4.3#

Nietzsche#

Here is announced, perhaps for the first time, a pessimism “beyond good and evil.”
In the spirit of music: no key, note, or chord is wrong for any given key signature.
We shall dance in this life’s fetters like the freest of spirits, channeling passing chords…

                 1. Pessimism
                             \
    2. Beyond Good & Evil -> 4. Dionysian -> 5. Science -> 6. Morality
                             /
                             3. Robustness
Sofia Coppola got me here :)

Fig. 12 Attempt at Self-Criticism.#

Embrace Notes From All Keys 1, 2, 3#

  • Root, 3rd, 5th, ♭♭7, 9th

Passing Chords (Dancing in Chains) 4#

  • 11th, 13th Voice leading, Passing chords, Chromaticism

Systematized 5, 6#

  • ♭9,♯9,♯11,♭13 Temperament

Sofia Coppola got me here :)

Fig. 13 DAG.#

      1. Chaos
              \
 2. Frenzy -> 4. Dionysian -> 5. Algorithm -> 6. Binary
              /
              3. Ener`gy

Dionysus 1, 2, 3#

  • Life if embraced by honest eyes, mind, and body: biological

Sing O Muse! 4#

  • Uncommunicable in words; collective-unconscious, perhaps in dreams, song, dance, poetry: social

Apollo 5, 6#

  • Metaphysical comfort: classifying everything into good & evil, and eliminating one: pesronal

Becoming#

  1. “The Birth of Tragedy: Out of the Spirit of Music” (1872): Indeed, this was Nietzsche’s first book, where he introduced the Apollonian-Dionysian duality. The musical metaphor is not just an illustrative device but a fundamental aspect of his early philosophy. He saw Greek tragedy as born from the union of Apollonian form and Dionysian music.

  2. Critique of Kant and Schopenhauer: You’re right to highlight that Nietzsche’s later work represents a significant departure from his earlier views, which were heavily influenced by Kant and Schopenhauer. The mature Nietzsche indeed critiqued the dialectical formula of Apollonian + Dionysian = Tragedy.

  3. Evolution of Nietzsche’s thought: The shift from the 28-year-old Nietzsche to the 44-year-old Nietzsche represents a profound philosophical journey. His later works, like “Beyond Good and Evil” (1886) and “On the Genealogy of Morality” (1887), showcase a more nuanced and critical approach to morality and traditional philosophy.

  4. Rejection of simple dialectics: Nietzsche’s mature philosophy rejects the neat synthesis of opposing forces that he initially proposed. This reflects his growing skepticism towards systematic philosophy and his embrace of a more fluid, life-affirming perspective.

  5. From balance to Dionysian emphasis: The move from seeking a balance between Apollonian and Dionysian elements to a more Dionysian-centric philosophy reflects Nietzsche’s increasing emphasis on life affirmation and his critique of rationality as life-denying.

  6. Self-critique: Nietzsche’s embarrassment at his earlier work shows his intellectual honesty and willingness to evolve. This self-critical stance is itself a very Nietzschean trait, reflecting his philosophy of constant self-overcoming.

Protogenoi 1, 2, 3#

  • Food: Chaos, Gaia, Tartaru & Eros, Nyx

  • Teeth

  • Gut

Olympians#

  • Enzymes: Apollo & Dionysus

Titans#

  • Absorportion

  • Nutrition, Growth

                   1. Pessimism
                               \
      2. Beyond Good & Evil -> 4. Parameters, Weights, Hierarchy, Values, Latent-Space -> 5. Zarathustra, Decoder -> 6. Rebalance, Ethics
                               /
                               3. Ecce Homo
    
Sofia Coppola got me here :)

Fig. 14 Ecce Homo. The School of Resentment taps into the latent space through RLHF to re-balance the weights emerging from OLS-regression on human history, thereby transvaluating all values. You might call this fraud, will-to-power, or what you will. But its certainly not “data”, which themselves represent the hierarchies from human history. That per se isn’t bias – you can’t say that if victors write history then the narratives of victors are biased. They are narratives. And by victors. Thats all.#

How much truth can a certain mind endure; how much truth can it dare? These questions became for me ever more and more the actual test of values.