26.1.26

In the proximity of madness


The sum of sensations, items of knowledge, experiences, the whole burden of culture, that is to say, has become so great that an over - excitation of the nervous and thinking powers is now a universal danger; indeed, the cultivated classes of Europe have in fact become altogether neurotic, and almost every one of its great families has come close to lunacy in anu rate one of its branches. It is true that health is nowadays sought by all available means; but what is chiefly needed is an abatement of that tension of faling, that crushing cultural burden which, even if it has to be purchased at a heavy cost, nonetheless gives ground for high hopes of a new Renaissance. We have christianity, the philosophers, poets, musicians to thank for an abundance of profound sensations: if these are not to stifle us we must conjure up the spirit of science, which on the whole makes one somewhat colder and more sceptical and in special cools down the fiery stream of belief in ultimate definitive truths; it is principally through christianity that this stream has grow so turbulent.

Friedrich Nietzsche
1844 - 1900