Yes, it is entirely possible to discern an effect, though it happened indirectly through radical labor movements rather than through Nietzsche’s personal intentions. [1]
1. The Weaponization of "Will to Power" in Factories
- The Concept: While Nietzsche meant the "Will to Power" for individual artistic elites, labor pamphlets argued that the working class needed to collectively develop this will to overthrow industrial bosses. [5]
- The Reality: An industrial worker striking in a Chicago factory or a port in Australia was exposed to newspapers (like the IWW’s Direct Action) that openly stated they were using Nietzsche to "transvalue capitalist values". Instead of begging for charity (which Nietzsche called "slave morality"), workers used raw, direct power. [5, 6]
2. French Syndicalism and "The General Strike"
- The Concept: Sorel took Nietzsche’s idea of the "noble myth" and applied it to the General Strike. He argued that workers shouldn't just ask for a 10% raise; they needed a grand, heroic myth to inspire them to completely halt the machinery of capitalism. [7]
- The Reality: For an industrial worker in France or Italy, this shifted the daily reality of labor disputes. Striking became less about economic negotiation and more about a heroic, psychological battle for human dignity. [7]
3. Agrarian Anarchism and the "Overman" of the Fields
- The Concept: Anarchist leaders like Emma Goldman integrated Nietzschean individualism into agrarian labor rights. They stripped away Nietzsche's hierarchy but kept his hatred of the state and church.
- The Reality: During the Spanish Civil War, field workers and peasant militias were led by figures who openly admired the concept of the Superhombre (Overman). For the illiterate agricultural worker, this manifested as a fierce culture of self-reliance, anti-clericalism, and the destruction of traditional religious hierarchies that taught peasants to accept their poverty. [8, 9, 10, 11]
Summary of Impact
| Layer of Impact | Nietzsche's Original View | How it Landed on the Worker |
|---|---|---|
| Morality | Christianity makes people weak slaves. | Workers rejected religious compliance and demanded rights aggressively. |
| Power | Only exceptional individuals should rule. | Unions used collective force as their own "Will to Power". |
| The State | The state is a cold monster. | Workers bypassed politics in favor of direct sabotage and strikes. |
1. The Transformation of Mass Entertainment
- The Shift: Traditional entertainment taught the worker that suffering was noble and rewards awaited them in heaven. Nietzschean-influenced fiction flipped this script.
- The Impact: Popular stories, dime novels, and early cinema began celebrating the "self-made rogue," the ruthless outlaw, or the rugged individualist who took what they wanted. Even if a worker remained uneducated, the media they consumed subtly stopped praising humble submission and started glorifying raw survival and personal ambition.
2. The Language of the "Boss" Changed
- The Justification: Captains of industry viewed themselves as Nietzschean "Overmen"—geniuses destined to drive humanity forward, while the workers were merely the necessary, disposable herd.
- The Everyday Reality: For the worker, this meant a massive hardening of labor conditions. Bosses felt a philosophical justification to eliminate charity, cut safety nets, and suppress strikes with brutal violence, viewing mercy as a "weakness" that harmed progress. The worker didn't know Nietzsche's name, but they felt his hijacked ideas in the whip and the wage cut.
3. The Secularization of the Household
- The Breakdown: As intellectual elites abandoned religion, the social power of the Church dissolved.
- The Everyday Reality: For the ordinary family, this slowly stripped away the traditional "buffer" of life. Sunday rest laws were eroded by factories. The comfort of the parish community was replaced by cold, bureaucratic state welfare or urban isolation. The worker's daily struggle became lonelier because the overarching spiritual framework that used to give their suffering meaning was systematically dismantled by the intellectual world.
Summary
1. The Disappearance of "Sacred" Hospitality
- Today's Reality: Today, your interaction is purely commercial and secular. You exchange currency for a commodity. The spiritual framework has been completely stripped away, replaced by a hyper-individualistic, transactional efficiency. You are two independent individuals making a contract—a shift that Nietzsche’s critique of religious structure predicted and accelerated.
2. The Morality of the Transaction
- The Connection: You expect a fair trade based on mutual self-interest. Nietzsche fiercely advocated for rejecting "pity" and "slave morality" (begging or relying on guilt) in favor of proud, self-reliant transactions. The modern marketplace operates exactly on this non-sentimental, pragmatic level. You both assert your own needs, strike a deal, and move on.
3. The "Will to Power" on the Menu
- The Connection: The restaurant you chose survived a brutal Darwinian struggle against dozens of other businesses that went bankrupt. The owner had to exercise immense ambition, strategy, and drive—what Nietzsche called the Will to Power—just to keep the doors open. You are consuming the end product of a highly competitive system that rewards raw ambition over humble tradition.
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