10.2.26

Microcosm and macrocosm of culture


He who wants to harvest happiness and contentment from life 
has only to avoid acquiring a higher culture.

The finest discoveries concerning culture are made by the individual man within himslef when he finds two heterogeneous powers ruling there. Supposing someone is a much in love with the plastic arts or music as he is enraptured by the resolve this contradiction by annihilating the one and giving the other free rein, the only thing for him to do is to turn himself into so large a hall of culture that both powers can be accomodated within it, even if at opposite ends, while between them there reside mediating powers with the strength and authority to settle any contention that might break out. Such a hall of culture within the single individual would, however, bear the strongest resemblance to the cultural structure of entire epochs and provide continual instruction regarding them by means of analogy. For wherever grand cultural architecture has developed, its purpose has been to effect a harmony and concord between contending powers through the agency of an overwhelming assemblage of the others powers, but without the need to supress them or clap then in irons.

Friedrich Nietzsche
1844 - 1900