MAN’S OBJECTION TO HIS OWN IMPROVEMENT
But would such a change be tolerated
if Man must rise above himself to desire it?
It would, through his misconception of its nature.
Man does desire an ideal Superman with such energy
as he can spare from his nutrition, and has in every
age magnified the best living substitute for it he
can find. His least incompetent general is set
up as an Alexander; his king is the first gentleman
in the world; his Pope is a saint. He is never
without an array of human idols who are all nothing
but sham Supermen. That the real Superman will
snap his superfingers at all Man’s present trumpery
ideals of right, duty, honor, justice, religion, even
decency, and accept moral obligations beyond present
human endurance, is a thing that contemporary Man does
not foresee: in fact he does not notice it when
our casual Supermen do it in his very face.
He actually does it himself every day without knowing
it. He will therefore make no objection to the
production of a race of what he calls Great Men or
Heroes, because he will imagine them, not as true
Supermen, but as himself endowed with infinite brains,
infinite courage, and infinite money.
The most troublesome opposition will
arise from the general fear of mankind that any interference
with our conjugal customs will be an interference
with our pleasures and our romance. This fear,
by putting on airs of offended morality, has always
intimidated people who have not measured its essential
weakness; but it will prevail with those degenerates
only in whom the instinct of fertility has faded into
a mere itching for pleasure. The modern devices
for combining pleasure with sterility, now universally
known and accessible, enable these persons to weed
themselves out of the race, a process already vigorously
at work; and the consequent survival of the intelligently
fertile means the survival of the partizans of the
Superman; for what is proposed is nothing but the
replacement of the old unintelligent, inevitable, almost
unconscious fertility by an intelligently controlled,
conscious fertility, and the elimination of the mere
voluptuary from the evolutionary process. Even
if this selective agency had not been invented, the
purpose of the race would still shatter the opposition
of individual instincts. Not only do the bees
and the ants satisfy their reproductive and parental
instincts vicariously; but marriage itself successfully
imposes celibacy on millions of unmarried normal men
and women. In short, the individual instinct
in this matter, overwhelming as it is thoughtlessly
supposed to be, is really a finally negligible one.