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Name: Christopher White
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America: Overman or Beast?

"Man is a rope, tied between beast and overman--a rope over an abyss... What is great in man is that he is a bridge and not an end: what can be loved in man is that he is an overture and a going under..." Friedrich Nietzsche

 Psychologists, political scientists and sociologists argue constantly over the meaning of this quote; in my mind, Fred is speaking of the constant battle that a man wages between being a self-fulfilled man or a man who constantly gravels. The self-fulfilled man takes care of himself in his own way. He doesn't feel the need to flagellate himself or humble himself repetitively so as to get recognition. He relies on his own strength to get him through the day, not on the strengths and weaknesses of institutions, governments or individuals.

 Contrarily, the "beast" or the man that gravels, has no qualms about saying whatever is necessary to maintain a steady connection with an individual or entity; he'll go far and below, if you will, what is  acceptable in order to make certain said individual stays within close proximity of  him. In other words, he'll surrender his own-self worth so as to cling to what he feels is important.  Luckily and unluckily for these men, the road to both the self-fulfilled man and the man that gravels is a rope that is hanging precariously over the abyss. The man that gravels can see the fringes at the end of the rope and take the journey to self-fulfillment; likewise, the self-fulfilled man can be tempted to cross the precarious rope into the land of self-pity and self-loathing.

 The question then is: Are Americans, en masse, the overman or the beast?

 Christopher W.

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