ืจ ื ืขืœื™ืืƒ

ืขืžื•ืก ืคืจืง ื‘

ืขืœ ืฉืœืฉื” ืคืฉืขื™ ื“ืžืฉืง: ื”ื ื” ื“ืžื™ื ื• ื›ื™ ื”ืืœ ื™ืชื‘ืจืš ืœื ื™ืขื ื™ืฉ ื”ืื“ื ืขืœ ืขื•ืŸ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืฉื ื™ ื•ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ื›ื™ ื–ื” ืžืžื“ื•ืชื™ื• ืฉื”ื•ื ื ื•ืฉื ืขื•ืŸ ื•ืขื•ื‘ืจ ืขืœ ืคืฉืข, ื•ืืžืจ ืืœื™ื”ื•ื (ืื™ื•ื‘ ืœื’:ื›ื˜) ื”ึถืŸ ื›ึธึผืœ ืึตืœึถึผื” ื™ึดืคึฐืขึทืœ ืึตึพืœ; ืคึทึผืขึฒืžึทื™ึดื ืฉึธืืœื•ึนืฉื ืขึดื ื’ึธึผื‘ึถืจ ื•ื‘ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช ื™ืขื ื™ืฉื•.

ืจื“ืดืง, ืขืžื•ืก ื:ื’

similar idiom here. There are many (โ€œืฉื‘ืขโ€) bad ืžื™ื“ื•ืช but one is the straw that breaks the camelโ€™s back: ื•ืžืฉืœื— ืžื“ื ื™ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ืื—ื™ื. Causing strife leads to utter destruction: ืขืœ ื›ืŸ ืคืชืื ื™ื‘ื•ื ืื™ื“ื•; ืคืชืข ื™ืฉื‘ืจ ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžืจืคื.


The kind of person who is ืžืฉืœื— ืžื“ื ื™ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ืื—ื™ื is the ืื“ื ื‘ืœื™ืขืœ.

ื‘ื ื™ ื‘ืœื™ืขืœ: ื‘ืœื™ ืขืœ, ืฉืคืจืงื• ืขืœื• ืฉืœ ืžืงื•ื.

ืจืฉืดื™, ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื™ื’:ื™ื“

ืื“ื ื‘ืœื™ืขืœ: ื‘ืœื™ืขืœ ื”ื•ื ื”ืคื•ืจืง ืžืžื ื• ืขืœ ืžืœื›ื•ืช ืฉืžื™ื ื•ืขื•ืœ ื‘ืฉืจ ื•ื“ื ื•ืื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื• ืฉื•ื ืขื•ืœ ื•ื”ื•ืœืš ื‘ืฉืจื™ืจื•ืช ืœื‘ื• ื”ืจืข.

ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ื’ืจืดื ืœืžืฉืœื™ ื•:ื™ื‘

ื™ื‘ ื•ื‘ื ื™ ืขืœื™ ื‘ื ื™ ื‘ืœื™ืขืœ; ืœื ื™ื“ืขื• ืืช ื”ืณืƒ ื™ื’ ื•ืžืฉืคื˜ ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ืืช ื”ืขื ื›ืœ ืื™ืฉ ื–ื‘ื— ื–ื‘ื— ื•ื‘ื ื ืขืจ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ื›ื‘ืฉืœ ื”ื‘ืฉืจ ื•ื”ืžื–ืœื’ ืฉืœืฉ ื”ืฉื ื™ื ื‘ื™ื“ื•ืƒ ื™ื“ ื•ื”ื›ื” ื‘ื›ื™ื•ืจ ืื• ื‘ื“ื•ื“ ืื• ื‘ืงืœื—ืช ืื• ื‘ืคืจื•ืจ ื›ืœ ืืฉืจ ื™ืขืœื” ื”ืžื–ืœื’ ื™ืงื— ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ื‘ื•; ื›ื›ื” ื™ืขืฉื• ืœื›ืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื”ื‘ืื™ื ืฉื ื‘ืฉืœื”ืƒ ื˜ื• ื’ื ื‘ื˜ืจื ื™ืงื˜ืจื•ืŸ ืืช ื”ื—ืœื‘ ื•ื‘ื ื ืขืจ ื”ื›ื”ืŸ ื•ืืžืจ ืœืื™ืฉ ื”ื–ื‘ื— ืชื ื” ื‘ืฉืจ ืœืฆืœื•ืช ืœื›ื”ืŸ; ื•ืœื ื™ืงื— ืžืžืš ื‘ืฉืจ ืžื‘ืฉืœ ื›ื™ ืื ื—ื™ืƒ ื˜ื– ื•ื™ืืžืจ ืืœื™ื• ื”ืื™ืฉ ืงื˜ืจ ื™ืงื˜ื™ืจื•ืŸ ื›ื™ื•ื ื”ื—ืœื‘ ื•ืงื— ืœืš ื›ืืฉืจ ืชืื•ื” ื ืคืฉืš; ื•ืืžืจ ืœื ื›ื™ ืขืชื” ืชืชืŸ ื•ืื ืœื ืœืงื—ืชื™ ื‘ื—ื–ืงื”ืƒ

ืฉืžื•ืืœ ื ืคืจืง ื‘

Athenians:

โ€ฆyou know as well as we do that right, as the world goes, is only in question between equals in power, while the strong do what they can and the weak suffer what they must.

Thucydides, The Peloponnesian War, The Melian Dialogue , Book 5, Chapter 17

Why described as ื”ื•ืœืš ืขืงืฉื•ืช ืคื”? Says things that sound good. Nietzchean ethics.

Thereโ€™s a lot of discussion among many people, especially fans of Nietzsche and those on the right, of master and slave morality. Master morality is supposed to be the type of morality that reveres strength and dominance, toughness and power, while slave morality is that which champions the weak and appeals to the masses. It argues against forms of oppression and domination.

โ€ฆWhen people object to slave morality, they are just objecting to morality. They are objecting to the notion that you should care about others and doing the right thing, even when doing so doesnโ€™t materially benefit you.

Benthamโ€™s Newsletter, Shut Up About Slave Morality

Iโ€™m an expert on Nietzsche (Iโ€™ve read some of his books), but not a world-leading expert (I didnโ€™t understand them). So take all of this as a riff on the concept, rather than a guide to Nietzscheโ€™s original intent.

In the beginning (says Nietzsche), the word โ€œgoodโ€ was synonymous with โ€œnobleโ€ - ie the virtues that made the nobility better than the serfs they ruled. This was way back in the Bronze Age, so your model for a noble should be Achilles, Agamemnon, etc.

The excellent noble delights in being strong, healthy, and virile. He lives in a beautiful palace and wears shining golden armor. He may be cultured, sophisticated, or even brilliant. Heโ€™s great at everything he does, and harbors ambitions to become even greater, maybe conquer a kingdom or two. Heโ€™s powerful, skillful, and awe-inspiring. Life is good!

Value systems naturally flow from elite to commoners. But a commoner canโ€™t do much with this kind of master morality besides conclude โ€œyeah, I suckโ€. Commoners are poor, sickly, and live in mud huts. Theyโ€™re unlikely to achieve many goals beyond โ€œnot dieโ€, and theyโ€™ve probably had their spirits crushed. But โ€œI suckโ€ isnโ€™t a psychologically stable proposition. So sometime around the Iron Age, the slaves started working on a morality of their own, one where theyโ€™re the good guys and the masters are the losers.

Slave morality says that the strong are tyrants, the rich are greedy, and the ambitious are puffed-up braggarts. The wisest man is he who admits he knows nothing; the strongest man is he who conquers his own desires; it is easier for a camel to pass through a needle and so on. God loves the humble, the salt of the earth. The worst thing you can do is try to pridefully rise above your fellows (cf. Tall Poppy Syndrome); the best thing you can do is to lessen yourself, through methods sacred (fasting, celibacy, self-flagellation) or mundane (giving to charity, serving your fellow man).

Nietzsche speculates that slave morality originated with the Jews (an especially downtrodden and persecuted race) but caught on after the rise of Christianity. Sometime around the fall of Rome it took the lead over master morality, and itโ€™s been gaining ever since. As time goes on, slave morality will become more and more dominant, master morality will fade into a dimmer and dimmer memory, and at some point weโ€™ll come to what he calls the Last Manโ€”someone so completely poisoned by slave morality that he worships mediocrity, feels no emotion but envy, and refuses to ever do anything because doing things seems insufficiently humble.

Scott Alexander, Matt Yglesias Considered As The Nietzschean Superman

Nietzchean ethics isnโ€™t all wrong.

ืื ืื™ืŸ ืื ื™ ืœื™, ืžื™ ืœื™?

ืžืฉื ื” ืื‘ื•ืช ื:ื™ื“

but balanced

ื•ื›ืฉืื ื™ ืœืขืฆืžื™, ืžื” ืื ื™?

ืžืฉื ื” ืื‘ื•ืช ื:ื™ื“

It was said of Reb Simcha Bunem, a 18th century Hasidic rebbe, that he carried two slips of paper, one in each pocket. One was inscribed with the saying from the Talmud: Bishvili nivra ha-olam, โ€œfor my sake the world was created.โ€ On the other he wrote a phrase from our father Avraham in the Torah: Vโ€™anokhi afar vโ€™efer, โ€œI am but dust and ashes.โ€ He would take out and read each slip of paper as necessary for the moment.

Martin Buber, Tales of the Hasidim: Later Masters, pp. 249-250.

answer is care about yourself but never be the ืžืฉืœื— ืžื“ื ื™ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ืื—ื™ื, creating strife with others.

Slave morality hates powerexcellence and refuses to justify it. Master morality says powerexcellence is its own justification, and the rest of us have to justify ourselves to it. Liberalism says that sure, we can probably justify power/excellence, as long as it stays within reasonable bounds and doesnโ€™t cause trouble.

Slave morality ignores benefits and sets the importance of harms at infinity. Master morality ignores harms, and sets the value of โ€œbenefitsโ€ (not that it would think of it in these termsโ€”greatness doesnโ€™t exist to benefit others) at infinity. Liberalism accepts the normal, finite utilitarian calculus and tries to balance benefits against harms.

Scott Alexander, Matt Yglesias Considered As The Nietzschean Superman

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