49

The new fundamental feeling: our conclusive transitoriness.  Formerly one sought the feeling of the grandeur of man by pointing to his divine origin: this has now become a forbidden way, for at its portal stands the ape, together with other gruesome beasts, grinning knowingly as if to say: no further in this direction! One therefore now tries the opposite direction: the way mankind is going shall serve as proof of his grandeur and kinship with God. Alas this, too, is vain! At the end of this way stands the funeral urn of the last man and gravedigger (with the inscription 'nihil humani a me alienum puto'24). However high mankind may have evolved  and perhaps at the end it will stand even lower than at the beginning!  it cannot pass over into a higher order, as little as the ant and the earwig can at the end of its 'earthly course' rise up to kinship with God and eternal life. The becoming drags the has-been along behind it: why should an exception to this eternal spectacle be made on behalf of some little star or for any little species upon it! Away with such sentimentalities!

24. nihil humani a me alienum puto: "[I am human], I consider nothing human alien to me." From the Roman playwright Terence's play, the Heautontimorumenos, or "The Self-Tormenter."
Friedrich Nietzsche - Daybreak
Book I - Aphorism # 49

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