A few weeks ago, I finished Marx’s Critique of Hegel’s Philosophy of Right. It strikes me now that that book and this one are similar, in that they shed light on the two thinkers as young men. In Marx’s Critique, we see the twenty-something grappling with the tentacled beast of Hegel; in The Birth of Tragedy, we see young Nietzsche taking his first bold step off the straight-and-narrow path of academia into his own world of thought. Both books are, to put it delicately, ‘young men’s books’—bold, daring, reckless, overly-ambitious, under-researched, brimming over with impetuosity and life. But the major difference between the two works is that Marx’s Critique (apart from its famous preface) is quite boring; while Nietzsche’s debut has all the fire and fury you’d expect from the mustachioed thinker.
As a piece of scholarship, this book is worthless. Everyone told Nietzsche so immediately, and it’s unnecessary to say more on the subject. But as a piece of… something, it’s fantastic. Here we get the rare treat of Nietzsche’s excellent prose combined with a fairly straightforward argument. But what, exactly, is the argument?
Although commonly discussed, I think that Nietzsche’s division of Apollonian/Dionysian is also commonly misrepresented. (For the sake of honesty, I should say I’m merely parroting what I read in the Douglas Smith’s introduction, bolstered by my own reading.) The main conflict Nietzsche identifies is not Apollonian vs. Dionysian, but Apollonian/Dionysian vs. Socratism.
Apollonian art is representational, such as paintings, sculpture, novels, and epic poetry. That’s why Nietzsche calls Homer the ultimate Apollonian artist, because he paints a picture with words. Now, mind you, these images don’t have to be rational. In fact, they often aren’t. (Does anything about the Iliad or the Odyssey strike you as particularly rational?) In fact, one of the first examples Nietzsche uses as Apollonian imagery are dreams—the ultimate in senselessness.
Dionysian art is not representational. It is, rather, a pure manifestation of the will to live. This is heavily influenced by Schopenhauer’s philosophy: Schopenhauer, building on Kant, thought that the world of the senses was but a visual manifestation of the primordial Will to Live—which is Schopenhauer’s interpretation of Kant’s noumena. Thus, since Apollonian art represents this world of the senses, it ends up being copy of a copy—twice removed from the primordial will. But music is a pure sensation, and therefore closer to the fundamental truth of reality.
So, for Nietzsche, the greatness of Greek Tragedy is that it combined these two aspects of art: the representational and nonrepresentational. The drama depicted on stage is Apollonian; but the music of the Chorus is Dionysian. It is the balance of myth and music, of words and will. And therein lies the rub.*
The death of tragedy comes with this fateful balance is disrupted. And it is disrupted by rationality: in the form of Euripides and Socrates. Socrates’s (or Plato’s) way of thinking was opposed to both the Apollonian and the Dionysian. His guiding light was reason, cold and pure. Socrates’s objection to Apollonian art is similar to Schopenhauer’s—it is a mere representation of the visual world, which itself is a mere manifestation of the Ideal Forms. But music is equally abhorrent for Socrates, because it is irrational, and distracts the soul from philosophy. In place of the Will to Live Socrates proposes the Will to Truth.
From then on, nonrepresentational art is not to be trusted, since it appeals to the senses, like wine or the lust for power. The point of art becomes, instead, to manifest reason and truth rather than to represent the Will to Live. Instead of the Apollonian world of dreams and myth we get the Socratic world of diagrams and dialectic.
I’m not sure why I took the trouble to summarize the book. Maybe it’s because I’ve heard it incorrectly summarized so many times before; or maybe it’s because it's so darn interesting. In any case, this is a marvelous little book, even if you think Nietzsche is both a bad scholar (which he is) and has dubious moral values (which is arguable). In the end, I think one of Nietzsche’s main points, at any time in his life, was that aesthetics is perhaps more important than either logic or ethics. Logic tells you what is true; ethics tell you what is right. But aesthetics makes life worth living—and who cares what’s true or right if it isn’t?
*One can see how influential this was on Freud, whose entire system is a kind of internalized version of Schopenhauer’s and Nietzsche’s. For Freud, the primal id (read “the will to live” or “the Dionysian”) is represented symbolically via dreams (read “the world of the senses” or “the Apollonian”).