On
Die Schnelligkeit.
2. Speed-of every sort; the mechanical increase in technical "velocities,"
and such increase altogether only a consequence of this
speed; the latter the inability to withstand in the stillness of concealed
growth and of waiting; mania for the surprising, for what
is again and again immediately and differently "striking" and enthralling;
transience as the basic law of "constancy." Necessary:
prompt forgetting and losing oneself in what comes next. On this
basis, then, the erroneous representation of the high and the
"highest" in the monstrous form of record-breaking performances;
purely quantitative increase, blindness to the truly momentary,
which is not the transient, but is what opens up eternity. With
respect to speed, however, the eternal is the mere endurance of
the same, the empty "and so on and on"; the genuine unrest of the
battle remains concealed, and in its place has stepped the restlessness
of constantly more ingenious activity, which is pushed forward
by the dread of becoming bored with oneself.
P. 121
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