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Who Decides What's Good and Bad? — Thus Spoke Zarathustra

Thus Spoke Zarathustra - Who Decides What's Good and Bad?

Friedrich Nietzsche

Thus Spoke Zarathustra

Who Decides What's Good and Bad?

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Analysis by the Wide Reads editorial team·Reviewed against the source text·Updated December 2, 2025

Summary

Who Decides What's Good and Bad?

Thus Spoke Zarathustra by Friedrich Nietzsche

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Zarathustra shares what he learned traveling the world: every culture has its own definition of good and bad, and they often directly contradict each other. What one society calls virtuous, another calls shameful. The Greeks valued competitive excellence and standing out from the crowd. Other peoples prized loyalty to family above all else, or keeping promises even when it cost them dearly. Zarathustra realizes that humans created all these moral systems themselves; they weren't handed down from heaven or discovered like natural laws. Values exist because people made them up to help their societies survive and thrive. This is both liberating and terrifying: if we created our moral codes, we can change them. But it also means there's no universal referee telling us what's right and wrong. Different groups of 'loving ones' throughout history have created tables of values that worked for their time and place. The real power isn't in following these rules, but in understanding that someone had to create them in the first place. Zarathustra sees this as humanity's greatest challenge: we've had a thousand different goals for a thousand different peoples, but we still lack one unifying purpose. Without that shared direction, do we even have a coherent humanity? The chapter ends with this haunting question, suggesting that our moral confusion reflects a deeper crisis of human identity and purpose.

In this chapter: Terms Characters Key Quotes Themes Modern Story

Why This Matters

Connect literature to life

Skill: Decoding Value Systems

The rules you were raised to follow were written by people solving problems that may no longer be yours. Zarathustra reports back from his travels that the Greeks' table of greatness, the Persians' table of truth-telling, and the family-centered peoples' table of honor were all human-made solutions to specific survival problems, dressed up later as eternal law. When a rule you have always followed starts to feel wrong, trace it back to the situation that created it before deciding whether to keep it.

Coming Up in Chapter 16

Zarathustra turns his attention to a more personal moral failing: the way we use love of our neighbors to avoid dealing with our own problems. He's about to challenge one of our most cherished beliefs about caring for others.

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Chapter 15

Who Decides What's Good and Bad?

Many lands saw Zarathustra, and many peoples: thus he discovered the good and bad of many peoples. No greater power did Zarathustra find on earth than good and bad. No people could live without first valuing; if a people will maintain itself, however, it must not value as its neighbour valueth. Much that passed for good with one people was regarded with scorn and contempt by another: thus I found it. Much found I here called bad, which was there decked with purple honours. Never did the one neighbour understand the other: ever did his soul marvel at his neighbour’s…

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Now let's explore the literary elements.

Key Quotes & Analysis

"A table of excellencies hangeth over every people."

— Zarathustra

Context: Explaining how every culture creates its own definition of what is admirable and worth striving for

Moral systems are not about abstract right and wrong but about what helps a group feel powerful and successful. Each culture's values reflect what they believe will make them thrive.

In Today's Words:

Your office's unwritten rules about what a star employee looks like are not facts about excellence; they are your leadership's values made visible. Every group has its own scoreboard. Knowing which one you are being measured against, and deciding whether you accept those rules, is the beginning of working with intention.

"Much that passed for good with one people was regarded with scorn and contempt by another: thus I found it."

— Zarathustra

Context: Describing what his travels revealed about moral diversity across cultures

This observation shatters the comfortable assumption that there are universal moral truths everyone agrees on. It forces us to confront that our deepest beliefs might just be local customs.

In Today's Words:

Comfort with disagreement is considered rude in some workplaces and intellectually honest in others. Directness reads as disrespect in one family and as love in another. What feels obviously right to you was learned somewhere, from people working out how to survive their particular situation, not handed down as a universal fact.

"A thousand goals have there been hitherto, for a thousand peoples have there been."

— Zarathustra

Context: Reflecting on humanity's lack of a unified purpose despite many different cultural goals

Without some shared human purpose, we are a collection of competing tribes with incompatible values. The question is whether we can create unity without destroying diversity.

In Today's Words:

Every group has figured out what it is optimizing for. What no one has settled is what all of them together are supposed to accomplish as a single species. That unresolved question is not abstract. It shows up in every situation where two groups with incompatible values cannot agree on the next step.

"Valuing is creating: hear it, ye creating ones!"

— Zarathustra

Context: The pivot from observer of moral systems to radical claim about their origin

The act of valuing is not discovery but creation. This reframes morality entirely, shifting authority from God or tradition to human creative will. Every value was once a choice someone made.

In Today's Words:

When your team decides that fast email responses signal professionalism, they are not discovering a truth; they are creating one. Every culture's moral code was made the same way. Recognizing this does not make all rules equal, but it does mean someone had to author the rules you follow, and that someone could be you.

Thematic Threads

Identity

In This Chapter

Zarathustra questions whether humanity has a coherent identity without shared values

Development

Evolved from individual identity crisis to species-wide identity confusion

In Your Life:

You might struggle with who you are when your personal values conflict with your family's or workplace's expectations

Social Expectations

In This Chapter

Different societies create completely contradictory expectations for what counts as good behavior

Development

Expanded from personal social pressure to recognition that all social expectations are human creations

In Your Life:

You might feel torn between different groups' expectations: your family wants loyalty, your job rewards individual achievement

Personal Growth

In This Chapter

Understanding that values are human creations opens possibility for conscious choice about which ones to follow

Development

Shifted from rejecting false values to recognizing the power to create new ones

In Your Life:

You might realize you can choose which family traditions to keep and which workplace cultures to embrace

Class

In This Chapter

Different social classes develop different moral systems based on their survival needs

Development

Introduced here as explanation for why different groups have conflicting values

In Your Life:

You might notice that working-class values like loyalty clash with middle-class values like individual advancement

You now have the context. Time to form your own thoughts.

Discussion Questions

This is not a test. Five prompts guide you through the chapter, from how it opens to how it closes, so you notice context and rhythm rather than facts to memorize. Sit with each question in your own words. When you see "One way to read it," treat it as a starting point, not the only answer.

  1. 1

    Zarathustra says 'no people could live without first valuing.' What does this mean, and why does he think values are essential to a people's survival?

    ▶One way to read it

    Values are the shared agreements that make coordinated life possible. A group that cannot agree on what is worth doing, protecting, or sacrificing cannot hold together. Values are not a luxury; they are the operating system of any functioning community.

    analysis • surface
  2. 2

    Zarathustra uses four different cultures to show that values are created, not discovered: the Greeks, the truth-telling people, the family-honoring people, and the fidelity-keeping warriors. What do these examples have in common?

    ▶One way to read it

    Each group elevated to a sacred value the behavior that solved its hardest survival problem. Competitive people needed excellence; truth-tellers needed trust; family-based societies needed loyalty. The value became holy because the need was real.

    analysis • medium
  3. 3

    Zarathustra says 'valuing is creating.' Apply this to a value you hold personally, tracing how you came to hold it and whose circumstances originally shaped it.

    ▶One way to read it

    A value like punctuality might trace back to a parent who worked shift jobs where lateness had real consequences. Knowing that origin does not make the value wrong, but it does let you decide consciously whether it still fits your life.

    application • medium
  4. 4

    Zarathustra observes that 'the crafty ego, the loveless one, that seeketh its advantage in the advantage of many is not the origin of the herd, but its ruin.' How do you recognize when someone is using collective values to serve only themselves?

    ▶One way to read it

    The person using collective values selfishly is usually the one invoking them most loudly when their personal interest is at stake and going quiet when the group would benefit but they would not. The inconsistency is the tell.

    application • deep
  5. 5

    Zarathustra ends by asking whether humanity is still lacking, since it has no shared goal. Do you think a single unifying goal for humanity is possible or even desirable, and what does your answer reveal about your own values?

    ▶One way to read it

    Thinking a single goal is needed may reflect a value placed on unity and coherence. Thinking diversity of goals is enough may reflect a value placed on freedom and local self-determination. Either answer is itself a value position, which is exactly his point.

    reflection • deep

Critical Thinking Exercise

10 minutes

Map Your Value Conflicts

Think of a recent disagreement you had with someone at work, in your family, or in your community. Write down what each person valued in that situation. Instead of judging who was right or wrong, try to identify what survival need or life experience might have shaped each person's values. What problem was each value system trying to solve?

Consider:

  • •Consider what generation, background, or job role might have shaped their values
  • •Look for practical reasons why their values might make sense for their situation
  • •Think about whether there's a way both value systems could coexist

Journaling Prompt

Write about a time when you changed your mind about what was important. What caused that shift, and how did it affect your relationships with others who still held your old values?

Coming Up Next...

Chapter 16: The Problem with People-Pleasing

Zarathustra turns his attention to a more personal moral failing: the way we use love of our neighbors to avoid dealing with our own problems. He's about to challenge one of our most cherished beliefs about caring for others.

Continue to Chapter 16
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The Friend as Enemy
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The Problem with People-Pleasing
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Study guides, teaching tools, themes, and the full library.More ways to read Thus Spoke Zarathustra: study guides, teaching tools, and the wider library.

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What this chapter teaches

Theme analyses that draw on this chapter and apply it to modern life.

  • Creating Your Own Values in Thus Spoke ZarathustraCreating your own values in Thus Spoke Zarathustra. Nietzsche on moral authorship, broken tablets, and life after inherited belief. Chapter guide.
Identity & Self-DiscoveryMoral Dilemmas & EthicsPower & Corruption

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