Nietzsche's will to health
OA Version
Citation
Abstract
Nietzsche repeatedly criticizes traditional morality for having ruined our health. This raises three questions: (1) How does Nietzsche understand human health? (2) Why are health-impacts evaluatively significant? (3) Why should these impacts override the weight of our traditional moral values? By addressing these questions, I bring clarity to Nietzsche’s ethics and new insight to contemporary philosophy of medicine. First, Nietzsche conceives of health as a balance between one’s abilities and the demands placed upon them by one's motivations. One is healthier the more one is able to meet those demands; less healthy, the less so. This view is similar to “embedded instrumentalism” in current philosophy of medicine. Second, the value health has for Nietzsche is closely related to that of “power.” Power involves the confrontation of difficulty in one’s pursuits. Nietzsche is especially interested in the diachronic value of upward trends in difficult confrontations. One is better off to the extent that one tackles more difficult versions of a task than before. Such upward trends are valuable because they prevent a form of human despair of special concern to Nietzsche. Striving after a prized goal one feels unable to realize is deeply distressing and, Nietzsche argues, leads to a form of self-alienation, resentment of others, evaluative instability, and a sense of futility in acting. This cluster of attitudes diminishes one’s welfare and undermines one’s agency. Upward trends in power contribute to one’s sense that one is able to carry out one’s dearest aims (i.e. to a sense of good health) and so prevent this dissatisfaction. Downward trends contribute to a sense of one’s impotence (of ill health). The value of avoiding this dissatisfaction and its consequences accounts for the value of health. Third, drawing on recent scholarship, I argue that Nietzsche affords health normative force for its being a constitutive aim of genuine agency. Constitutive of genuine action is the realization of a condition in which we act and do not see ourselves as impotent in acting. Therefore we have reason to avoid conditions that eradicate our (sense of our own) health, grounded in the aim of realizing genuine agency.
Description
2018
License
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International