Pure mechanics are, of course, amoral. A machine doesn't do good or evil...it just does whatever the machine does.
I say it depends on how you look at it. Some people look at nature and claim to see only random chance, or "nature red in tooth and claw." I find this astonishing, as my empirical observation is that there is tremendous coordination and design in nature, despite the flaws. So it's a "glass half empty" versus a "glass half full" perspective, at the very least: except I would say the "glass" is really 9/10 full.I say: there is absolutely nothing Christian in any sense, in any possible sense, when one examines the biological world of Nature.
A higher Christian will is not one that comes through nature. It comes nearly completely from 'beyond nature'. It interposes itself as-against nature!
Yet if man is a mere product of nature, then so is his "will" -- and so would be "the Christian will." It's only if human will is some reflection of the divine will that it could possibly transcend the natural.
No, that's how it seems to him, perhaps, if we believe him. But it is not the case that Nietzsche's perspective is automatically the right one, the true and objective one, or that he merely dispassionately records the facts of what he could not help but see because it was all there was to see. He writes as an Atheist, with Atheist suppositions and Atheist observations -- and that is no small fact in the shaping of his conclusions.True, Nietzsche has no alternative, as he dismantles Christian ethics and those imperatives, to reduce man to just another organism seeking life. But this is not Nietzsche doing this! Nietzsche notices that it happened.
It wasn't a "recognition." It was a "proposition."4) The Übermench is a logical necessity from the predicates that had been established through the recognition that there is 'no metaphysical dimension'.
Nietzsche wasn't dispassionately recording neutral facts from a "nowhere" perspective. He had decided to dismiss the metaphysics a priori, not from observation or even rational argument. And ironically, in saying "God is dead," Nietzsche used his own intelligence, identity, "voice" and perspective -- all metaphysical entities.
He stood on metaphysics in order to deny metaphysics. But that, of course, is a logical failure, a self-contradiction on his part.
6) Leftism and 'will-to-power'. I think that the Left and 'progressives' are heavily involved (if I can put it like this) in 'will-to-power'. But 'will-to-power' within the larger, industrial, mechanized, and automated 'world' needs to be brought out as a topic. In brief: these systems mirror natural systems. They are not 'Christian' and cannot be 'Christian'. Just as a mining company is like a mechanism that is set in motion and 'mercilessly' extracts ores, so our modern economic mechanisms function similarly. And we live within these 'systems'. The leftist-progressive 'agenda' so-called shows itself as a servant of these forces in some, not all, but in some ways. That is why, today, people are concerned about left totalitarianism as it takes shape.
I'm not sure why you think "natural" and "mechanical" are the same thing. Nature isn't a machine, obviously; and in many ways, the "mechanical" is directly contrastable to the "natural." The former is dead, the latter is living. The former is artificial, the latter is organic. The former is man-created, and bears the image of his autocratic will; the latter is God-created, with intimations of the divine nature in it. In a few ways, the analogy might loosely hold -- for example, both mechanization and the natural world seem to run "on their own," so to speak -- but to see nature as if it were a mere "machine" in all regards, one has to squint hard to exclude a lot.
7) Europeanism...I do desire -- we do desire -- to create a solidarity and a recognition of common interests for purposes of 'self-protection'.
I understand. And I think Nietzsche would approve of that impulse. However, while I recognize that "whiteness" has become a racist target of the Left, I do not wish to organize resistance around the same concept they created. I think real resistance needs to be organized along non-racist, lines, lines like rational versus irrational, human rights advocates versus sectarian privileges, narratives of human potential and hope versus narratives of phony "oppression," or narratives of ethics versus narratives of amorality. I do not think any principled resistance is benefitted by being attached to the "whiteness" construct of the left. I don't even agree that "whiteness" is a thing: it's a minor characteristic of some persons, but one which is being artificially inflated for the purposes of stoking racist envy on the Left.
in other words, "whiteness" is a constructed artifact of the ideology known as "Identity Politics." And since it is that, why would we allow the Left to construct the terms of our own position for us? They're not doing a great job with their own.
That may be. But I think we can begin with analytics.8.) Christianity requires new definitions. What is it we are speaking about when we say "I am a Christian"? What does this mean? You may have worked out all your definitions. You may have no problems here. We have not, and we have some problems.
To be "Christian" is, par excellence, to be a follower of the teaching and attitudes of the Jewish carpenter from Galilee. It is to be a "Christ one." Everything else is secondary to that.
I think not. I believe that you will look in vain for the term "Christendom" in the Bible, and will not find anything to justify that concept in the teaching of the One who said most clearly, "My kingdom is not of this world." In fact, I would suggest, the setting up of worldly kingdoms and the creating of putatively "Christian" cultures is not at all the project He commanded of His followers.If we are Christians we still have obligations to Christendom.
So I would bow out on that score. What has been called "Christian" or "European" culture must fend for itself, if it can; we Christians have no mandate to try to preserve it, just as we had no mandate to create it in the first place. The goods it brought to humankind were always a byproduct of those elements that were obedient to the real Christian mandate; and its excesses and failures were a result of departure from that same mandate. I'd just advocate us getting back on track.