Nietzsche said that. He said that all of morality is secretly nothing other than the "will to power," and particularly the "will" of the weak to control the strong. Behind all morality, he said, is nothing but power.TimeSeeker wrote: ↑Tue Sep 18, 2018 3:07 pm That's the exact same behavior you display. It is not a contradiction. It is the will to power.
And our age has believed him. This is why we find ourselves in a world of raw power, with new levels of cruelty and barbarism appearing every day, and the foundations of our moral resistance crumbling to dust under our feet. After all, if the deep secret of morality is that it's just power, then why should one kind of power be privileged over another?
Why should some uses of power be "wrong," and some "right"? In a Nietzschean world, might makes right...at least, it makes as "right" as anything can get -- which is to say, really, not at all. The truth is, all there is is power.
But even Nietzsche couldn't live like that. Neither can you. And if you ever think you manage to try, you'll find your neighbours rise up and kill you, because you'll be intolerable in any society. Their power will crush yours. And why shouldn't it? You're not privileged either -- your greatness is only the extent of your present power. And collectively, theirs is greater.
Whatever is, is as good as it gets for you, then. And as per Nietzsche, nothing, but nothing, can make morality objective.
But in point of fact, you're incorrect. Dubious is still caught in a self-contradiction. It's just that in a NIetzschean world, we can't call being caught in a contradiction "bad." But then, in a Nietzschean world, we can't call being a "hypocrite," a "coward" or a "trickster" wrong either.