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THE WORLD AS A WORK OF ARTBy Karsten Harries; Karsten Harries is a professor of philosophy at Yale University.

Published: January 19, 1986

NIETZSCHE Life as Literature. By Alexander Nehamas. 261 pp.

Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. $17.50.

THE HUMANITIES have become uncertain of their way: recent

discourse in philosophy and literary theory suggests that reason has

undermined trust in reason; the traditional distinction between

theory and literature, between philosophy and poetry, has blurred.

Such uncertainty has renewed appreciation of Nietzsche's attempt to

replace Plato's idealized Socrates, whose life and death celebrated

confidence in reason, with his own ideal image of the philosopher, an

idealization of himself as a poet-philosopher opening doors to a post-

Socratic, postmodern culture. At issue is the future of philosophy.

Philosophers and anyone interested in philosophy ought therefore to

welcome Alexander Nehamas's elegant and challenging interpretation of this ''most

writerly of philosophers.''

Mr. Nehamas, who is a professor of philosophy at the University of Pittsburgh, uses two

related themes to give unity to his study. The first is Nietzsche's perspectivism: we know

no fact independent of interpretation; there is no vision of reality untainted by prejudice

and perspective - but that doesn't mean that one interpretation may not be better than

another. Nietzsche's perspectivism helps explain his experiments with different styles of

writing, which force us to pay attention not just to what is said but to the way it is being

said. Instead of excluding himself from his texts, Nietzsche intrudes himself; instead of the

self-effacement we have come to expect of scholarly writing, Nietzsche constantly reminds

us that his insights are very much his own. Committed to perspectivism, Mr. Nehamas

attempts something of the sort himself. Not that he resorts to Nietzschean hyperbole or

tries to match Nietzsche's masterly play with language; but like Nietzsche, he does not let

us forget that his is only one interpretation, and reminds us of others with which it invites

comparison.

The second theme of Mr. Nehamas's interpretation is Nietzsche's estheticism. Nietzsche is

said to look at the world as if it were a work of art (more precisely a literary text), at

persons and things as if they were characters or entities in some work of fiction, at our

relationship to the world as if it were textual interpretation. This literary model lets Mr.

Nehamas present Nietzsche's ''will to power'' (often understood as a theory about nature)

as an act of interpretation that gives definite shape to an indeterminate world. It also

provides him with a key to understanding Nietzsche's doctrine of the eternal recurrence,

which offers ''not a theory of the world but a view of the ideal life.'' That ideal celebrates

the person able to affirm all he has done and to re-create himself as the hero of a narrative

that, in its perfection, lets us experience every detail as inevitable.

For Mr. Nehamas, a good example of the self-creator is the narrator of Proust's

''Remembrance of Things Past.'' Not that the life of this narrator was ever Nietzsche's own

ideal. ''But,'' says Mr. Nehamas, ''the framework supplied by this perfect novel which

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relates what, despite and even through its very imperfections, becomes and is seen to be a

perfect life, and which keeps turning endlessly back upon itself, is the best possible model

for the eternal recurrence.'' Such perfection, Mr. Nehamas concludes, Nietzsche strove for

and achieved. ''Nietzsche's texts therefore do not describe but, in exquisitely elaborate

detail, exemplify the perfect instance of his ideal character. And this character is none

other than the character these very texts constitute: Nietzsche himself.'' BUT this

conclusion puts into question Nietzsche's, as well as Mr. Nehamas's, esthetic view of

things. What is the relationship between ''the miserable little man'' Nietzsche was and ''the

magnificent character'' he created? Does the creation of the latter rest on a triumphant

affirmation of the former? Doesn't it presuppose quite the opposite, a need to escape from

life into art? And isn't that escape itself a manifestation of what Nietzsche's Zarathustra

calls ''the spirit of revenge,'' a rejection of all that binds us into time - body, life and reality

- in favor of their reflections in the mirror of art? To overcome the spirit of revenge, to

redeem ourselves in Nietzsche's sense, we must find the strength to accept ourselves as we

are, vulnerable and mortal, willing power, yet lacking power.

This struggle renders the German philosopher's texts profoundly ambiguous. There is no

denying Nietzsche's estheticism, but we must also hear his call for a redemption from the

spirit of revenge, a redemption that would overcome every estheticism. We should not

forget his sad end when we admire ''the magnificent character'' emerging through the

books he wrote. To trade even a miserable life for the grandest delusion is to strike a

questionable bargain. And so is to trade adequacy to the many different strands of

Nietzsche's texts for esthetic coherence. But just because it runs this risk, this unusually

engaging book demands our attention.

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