marsha said:
I interpret Nietzsche's master-slave struggle, and other attributes he riles 
against, to be primarily patterns within each individual.  That's how it makes 
sense to me.  He considered himself a psychologist after all.

dmb says:
That's what his Beyond Good and Evil seems to say. The master and slave 
moralities may have been more sharply divided at previous points in history 
when they were forming in their respective classes but today both types are 
mixed into the culture as a whole and both types are usually found in every 
person. I was horrified to find them both in myself, of course. 

Thanks for the heads-up about Radical Empiricism being available at Librivox. 
Somehow, I'd missed that one even though I actively looked for it. Now its on 
my ipod along with 3000 songs and a dozen books. Its funny to look back and 
think about how much I loved my Sony walkman. Now it seems like a clunky old 
joke. It fit into my pocket only painfully and needed a new set of batteries 
after playing just a couple of tapes.
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