Review: Review
Author(s): Keith Ansell-Pearson
Review by: Keith Ansell-Pearson
Source: Journal of Nietzsche Studies, Vol. 42, No. 1, Special Issue Nietzsche's Ancient History (
Autumn 2011), pp. 130-134
Published by: Penn State University Press
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5325/jnietstud.42.1.0130
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130 Book Reviews
dependence on overarching systems, pure concepts, a priori principles, and logical arguments”
(xvii). Although she states this, there is no extensive exploration in her book of Nietzsche’s close
relation to traditions within philosophy of materialism and naturalism, both ancient and modern.
However, she does focus well throughout the study on a number of selected themes that serve to
highlight the philosophical substance of the book. These consist of (a) the de-deification of nature,
morality, and knowledge; (b) the naturalization of ourselves; and (c) the beautification of our lives.
In addition, there are helpful insights at various points in the book into Nietzsche’s critical relation
to major philosophical figures, such as Plato, Descartes, Kant, and Schopenhauer.
The author does not aim to produce either a definitive or a canonical reading of the text, either as a
whole or in terms of the way she groups the sections together. She succeeds in providing the student
reader with an interpretation of, and engagement with, the text that is highly attentive, incisive, and
reliable and which brings out well the many challenges of the book. But I have a number of criticisms
of the book. The first is that although it is welcome to have every section or aphorism of GS treated
and commented upon, this does make for a conciseness whereby many key topics are treated far too
cursorily, and at times this makes for a superficial engagement with the book. Second, the author
does not situate the book in the context of Nietzsche’s corpus as a whole, and here I think that the
student reader could have been given more guidance. Third, Langer sticks closely to the text and
makes no use of the remarkable Nachlass from this period of Nietzsche’s development (admittedly
this might have served to distract attention from the published book, which is her main focus).
Finally, there is the lamentable fact that she has not read widely in the secondary literature: The
selected bibliography at the end of the book amounts to just over one page, and the most up-to-date
references are to works of 2000 and 2001. This means that the student reader is not being directed
to a great deal of research that has been done on aspects of the text, including amor fati, eternal
recurrence, the figuration of Epicurus, intellectual conscience, Redlichkeit, incorporation, and so
on. None of these criticisms, however, should distract from the fact that this is an admirably close,
nuanced, and fertile reading of Nietzsche’s text.
University of Warwick
k.j.ansell-pearson@warwick.ac.uk
Dirk R. Johnson. Nietzsche’s Anti-Darwinism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010.
x + 250 pp. ISBN 978-0-521-19678-9. Cloth, $85.00.
Keith Ansell-Pearson
This book makes an important intervention in contemporary Nietzsche studies in the Englishspeaking world. The author has especially fresh insights to offer into On the Genealogy of Morality,
and in my view his reading is superior in some key respects to recent readings of this text, of which
of late there has been a veritable overkill. The fundamental claim of this book is that we will not
properly understand Nietzsche until we understand the main polemical target of his philosophizing.
This target, the author wants to demonstrate, is the evolutionary naturalism of Darwin: “Nietzsche’s
philosophy in his final years was premised on a fundamental anti-Darwinism” (203). To a large extent
the book seeks to substantiate an insight that, to the best of my knowledge, was first highlighted by
Deleuze in his classic study of 1962, Nietzsche et la philosophie. This is the extent to which Nietzsche
exposes the reactive character of a great deal of modern science, be it in physics or biology.1
According to Paul S. Loeb, who provides the puff on the back cover, the balanced and careful
examination the book offers of this crucial test case “results in a powerful critique of the prevalent
JOURNAL OF NIETZSCHE STUDIES, Issue 42, 2011.
Copyright © 2011 The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA.
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Book Reviews 131
naturalistic approach to Nietzsche.” In short, instead of trying to co-opt Nietzsche for fashionable
projects, we need to respect the independence of his philosophical thinking. There is, however, an
ambiguity at the heart of Johnson’s book that is never satisfactorily resolved: Is the suggestion that
Nietzsche is not at all a naturalist, or is it that he needs to be liberated from his entanglement with a
fashionable Darwinism? Note that Loeb is careful to speak of the “prevalent naturalistic approach”
to Nietzsche, not naturalistic approaches per se. I personally would want to insist on Nietzsche’s
naturalist credentials simply because it is one of the great traditions in emancipatory philosophy
with a noble ancient lineage that was important to Nietzsche (Democritus, Epicurus, and Lucretius,
for example). To free ourselves from the fears of the mind and prejudices of morality we need this
naturalism, and I would argue that Nietzsche draws heavily on naturalist resources throughout his
writings for this end.
Johnson’s book is divided into two main parts: In the first part he seeks to trace Nietzsche’s
move toward an anti-Darwin stance; provides a reading of Thus Spoke Zarathustra, especially the
figure of the Übermensch; and tackles Nietzsche’s “agonists.” In the second part he offers a reading in three chapters of the three essays of GM. Johnson’s main aim in this study is to show how
a “full-blown critique” of Darwin emerges at the end of Nietzsche’s intellectual career, especially
after he had initially revealed close affinities with his ideas. He even goes so far as to claim that
perhaps more than any other modern thinker it was Darwin that made Nietzsche’s mature period
(1886–88) possible, so allowing him to become who he was.
There are three main premises guiding the study. First, there is the claim that Nietzsche’s
engagement with Darwin was a constant one and “framed his philosophy from beginning to end” (3).
The author readily acknowledges that Darwin barely appears in the published writings. Moreover,
what of the fact that Nietzsche appears not to have read Darwin at all, neither The Origin of Species
nor The Descent of Man (with its explicit genealogy of man’s descent)? Johnson regards these
objections as misguided for various reasons. He maintains that given the Zeitgeist it is not surprising
that Nietzsche’s thinking, from first (think of the early essay on Strauss) to last, should gravitate
within a Darwinian orbit. Somewhat controversially, then, he maintains that Nietzsche understood
Darwin and the implications of his theory—for example, the break with conventional understandings
of morality and the complete secularization of the world—both early and well. Nietzsche, as we
know, was well versed in the scientific concepts and developments of his day, largely gleaned from
epic studies such as Lange’s History of Materialism and from popularizations of science, and there
is no doubt that he did encounter Darwin’s ideas in this way, sometimes reliably and incisively.
The early essay on Strauss shows that Nietzsche clearly understood the extent to which Darwin’s
new theory necessitated a radical overhaul of both traditional metaphysics and ethics. Nietzsche’s
reservations about Darwin, according to Johnson, are primarily philosophical, and he does not
approach his ideas as unimpeachable science. His critique is thus said to be “foundational” in character, resting on a criticism of Darwin’s core assumptions, such as his understanding of nature, his
adoption of the egoism/altruism model, the priority given to competition and struggle, the belief in
self-preservation, and so on.
The second premise of the book concerns the question of whether Nietzsche’s polemics, beginning with GM, do in fact incorporate Darwin or strictly speaking target social Darwinism and its
application of Darwin’s ideas to aspects of humanity, society, and morality. Johnson admits that
Nietzsche is not at all clear on this matter. The issue is recognized to be an important one simply
because if the polemic is targeted at vulgar popularizations, then one can extricate Darwin from it
and argue that the two thinkers are compatible, with both seeking to found morality along strictly
naturalistic lines. Johnson rightly notes, however, that in several passages in his writings Nietzsche
lumps Darwin together with other British natural-law theorists, such as the “English psychologists”
of GM. According to Johnson, Nietzsche sees Darwin as operating within the same tradition and
set of perspectives as his British predecessors and contemporaries. This certainly serves to explain
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Nietzsche’s depiction of Darwin in Beyond Good and Evil. A striking feature of Nietzsche’s
thought, one that is all too often glossed over, is his openly hostile attitude toward British empiricism
and Anglophone modes of philosophizing. In BGE Nietzsche says that the empiricists are “honest
craftsmen” (BGE 213) and in GM, that their discovery of “immoral and ungodly truths” is to be
applauded (GM I:1). However, he locates in their work only a “plebeian ambition” with no instinct
for the real nature of the problems being dealt with (BGE 213). For Nietzsche the “truths” that the
modern mind has perceived are ones that “have charms and seductive powers only for mediocre
spirits,” e.g., the “truths of English philosophy” or what he calls “the damnable Anglo-mania of
‘modern ideas’” (BGE 253). He is insistent that the plebeian nature of modern ideas is England’s,
and he has in mind the likes of Darwin, Spencer, and John Stuart Mill (BGE 253). Johnson’s study, at
least in part, helps us to make sense of such revealing statements. According to Johnson, Nietzsche’s
polemical target in his late period is the so-called English school of thought, including its attempt
to establish morality on a new nonmetaphysical and naturalist basis. In other words, Darwin never
really questions the idea of a “moral sense”: The task is simply to “naturalize” this sense or faculty.
Although Nietzsche’s polemic assumes the form of a “highly stylized personal opposition” (6), it
becomes imperative for him to engage with it because it does represent a new, albeit limited, form
of the “critique” of morality—though, of course, Nietzsche maintains that no one before him has
attempted a genuine critique.
The third premise of the book is to suggest that GM is best understood as a sustained and systematic
critique of Darwin. Here the author wants to challenge the assumption that the late “anti-Darwin”
passages we encounter in Nietzsche—e.g., in book 5 of The Gay Science and in Twilight of the
Idols—are sudden and unprecedented and out of keeping with the rest of his philosophy. Johnson
is well aware that GM is a polemic and that it works as such. However, he aims to show that
the arguments have a subversive function: What is being attacked in the book, and attacked the
most, is evolutionary naturalism. Johnson argues that in order to carry out this subversion most
effectively Nietzsche finds it necessary to enter the discursive parameters of naturalism and so
chooses to engage with it from within—in short, he assumes the guise of a naturalist in order to
discredit naturalism. Ruth Abbey has also argued that Nietzsche’s deployment of naturalism is
largely rhetorical, but Johnson is making a much stronger point as concerns the rhetorical textuality
of GM.2 It’s here that we encounter the ambiguous character of Johnson’s reading: Is it all forms
of naturalism that are opposed by Nietzsche or only its modern incarnation in the English school?
It’s difficult to conceive of Nietzsche as the anti-metaphysician he is—and is recognized to be such
by Johnson—without thinking that this “overcoming” of metaphysics on Nietzsche’s part is not
conducted in the name of some kind of naturalism, since what else would enable us to get beyond
metaphysics?3 In a footnote the author seeks to clarify his position by stating that the position he
really wishes to question is the one upheld by Brian Leiter, in which the view is that philosophical
inquiry should be continuous with empirical inquiry in the sciences.4 Still, one could maintain that
Nietzsche’s use of biological and physiological concepts and notions in GM is not solely rhetorical but part of his attachment to an alternative science. One thing missing from this book is any
recognition or appreciation of Nietzsche’s alternative scientific sources such as Wilhelm Roux and
Carl von Nageli. There is also in my view a need to take seriously as a theory or doctrine the will to
power. According to Johnson, Nietzsche in GM adopts the discourse of naturalists and Darwinists
since it is the only means to subvert their framework and challenge their growing success (and
we know that Nietzsche set out only to criticize victorious causes). But shouldn’t his alternative
“scientific” discourse be examined, including its sources? Without this, Nietzsche’s polemic is
read problematically in terms of a contest between an idiosyncratic theory—one that Johnson calls
nonmetaphysical and non-naturalist—and a hegemonic practice of modern, “respectable” science.
I don’t think that this is a satisfactory positioning of Nietzsche’s thinking, either in GM or
elsewhere. It is one thing to claim, as the author does, that Nietzsche saw in modern naturalism
(Darwinism) remnants of idealism and religious consolation and another, as the author also does,
that his thinking is directed at naturalism tout court.
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It is in chapter 2 of the book that we begin to see what for Johnson is the fundamental opposition
or antagonism structuring Nietzsche’s philosophy: Dionysus versus Darwin! He notes that while
Darwin’s theory of natural selection greatly disturbs religious assumptions about man’s central role
in the universe, the metaphors, images, and overall narrative voice of the Origin “offer metaphysical
solace and resignation in the face of a law-bound evolution of life,” in which, as Darwin has it,
“endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been and are being evolved” (cited in
Johnson, 48). Thus, while offering a bleak picture of nature, with war, famine, death, and extermination ever-present realities, Darwin’s text ultimately provides a redemptive portrait of the evolution
of life, with nothing less than a Darwinian sublime: “[F]rom the war of nature, from famine and
death, the most exalted object which we are capable of conceiving, namely the production of the
higher animals, directly follows” (Darwin, cited in Johnson, 49). Thus, although we encounter pain,
anguish, and struggle everywhere in nature, we can also find consolation in the greater wisdom of
evolution. And the most exalted object we can conceive is that of our faculty of reason: It is reason
that will enable us to perceive nature’s ultimate wisdom. By contrast, Johnson argues, Nietzsche
undermines this faith in “reason,” emphasizing not this faculty but exuberant physicality and the
imminent attainability of a superior type, albeit one that cannot be described in prose but only
“conjured” through “poetic affirmation” (50). Darwin places the emphasis of values on survival,
extinction, and struggle, and for Johnson this makes him a fundamentally pessimistic thinker. By
contrast, Nietzsche is a tragic and Dionysian philosopher in which the highest art consists in saying
yes to life in its strangest and most difficult problems: “the will to life rejoicing in its own inexhaustibility through the sacrifice of its highest types …” (Nietzsche, cited in Johnson, 78). Of course,
what this overlooks is that Nietzsche, too, cannot do completely without consolations of his own
(one thinks of eternal recurrence, of the Dionysian promise—eternal rebirth, life’s inexhaustible
nature, and so on). To think that Nietzsche has dispensed with consolations altogether is mistaken,
and Johnson does not comment on these “Dionysian” consolations at all.
The author claims that Nietzsche is combating Darwin and Darwinian ideas agonistically, seeking to ensure that there is on offer a healthy multiplicity of conceptions of “life.” On one level, he
suggests, Nietzsche accepts the necessity of Darwin’s position since it is the inevitable consequence
of a particular “type” of will (this must mean that Nietzsche is saying both yes and no to Darwin). In
short, Nietzsche’s personalized anti-Darwin position is part of the larger project of the final period in
which Nietzsche has many “agonists” whom he is taking to task and who taken collectively represent
a set of world-historical figures whose teachings reflect the wills to power of decadent types contra
the claims of higher or aristocratic forms of culture. The central question for Nietzsche, according
to Johnson, is whether ascetic scientific practice can allow “for an affirmative, active projection of
will to power” or whether, in the end, it reflects nothing other than a reactive will that is directed
against all “outer-directed creative energy through an ascetic interpretation of existence …” (195).
As Johnson reads him, Nietzsche comes to hold to the view that modern science denigrates “all
active realms of existence that do not fall under the purview of scientific rationalism.” Purporting
to discover rational, mechanical processes (e.g., “natural laws”) at work in nature, it seeks to eliminate or marginalize active and so-called irrational disturbances (197). Johnson leaves his readers
ultimately on a hopeful note. In presenting an alternative genealogy Nietzsche’s genealogical tree
has two main branches: While one has its roots in priestly asceticism, the other “incorporates all
strong, active wills within an open-ended history, one whose lineage has yet to be established and
whose traditions have yet to be fixed” (201).
Johnson is surely right when he suggests that the polemical and culturally contingent “antiDarwinism” of GM needs to be taken more at face value, at least as a way of countering the tendency
to treat the text as a “straightforward articulation of the biologist-naturalist preoccupations of the
age” (214). However, it is highly problematic to suggest that the polemical thrust of Nietzsche’s late
writings can be reduced to a single target and that this target is Darwin. Such a move reminds one of
Deleuze’s outlandish claim that anti-Hegelianism runs through Nietzsche’s corpus as its cutting edge.
Johnson has written a study that merits being read by anyone with an interest in Nietzsche’s relation
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134 Book Reviews
to science, especially Darwinism, and an investment in the stakes of reading one of Nietzsche’s
masterpieces, On the Genealogy of Morality.
University of Warwick
k.j.ansell-pearson@warwick.ac.uk
Notes
1. See Gilles Deleuze, Nietzsche and Philosophy, trans. H. Tomlinson (London: Continuum,
1983), 44–47. On p. 45 Deleuze writes: “Nietzsche shows that science is part of the ascetic ideal
and serves it in its own way.… But we must also look for the instrument of nihilistic thought in
science. The answer is that science, by inclination, understands phenomena in terms of reactive
forces and interprets them from this standpoint. Physics is reactive in the same way as biology;
things are always seen from the petty side, from the side of reactions.”
2. Ruth Abbey, Nietzsche’s Middle Period (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000), 7–10.
3. Unless, of course, one has Heideggerian-inspired commitments to the question and history
of Being.
4. See Brian Leiter, Nietzsche on Morality (London: Routledge, 2002), 3.
Robin Small. Time and Becoming in Nietzsche’s Thought. London: Continuum, 2010. xii + 202
pp. ISBN 978-1-4411-8965-3. Cloth, $120.00.
Wolter Hartog
Nietzsche’s interpretation and conceptualization of becoming have already generated a lot of discussion, but less attention has been paid to his treatment of the specifically temporal aspects of
the process of becoming. And to the extent that Nietzsche’s approach to time and temporality has
been discussed, the issue tends to be reduced to his thought of eternal recurrence. In his new study,
Robin Small argues that there is much more to say about Nietzsche’s conception of temporality:
about “his approach to questions about the nature of becoming, and about past, present and future”;
about the specifically human experience of temporality; and about the interconnected notions of
memory, guilt, and responsibility (2).
Small’s first two chapters are dedicated to showing the interrelations between the two main
themes of his book, time and becoming. Small argues that Nietzsche regarded the “reality of becoming” as an absolute fact, and he shows how Nietzsche developed his main arguments for this fact
in dialogue with contemporaries such as Afrikan Spir, Eduard von Hartmann, Philipp Mainländer,
and Eugen Dühring. According to Small, Nietzsche presents time primarily as an interpretation
of the fact of becoming, and he distinguishes from this a more primal, actual time(-chaos)—that
is, the time of becoming itself, in which the representation of time takes place. As a part of the
struggle of becoming, Small argues, the human organism acquires a personal “measure of time”—a
notion inspired by Karl Ernst von Baer—on the basis of which it projects a particular rhythm as a
form upon the continuous process of becoming. With this context in mind, Small devotes his third
chapter to a careful analysis of Nietzsche’s early design of a “time-atom theory” (KSA 7:26[12]).
Small interprets this theory as an attempt to develop an alternative to the dominant scientific outlook that goes back to the ancient atomistic and Eleatic thinkers and which gives priority to space
over time. He concludes, however, that Nietzsche’s attempt to invert this model in his theory of
JOURNAL OF NIETZSCHE STUDIES, Issue 42, 2011.
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