"Das Ressentiment ist das Verbotene an sich für den Kranken—sein Böses: leider auch sein natürlichster Hang.—Das begriff jener tiefe Physiolog Buddha. Seine „Religion”, die man besser als eine Hygiene bezeichnen dürfte, um sie nicht mit so erbarmungswürdigen Dingen wie das Christenthum ist, zu vermischen, machte ihre Wirkung abhängig von dem Sieg über das Ressentiment: die Seele davon frei machen—erster Schritt zur Genesung. „Nicht durch Feindschaft kommt Feindschaft zu Ende, durch Freundschaft kommt Feindschaft zu Ende”: das steht am Anfang der Lehre Buddha's—so redet nicht die Moral, so redet die Physiologie.—Das Ressentiment, aus der Schwäche geboren, Niemandem schädlicher als dem Schwachen selbst,—im andern Falle, wo eine reiche Natur die Voraussetzung ist, ein überflüssiges Gefühl, ein Gefühl, über das Herr zu bleiben beinahe der Beweis des Reichthums ist."
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Ecce Homo (book)
1886 – 1888
Ecce Homo: How One Becomes What One Is (German: Ecce homo: Wie man wird, was man ist) is the last book written by philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche. It was written in 1888 and published in 1908. Throughout the course of the book, Nietzsche expounds — in the characteristically hyperbolic style found in his later period (1886–1888) — upon his life as a child, his tastes as an individual, and his vision for humanity.
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