- Last man
-
For the football term, see Last man (football). For uses of "The Last Man", see The Last Man (disambiguation).
The last man (German: der letzte Mensch) is a term used by the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche in Thus Spoke Zarathustra to describe the antithesis of the imagined superior being, the "Übermensch", whose imminent appearance is heralded by Zarathustra. This 'Over Man' may be contrasted to a weak-willed individual, one who is tired of life, takes no risks, seeks only comfort and security: the last man.
Nietzsche saw that nothing great is possible for the Last Man, and it is Nietzsche's contention that Western civilization (Europe) is moving in the direction of the last man, an apathetic creature, who has no great passion or commitment, who is unable to dream, who merely earns his living and keeps warm.
One of Nietzsche's greatest fears was the creeping mediocrity brought about by democratic "freedom" and universal equality. If the "Übermensch" represented his ideal – the ideal of a being strong enough to create a new master morality, strong enough to live without the consolation of an egalitarian ethics, and strong enough to recognize and embrace the "eternal return" as the ultimate reality – then Nietzsche’s so called "last man" is the exact opposite.
The last man, Nietzsche predicted, would be one response to nihilism. But the full implications of the death of God had yet to unfold. As he said, "the event itself is far too great, too distant, too remote from the multitude's capacity for comprehension even for the tidings of it to be thought of as having arrived as yet."[1]
See also
Notes
- ^ Gay Science, §343
Friedrich Nietzsche Works The Birth of Tragedy · Philosophy in the Tragic Age of the Greeks · On Truth and Lies in a Nonmoral Sense · Untimely Meditations · Hymnus an das Leben · Human, All Too Human · The Dawn · The Gay Science · Thus Spoke Zarathustra · Beyond Good and Evil · On the Genealogy of Morality · The Case of Wagner · Twilight of the Idols · The Antichrist · Ecce Homo · Nietzsche contra Wagner · The Will to Power (posthumous)Concepts Amor fati · Apollonian and Dionysian · Eternal return · Free will · God is dead · Herd instinct · Last man · Master-slave morality · Nietzschean affirmation · Perspectivism · Ressentiment · Transvaluation of values · Tschandala · Übermensch · World riddle · Will to powerRelated articles Categories:- Friedrich Nietzsche
- Philosophical concepts
- Nihilism
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.