V,
Thoughts
out
0f Season, ii.
0f Season, ii.
Nietzsche - v18 - Epilogue, Index
364.
Materialism, a criticism of, xv. 117 et seq.
— the political mania as, xvi. 251.
Maternity, the instinct of, in animals, x. 105.
Mathematics and the assertion of our human relation to
things, x. 204.
Maupassant (Guy de), Nietzsche's particular fondness for,
xvii. 38.
Maxims and missiles, (Chap i. ) xvi. 1-8.
Maya, the veil of, i. 25; annihilated by music, 32.
Mazzini, alluded to, x. 41.
Measure and moderation, vii. 125.
Mediators, rightly called mediocre, x. 201.
Medicine of the soul, vii. 167.
Mediocrity, as a mask for superior minds, vii. 280.
— of mediators, x. 201.
— truths best adapted to, xii. 212; of Englishmen,
212; the only significant form of morality now-
adays, 237.
— its command of gold, and all that glitters, xv. 302;
J "liberal" as a polite term for, 303; the philoso-
pher's attitude to, 325.
Meditation, on loss of dignity by, x. 42.
JSleilhac, as a representative of modern Paris, xvii. 38.
Meistersinger, Die, the character of Hans Sachs in, iv.
110; the soul of Germany depicted in, 118; its
composition, 165 ; the theme of, 201.
luman, ii. VIII, Case of Wagner. IX, Dawn of Day. X, Joyful
Wisdom. XI, Zarathustra. XII, Beyond Good and Evil. XIII,
venealogy of Morals. XIV, Will to Power, i. XV, Will to Power,
i. XVI, Antichrist. XVII, Ecce Homo.
i
179
## p. 180 (#254) ############################################
INDEX—NIETZSCHE
Meistersinger, Die, Hans Sachs quoted, v. 60.
— instanced, viii. 6; its plot, 27.
— the overture to, criticised, xii. 191; as expressing Nietz-
sche's thoughts with regard to the Germans, 192.
— and the gayest and boldest period of its composer,
xiii. 122.
— a relaxation after Tristan und Isolde, xvii. 44.
Melancholy, the variable winds of, ix. 344.
— The song ^(Zarathustra's), xi. 363-9.
— Song to, xvii. 149-50.
Melanchthon alluded to, vii. 230-1.
Melody analysed, i. 51.
Memory, the influence of sleep on, vi. 23.
— the cultivation of the gracious, ix. 256.
— the problem of, in man, xiii. 65; only that which
never stops hurting remains in the, 66; the at-
tainment of reason by its aid, 68.
— the process of, xv. 23.
Mendelssohn, an estimate of the music of, vii. 270.
— the beautiful soul of, viii. 99.
— as the beautiful episode of German music, xii. 201-2.
— his possession of distinction, like Goethe, in the most
natural way in the world, xiii. 220.
— alluded to, xiv. 88.
— the element of Goethe in, xv. 271. y
Mentiri, what the Romans expressed by, x. 187.
Merck, an allusion to, by Strauss, iv. 83.
Menm£e (Prosper), quoted, vi. 70.
— and his influence upon the libretto to Carmen, viii.
— as worthy to be called a master of prose, x. 126.
— an honest atheist, xvii. 39. J
The volumes referred to under numbers are as foilow :—I, Birth
of Tragedy. II, Early Greek Philosophy. Ill, Future of Educai
tional Institutions. IV, Thoughts out of Season, i. V, Thoughts out
of Season, ii. VI, Human, al'. -too-Human. i. VII, Human, all-toe-
ISO
## p. 181 (#255) ############################################
METAPHOR—MIDAS
Metaphor, the relation of music to, ii. 30; contra, 42;
and truth, 177; truth as an army of metaphors,
180; the impulse for, seeks a new impulse in
art, 188.
Metaphysics, the metaphysical world, vi. 20; the harm-
lessness of, in the future, 21; phenomenon and
"thing in itself," 28-30; metaphysical explana-
tions^! ; fundamental questions 0^31-3; conflict
of, mih/ree spirits, 158.
— the metaphysician's knapsack, vii. 17.
— transvalued and replaced, xiv. 381.
— the metaphysical need, xv. 74-96; concerning the
psychology of, 77-80.
Method, the value of scientific, xv. 3.
Methodism, a reasonable admission regarding, xii. 211.
Metz, The Birth of Tragedy thought out under the walls
of, xvii. 69.
Meyer (Jurgen), of Bonn university, alluded to, v. 135.
Meyerbeer, the ingenious artifices of, iv. 157; and Wagner,
1S7-
Michelangelo, the frescoes of, vi. 199.
— characteristics of, vii. 74-5.
— on his and Raphael's genius, ix. 366; alluded to,
367-
— his conception of God as the tyrant of the world, xiii.
215; rated higher than Raphael, 216.
— Napoleon as the posthumous brother of, according to
Taine, xv. 397.
Michelet, alluded to, xiv. 278.
— as enthusiasm in its shirtsleeves, xvi. 60.
Midas, the quest of, for the wise Silenus, i. 34.
Human, ii. VIII, Case of Wagner. IX, Dawn of Day. X, Joyful
Wisdom. XI, Zarathustra. XII, Beyond Good and Fvil. XIII,
Genealogy of Morals. XIV, Will to Power, i. XV, Will to Power,
ii, XVI, Antichrist. XVII, Ecce Homo.
181
## p. 182 (#256) ############################################
INDEX—NIETZSCHE
Middle Ages, the, the mediaeval memento mort, v. 66; the
sense in which we are still living in, 68.
— the apparent superiority of, vi. 348.
— passion in, vii. 311.
Middle class, the, as having been made out of our servant
caste, xiv. 95.
Middleman, the, as infesting modern life, and making it
expensive, xiv. 65; pre-eminent in intellectual
spheres, 65.
Military profession, the, an educational danger to its privi-
leges, xvi. 56.
Military state, the, its purpose, to create the military
genius, ii. 16.
— the military development of Europe, xiv. 104.
— the last means of adhering to the great traditions of
the past, xv. 189.
Mill (John Stuart), on indulgence, ix. 55 ; and the Chris-
tian ideal, 139.
— a type of English mediocrity, xii. 212.
— alluded to, xiv. 26.
— quoted, xv. 217; and the maxim—" do as you would
be done by," 343; an adverse criticism of, 344.
— his offensive lucidity, xvi. 60.
Miltiades, and Themistocles, ii. 56; his fate, 60.
Milton, vii. 77.
Mind, the, thequestion as to its presence at all to-day, iv. 142.
— its development feared by the State, vi. 345.
— the worse and less fertile soils of, as the first to be
cultivated to-day, vii. 294.
— the discipline of, x. 107; the danger of the impatient
spirits, 107; virtuous stupidity needed, 108.
The volumes referred to under numbers are as follow :—I, Birth
of Tragedy- II, Early Greek Philosophy. Ill, Future of Educa-
tional Institutions. IV. Thoughts out of Season, i.
V, Thoughts out
0f Season, ii. VI, Human, all-too-Human, i. VII, Human, ail-too-
182
## p. 183 (#257) ############################################
MIND—MODERN
Mind, the, the exoteric and the esoteric class of, xii. 43.
— as belonging to fiction, xv. 11.
Minority, the, the right of the weaker, vi. 91.
Mirabeau, the reverence of, for Chamfort, x. 128.
— an example of the aristocratic inability to take serious-
ly for any length of time their enemies, their
disasters, their misdeeds, xiii. 38.
Miracles, the doctrine of, xiv. 157.
Miraculous, the, and the saint phenomenon, xii. 67.
Mirror, TheChildwith the (Zaralhustra's discourse), xi. 95-
98.
Misanthropy, the result of a far too eager philanthropy,
x. 189.
Misfortune, the narcotics of, vi. i11.
— the ancient means of solace against, and a higher, ix.
23; the valuations of, by Christianity and anti-
quity, 81; the subtlety in, 282.
Mistrust, vii. 44.
Misunderstanding, advantage and disadvantage in the
same, vii. 130; on being misunderstood, 163.
Mitchell's treatment recommended for pangs of conscience,
xiv. 192.
Mithras, Christianity and the cult of, xvi. 223.
Moderation, how produced, vi. 335.
— and measure, vii. 125.
— methods of combating vehement impulses, ix. 106;
motives for, 107; the appearance of, 287.
Modern life, the outlines of, depicted, v. 135; another side
of, 137-
Modern society, women's intellect in, vii. 327.
Modern spirit, the, the want of discipline in, xiv. 67.
Human, ii. VIII, Case of Wagner. IX, Dawn of Day. X, Joyful
Wisdom. XI, Zarathustra. XII, Beyond Good and Evil. XIII,
Genealogy of Morals. XIV, Will to Power, i. XV, Will to Power,
ii. XVI, Antichrist. XVII, Ecce Homo.
r
183
## p. 184 (#258) ############################################
INDEX—NIETZSCHE
Modernity, regarded in the light of nutrition and digestion,
xiv. 63; a contribution to the characterisation of,
64; favourite obstacles and remedies of, 103-4-
— a criticism of, xvi. 96; the escape from, 127; toe
hyperboreans, 127.
— Beyond Good and Evil (1886), a criticism of, xvii. 115.
Modesty, on, vi. 376.
— of the mature philosopher, ix. 340.
— the danger of, xv. 371.
Mohammed, the god of, viii. 165.
— instanced, ix. 381.
— alluded to, xv. 375.
— the " holy lie" as common to, xvi. 214.
Mohammedanism and its use of a " beyond," xiv. 125; an
affirmative religion of the Semitic order, 126.
Moira, the Greek conception of, vi. 117.
— the realm of, ix. 135.
Moliere, a delineator of moral character masks, vii. 230;
the exponent of a fixed idea, 314.
— quoted, xii. 18.
— Nietzsche's artistic taste defends, xvii. 38.
Moltke and David Strauss, iv. 57.
Mommsen, the confessions of, iv. 23.
Monarchy, the representative belief of, xv. 206.
Monastery, the, spoilt through having been abused by the
church, xv. 337.
Money, banquets that represent, ix. 209.
Monotheism perhaps the greatest danger of mankind in
the past, x. 179.
Mont Blanc, the view of, from Geneva, vii. 296.
Montaigne and the use made of history to-day, iv. 118.
The volumes referred to under numbers are as follow :—I, Birth
of Tragedy. II, Early Greek Philosophy. Ill, Future of Educa-
tional Institutions. IV, Thoughts out of Season, i. V, Thoughts out
of Season, ii. VI, Human, all-too-Human, i. VII, Human, ail-too-
I84
## p. 185 (#259) ############################################
MONTAIGNE—MORALITY
Montaigne, the rank held by, for honesty, v. 116.
— as Shakespeare's model, vi. 177.
— a guide to the understanding of Socrates, vii. 242;
his books praised, 302; alluded to, 178.
— on doubt, ix. 52-3.
— his loquacity, x. 130; alluded to, 61.
— Nietzsche's affinity to, xvii. 38.
Monnmentum are perennius, the, the non-belief in, vi. 36.
Moon, the, lunar love—immaculate perception, xi. 145.
Moore (Thomas), afraid to publish Byron's autobiography,
so he burnt it, xiii. 179.
Moral evolution, the tendency of, xiv. 279.
Moral ideal, the, (Sec. v. Part ii. Book ii. ) xiv. 264-311.
Moral idiosyncratist, the, xiv. 223.
Moral observation, the necessity of, vi. 56 et seg.
Moral sentiments, the history of {a. series of aphorisms), vi.
53-i10-
Moral valuations, the history of, is the history of the error
of responsibility, vi. 60.
Moralisation, the history of, xv. 229-38.
Moralist, the, concerning the ideal of, xiv. 248-51.
— characterised, xvi. 31.
Moralists, the analytical, not to be confused with the petty-
minded, vii. 199-200.
— on moral mosquitoes, ix. 286; two kinds of, 312.
Morality, denned as the will to disown life, i. 10.
— the current of, flowing through Wagner's characters,
iv. 11o.
— of Christian and the antique virtues, v. 112; the ne-
cessity for teachers of, 113.
— private and oecumenical, vi. 40; and the order of
Human, ii. VIII, Case of Wagner. IX, Dawn of Day. X, Joyful
Wisdom. XI, Zarathustra. XII, Beyond Good and Evil. XIII,
Genealogy of Morals. XIV, Will to Power, i. XV, Will to Power,
ii. XVI, Antichrist. XVII, Ecce Homo.
! 85
## p. 186 (#260) ############################################
INDEX—NIETZSCHE
possessions, vi. 62 ; what it is to be immoral, 63;
the suspicion thrown on, for faith's sake, 73; the
noble acts, desires, and aspirations of, 75; the
glamour and shadow cast upon actions by suc-
cess and failure, 80; the moral sense, 84; the
pleasure given by, 90; the three phasesof, hither-
to existing, 92; the morality of the mature
individual, 93; its relation to custom and tradi-
tion, 94 et seq. ; alluded to, 61.
Morality, against the "triers of the reins " of, vii. 31; the art
of, 32; why the sceptics offend, 42; its origin
traced, 46; its sacrifice, 46; mercantile morality
a refinement of piratical, 201; the significance
of oblivion in, 218; the heirs to its wealth, 219;
on its grades and motives, 221 ; the intellectual
versus the instinctive, 222 ; the traces of its de-
velopment found in literature, 252; Greek
literature instanced, 252 ; alluded to, 300.
— the antithesis between Master and Christian, viii.
48; Greek morality not founded on religion but
on the polis, 165.
— the arts and weapons of defence used by, ix. 3; the
veritable Circe of philosophers, 3; the conception
of the morality of custom, 14; the most moral
man, 15; on immoralists, 16; counter-motion
between the sense of causality and the sense of
morality, 17; the significance of madness in the
history of, 20; the morality of voluntary
suffering, 24; its opposition to amendments,
27; the various consequences of the observance
of its principles, 28; on refined cruelty, and the
The volumes referred to under numbers are as follow :—I, Birth
of Tragedy. II, Early Greek Philosophy. Ill, Future of Educa-
tional Institutions. IV, Thoughts out of Season, i. V, Thoughts out
of Season, ii. VI, Human, all-too-Human, i. VII, Human, ail-too-
186
## p. 187 (#261) ############################################
MORALITY
thirst for distinction in the practice of, 36; the
most ancient moral judgments, 98; two classes
of people who deny, 99 ; on picturesque morality
—more beautiful but less valuable, 150; the
organisation of deviating people perhaps prema-
ture, 167; a morality which does not bore one,
168; the attitude of the Germans to, 21. 7; the
capacity of the German to raise himself above,
221 ; enthusiastic sacrifice, and the morality of
victims, 226; the morality of sacrifice, 231; a
moral interregnum, 324.
Morality,as the herd instinct in the individual, x. 160; advice
addressed to the preachers of, 226; considered
as a problem, 280; moral criticism and valuation,
281; its value remains untested, 282; the indis-
pensability of the disguise of, 293; vengeance
on intellect and other backgrounds of, 315 ; on
viewing, from a position outside, 347 ; conditions
of getting there, 348.
— The Thousand and one Goals {Za. ra. thustra. 's discourse),
xi. 65-8.
— the surmounting of, xii. 47; the calling to account of
popular, 48; the herding animal morality at
present in Europe, 127; on love for one's
enemies, 160; the morally tactful, 161; the dis-
tinction of rank between man and man, and con-
sequently between morality and morality, 175;
the two primary types of master morality, 227-
30; slave morality, 230-2; and mediocrity,
237-
— Nietzsche on his first explorations in, xiii. 10; the
Human, ii.
Materialism, a criticism of, xv. 117 et seq.
— the political mania as, xvi. 251.
Maternity, the instinct of, in animals, x. 105.
Mathematics and the assertion of our human relation to
things, x. 204.
Maupassant (Guy de), Nietzsche's particular fondness for,
xvii. 38.
Maxims and missiles, (Chap i. ) xvi. 1-8.
Maya, the veil of, i. 25; annihilated by music, 32.
Mazzini, alluded to, x. 41.
Measure and moderation, vii. 125.
Mediators, rightly called mediocre, x. 201.
Medicine of the soul, vii. 167.
Mediocrity, as a mask for superior minds, vii. 280.
— of mediators, x. 201.
— truths best adapted to, xii. 212; of Englishmen,
212; the only significant form of morality now-
adays, 237.
— its command of gold, and all that glitters, xv. 302;
J "liberal" as a polite term for, 303; the philoso-
pher's attitude to, 325.
Meditation, on loss of dignity by, x. 42.
JSleilhac, as a representative of modern Paris, xvii. 38.
Meistersinger, Die, the character of Hans Sachs in, iv.
110; the soul of Germany depicted in, 118; its
composition, 165 ; the theme of, 201.
luman, ii. VIII, Case of Wagner. IX, Dawn of Day. X, Joyful
Wisdom. XI, Zarathustra. XII, Beyond Good and Evil. XIII,
venealogy of Morals. XIV, Will to Power, i. XV, Will to Power,
i. XVI, Antichrist. XVII, Ecce Homo.
i
179
## p. 180 (#254) ############################################
INDEX—NIETZSCHE
Meistersinger, Die, Hans Sachs quoted, v. 60.
— instanced, viii. 6; its plot, 27.
— the overture to, criticised, xii. 191; as expressing Nietz-
sche's thoughts with regard to the Germans, 192.
— and the gayest and boldest period of its composer,
xiii. 122.
— a relaxation after Tristan und Isolde, xvii. 44.
Melancholy, the variable winds of, ix. 344.
— The song ^(Zarathustra's), xi. 363-9.
— Song to, xvii. 149-50.
Melanchthon alluded to, vii. 230-1.
Melody analysed, i. 51.
Memory, the influence of sleep on, vi. 23.
— the cultivation of the gracious, ix. 256.
— the problem of, in man, xiii. 65; only that which
never stops hurting remains in the, 66; the at-
tainment of reason by its aid, 68.
— the process of, xv. 23.
Mendelssohn, an estimate of the music of, vii. 270.
— the beautiful soul of, viii. 99.
— as the beautiful episode of German music, xii. 201-2.
— his possession of distinction, like Goethe, in the most
natural way in the world, xiii. 220.
— alluded to, xiv. 88.
— the element of Goethe in, xv. 271. y
Mentiri, what the Romans expressed by, x. 187.
Merck, an allusion to, by Strauss, iv. 83.
Menm£e (Prosper), quoted, vi. 70.
— and his influence upon the libretto to Carmen, viii.
— as worthy to be called a master of prose, x. 126.
— an honest atheist, xvii. 39. J
The volumes referred to under numbers are as foilow :—I, Birth
of Tragedy. II, Early Greek Philosophy. Ill, Future of Educai
tional Institutions. IV, Thoughts out of Season, i. V, Thoughts out
of Season, ii. VI, Human, al'. -too-Human. i. VII, Human, all-toe-
ISO
## p. 181 (#255) ############################################
METAPHOR—MIDAS
Metaphor, the relation of music to, ii. 30; contra, 42;
and truth, 177; truth as an army of metaphors,
180; the impulse for, seeks a new impulse in
art, 188.
Metaphysics, the metaphysical world, vi. 20; the harm-
lessness of, in the future, 21; phenomenon and
"thing in itself," 28-30; metaphysical explana-
tions^! ; fundamental questions 0^31-3; conflict
of, mih/ree spirits, 158.
— the metaphysician's knapsack, vii. 17.
— transvalued and replaced, xiv. 381.
— the metaphysical need, xv. 74-96; concerning the
psychology of, 77-80.
Method, the value of scientific, xv. 3.
Methodism, a reasonable admission regarding, xii. 211.
Metz, The Birth of Tragedy thought out under the walls
of, xvii. 69.
Meyer (Jurgen), of Bonn university, alluded to, v. 135.
Meyerbeer, the ingenious artifices of, iv. 157; and Wagner,
1S7-
Michelangelo, the frescoes of, vi. 199.
— characteristics of, vii. 74-5.
— on his and Raphael's genius, ix. 366; alluded to,
367-
— his conception of God as the tyrant of the world, xiii.
215; rated higher than Raphael, 216.
— Napoleon as the posthumous brother of, according to
Taine, xv. 397.
Michelet, alluded to, xiv. 278.
— as enthusiasm in its shirtsleeves, xvi. 60.
Midas, the quest of, for the wise Silenus, i. 34.
Human, ii. VIII, Case of Wagner. IX, Dawn of Day. X, Joyful
Wisdom. XI, Zarathustra. XII, Beyond Good and Fvil. XIII,
Genealogy of Morals. XIV, Will to Power, i. XV, Will to Power,
ii, XVI, Antichrist. XVII, Ecce Homo.
181
## p. 182 (#256) ############################################
INDEX—NIETZSCHE
Middle Ages, the, the mediaeval memento mort, v. 66; the
sense in which we are still living in, 68.
— the apparent superiority of, vi. 348.
— passion in, vii. 311.
Middle class, the, as having been made out of our servant
caste, xiv. 95.
Middleman, the, as infesting modern life, and making it
expensive, xiv. 65; pre-eminent in intellectual
spheres, 65.
Military profession, the, an educational danger to its privi-
leges, xvi. 56.
Military state, the, its purpose, to create the military
genius, ii. 16.
— the military development of Europe, xiv. 104.
— the last means of adhering to the great traditions of
the past, xv. 189.
Mill (John Stuart), on indulgence, ix. 55 ; and the Chris-
tian ideal, 139.
— a type of English mediocrity, xii. 212.
— alluded to, xiv. 26.
— quoted, xv. 217; and the maxim—" do as you would
be done by," 343; an adverse criticism of, 344.
— his offensive lucidity, xvi. 60.
Miltiades, and Themistocles, ii. 56; his fate, 60.
Milton, vii. 77.
Mind, the, thequestion as to its presence at all to-day, iv. 142.
— its development feared by the State, vi. 345.
— the worse and less fertile soils of, as the first to be
cultivated to-day, vii. 294.
— the discipline of, x. 107; the danger of the impatient
spirits, 107; virtuous stupidity needed, 108.
The volumes referred to under numbers are as follow :—I, Birth
of Tragedy- II, Early Greek Philosophy. Ill, Future of Educa-
tional Institutions. IV. Thoughts out of Season, i.
V, Thoughts out
0f Season, ii. VI, Human, all-too-Human, i. VII, Human, ail-too-
182
## p. 183 (#257) ############################################
MIND—MODERN
Mind, the, the exoteric and the esoteric class of, xii. 43.
— as belonging to fiction, xv. 11.
Minority, the, the right of the weaker, vi. 91.
Mirabeau, the reverence of, for Chamfort, x. 128.
— an example of the aristocratic inability to take serious-
ly for any length of time their enemies, their
disasters, their misdeeds, xiii. 38.
Miracles, the doctrine of, xiv. 157.
Miraculous, the, and the saint phenomenon, xii. 67.
Mirror, TheChildwith the (Zaralhustra's discourse), xi. 95-
98.
Misanthropy, the result of a far too eager philanthropy,
x. 189.
Misfortune, the narcotics of, vi. i11.
— the ancient means of solace against, and a higher, ix.
23; the valuations of, by Christianity and anti-
quity, 81; the subtlety in, 282.
Mistrust, vii. 44.
Misunderstanding, advantage and disadvantage in the
same, vii. 130; on being misunderstood, 163.
Mitchell's treatment recommended for pangs of conscience,
xiv. 192.
Mithras, Christianity and the cult of, xvi. 223.
Moderation, how produced, vi. 335.
— and measure, vii. 125.
— methods of combating vehement impulses, ix. 106;
motives for, 107; the appearance of, 287.
Modern life, the outlines of, depicted, v. 135; another side
of, 137-
Modern society, women's intellect in, vii. 327.
Modern spirit, the, the want of discipline in, xiv. 67.
Human, ii. VIII, Case of Wagner. IX, Dawn of Day. X, Joyful
Wisdom. XI, Zarathustra. XII, Beyond Good and Evil. XIII,
Genealogy of Morals. XIV, Will to Power, i. XV, Will to Power,
ii. XVI, Antichrist. XVII, Ecce Homo.
r
183
## p. 184 (#258) ############################################
INDEX—NIETZSCHE
Modernity, regarded in the light of nutrition and digestion,
xiv. 63; a contribution to the characterisation of,
64; favourite obstacles and remedies of, 103-4-
— a criticism of, xvi. 96; the escape from, 127; toe
hyperboreans, 127.
— Beyond Good and Evil (1886), a criticism of, xvii. 115.
Modesty, on, vi. 376.
— of the mature philosopher, ix. 340.
— the danger of, xv. 371.
Mohammed, the god of, viii. 165.
— instanced, ix. 381.
— alluded to, xv. 375.
— the " holy lie" as common to, xvi. 214.
Mohammedanism and its use of a " beyond," xiv. 125; an
affirmative religion of the Semitic order, 126.
Moira, the Greek conception of, vi. 117.
— the realm of, ix. 135.
Moliere, a delineator of moral character masks, vii. 230;
the exponent of a fixed idea, 314.
— quoted, xii. 18.
— Nietzsche's artistic taste defends, xvii. 38.
Moltke and David Strauss, iv. 57.
Mommsen, the confessions of, iv. 23.
Monarchy, the representative belief of, xv. 206.
Monastery, the, spoilt through having been abused by the
church, xv. 337.
Money, banquets that represent, ix. 209.
Monotheism perhaps the greatest danger of mankind in
the past, x. 179.
Mont Blanc, the view of, from Geneva, vii. 296.
Montaigne and the use made of history to-day, iv. 118.
The volumes referred to under numbers are as follow :—I, Birth
of Tragedy. II, Early Greek Philosophy. Ill, Future of Educa-
tional Institutions. IV, Thoughts out of Season, i. V, Thoughts out
of Season, ii. VI, Human, all-too-Human, i. VII, Human, ail-too-
I84
## p. 185 (#259) ############################################
MONTAIGNE—MORALITY
Montaigne, the rank held by, for honesty, v. 116.
— as Shakespeare's model, vi. 177.
— a guide to the understanding of Socrates, vii. 242;
his books praised, 302; alluded to, 178.
— on doubt, ix. 52-3.
— his loquacity, x. 130; alluded to, 61.
— Nietzsche's affinity to, xvii. 38.
Monnmentum are perennius, the, the non-belief in, vi. 36.
Moon, the, lunar love—immaculate perception, xi. 145.
Moore (Thomas), afraid to publish Byron's autobiography,
so he burnt it, xiii. 179.
Moral evolution, the tendency of, xiv. 279.
Moral ideal, the, (Sec. v. Part ii. Book ii. ) xiv. 264-311.
Moral idiosyncratist, the, xiv. 223.
Moral observation, the necessity of, vi. 56 et seg.
Moral sentiments, the history of {a. series of aphorisms), vi.
53-i10-
Moral valuations, the history of, is the history of the error
of responsibility, vi. 60.
Moralisation, the history of, xv. 229-38.
Moralist, the, concerning the ideal of, xiv. 248-51.
— characterised, xvi. 31.
Moralists, the analytical, not to be confused with the petty-
minded, vii. 199-200.
— on moral mosquitoes, ix. 286; two kinds of, 312.
Morality, denned as the will to disown life, i. 10.
— the current of, flowing through Wagner's characters,
iv. 11o.
— of Christian and the antique virtues, v. 112; the ne-
cessity for teachers of, 113.
— private and oecumenical, vi. 40; and the order of
Human, ii. VIII, Case of Wagner. IX, Dawn of Day. X, Joyful
Wisdom. XI, Zarathustra. XII, Beyond Good and Evil. XIII,
Genealogy of Morals. XIV, Will to Power, i. XV, Will to Power,
ii. XVI, Antichrist. XVII, Ecce Homo.
! 85
## p. 186 (#260) ############################################
INDEX—NIETZSCHE
possessions, vi. 62 ; what it is to be immoral, 63;
the suspicion thrown on, for faith's sake, 73; the
noble acts, desires, and aspirations of, 75; the
glamour and shadow cast upon actions by suc-
cess and failure, 80; the moral sense, 84; the
pleasure given by, 90; the three phasesof, hither-
to existing, 92; the morality of the mature
individual, 93; its relation to custom and tradi-
tion, 94 et seq. ; alluded to, 61.
Morality, against the "triers of the reins " of, vii. 31; the art
of, 32; why the sceptics offend, 42; its origin
traced, 46; its sacrifice, 46; mercantile morality
a refinement of piratical, 201; the significance
of oblivion in, 218; the heirs to its wealth, 219;
on its grades and motives, 221 ; the intellectual
versus the instinctive, 222 ; the traces of its de-
velopment found in literature, 252; Greek
literature instanced, 252 ; alluded to, 300.
— the antithesis between Master and Christian, viii.
48; Greek morality not founded on religion but
on the polis, 165.
— the arts and weapons of defence used by, ix. 3; the
veritable Circe of philosophers, 3; the conception
of the morality of custom, 14; the most moral
man, 15; on immoralists, 16; counter-motion
between the sense of causality and the sense of
morality, 17; the significance of madness in the
history of, 20; the morality of voluntary
suffering, 24; its opposition to amendments,
27; the various consequences of the observance
of its principles, 28; on refined cruelty, and the
The volumes referred to under numbers are as follow :—I, Birth
of Tragedy. II, Early Greek Philosophy. Ill, Future of Educa-
tional Institutions. IV, Thoughts out of Season, i. V, Thoughts out
of Season, ii. VI, Human, all-too-Human, i. VII, Human, ail-too-
186
## p. 187 (#261) ############################################
MORALITY
thirst for distinction in the practice of, 36; the
most ancient moral judgments, 98; two classes
of people who deny, 99 ; on picturesque morality
—more beautiful but less valuable, 150; the
organisation of deviating people perhaps prema-
ture, 167; a morality which does not bore one,
168; the attitude of the Germans to, 21. 7; the
capacity of the German to raise himself above,
221 ; enthusiastic sacrifice, and the morality of
victims, 226; the morality of sacrifice, 231; a
moral interregnum, 324.
Morality,as the herd instinct in the individual, x. 160; advice
addressed to the preachers of, 226; considered
as a problem, 280; moral criticism and valuation,
281; its value remains untested, 282; the indis-
pensability of the disguise of, 293; vengeance
on intellect and other backgrounds of, 315 ; on
viewing, from a position outside, 347 ; conditions
of getting there, 348.
— The Thousand and one Goals {Za. ra. thustra. 's discourse),
xi. 65-8.
— the surmounting of, xii. 47; the calling to account of
popular, 48; the herding animal morality at
present in Europe, 127; on love for one's
enemies, 160; the morally tactful, 161; the dis-
tinction of rank between man and man, and con-
sequently between morality and morality, 175;
the two primary types of master morality, 227-
30; slave morality, 230-2; and mediocrity,
237-
— Nietzsche on his first explorations in, xiii. 10; the
Human, ii.
