Nietzsche, if you notice, almost never gives any evidence for his assertions. :) Moreover, he did not mean morality; he meant slave morality.
Anyway, there's no real disagreement. N did not argue that morality was not important or real, which it obviously is; he gave an (evidence-free) account of its origin.
--- On Sun, 7/26/09, Joanna <123hop at comcast.net> wrote:
>
> I looked up Nietzche quotes to get the exact one and
> couldn't find it. It's somewhere in "Beyond Good and Evil."
> But there was some other stuff of his in the same vein. For
> example:
>
>
> --Fear is the mother of morality.
>
> --Morality is the herd-instinct in the individual.
>
> --Whatever is done for love always occurs beyond good and
> evil.
>
> If you see what he's getting at, you might conclude that
> wedding politics to morality is a bad idea.
> Che spoke of revolution as being an expression of love.
> This would be consistent with the Nietzchean precepts
> above.
>
> Joanna
>
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>
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