I think that's brilliant. I've never been much of a fan of the Church or modern religion, and ancient Greece fascinates me. The slave and master definitions are especially amusing. They remind me of a conversation I had with a friend yesterday about whether people can be "good" or "bad." I don't think anyone is good or bad; there are people, perceptions, actions, and consequences, and that's about it. Nietzsche's idea that morality can be defined by societal customs really resonates with that (and with me). Perceptions are so incredibly powerful, and they're part psychology, part emotion, and part societal custom (sociology?). I love that he challenges them.
That's the biggest problem I have with law. As far as I can tell, law is people deciding what their morals are and then making them "official" and enforcing them as rules. I don't have anything terribly deep to say about that, it just gets on my nerves. I generally like people, and I also don't like when people tell each other what to do. Talk about unproductive. I know it works for society, but I don't think it's the best we can do.
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