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Book 3 of Daybreak by Friedrich Nietzsche |
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149 The need for little
deviant acts!— Sometimes to act against
one’s better judgment when it comes to questions of custom; to give
way in practice while keeping one’s reservations to oneself; to do as
everyone does and thus to show them consideration as it were in compensation
for our deviant opinions:—many tolerably freeminded people regard this, not
merely as unobjectionable, but as “honest,” “humane,” “tolerant,” “not being
pedantic,” and whatever else those pretty words may be with which the
intellectual conscience is lulled to sleep: and thus this person takes his
child for Christian baptism though he is an atheist; and that person serves
in the army as all the world does, however much he may execrate hatred
between nations; and a third marries his wife in church because her relatives
are pious and is not ashamed to repeat vows before a priest. “It doesn’t really
matter if people like us also do what everyone does and always has
done”—this is the thoughtless prejudice! The thoughtless error!
For nothing matters more than that an already mighty, anciently
established and irrationally recognized custom should be once more confirmed
by a person recognized as rational: it thereby acquires in the eyes of all
who come to hear of it the sanction of rationality itself! All respect to
your opinions! But little deviant acts are worth more! |