The term " the meek " would be familiar in the Old Testament, e . g ., as in slave morality ".
22.
Nietzsche sees slave morality as pessimistic and fearful, values for them serving only to ease the existence for those who suffer from the very same thing.
23.
Unlike master morality which is sentiment, slave morality is based on re-sentiment devaluing that which the master values and the slave does not have.
24.
The essence of slave morality is " utility " : the good is what is most useful for the whole community, not the strong.
25.
He certainly gives slave morality a more thorough critique but this is partly because he believes that slave morality is modern society's more imminent danger.
26.
He certainly gives slave morality a more thorough critique but this is partly because he believes that slave morality is modern society's more imminent danger.
27.
Nietzsche condemns the triumph of slave morality in the West, saying that the democratic movement is the " " collective degeneration of man " ".
28.
Judeo-Christian values are more thoroughly examined in " On the Genealogy of Morals " as a product of what he calls " slave morality ."
29.
To that end, he distinguished between master and slave moralities, and claimed that man must turn from the meekness and humility of Europe's slave-morality.
30.
Nietzsche viewed the progress of such Slave Morality as a sort of violation of the natural order and a thwarting of the authentic advancements of civilization available only through the Strong.