All great things go to ruin by reason of themselves, by reason of an act of self-dissolution
 Friedrich Nietzsche, On the Genealogy of Morality (1887). copy citation

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Author Friedrich Nietzsche
Source On the Genealogy of Morality
Topic reason dissolution
Date 1887
Language English
Reference
Note Translated by Horace B. Samuel
Weblink https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Genealogy_of_Morals

Context

“all this is now done away with, all this has the conscience against it, and is regarded by every subtler conscience as disreputable, dishonourable, as lying, feminism, weakness, cowardice—by means of this severity, if by means of anything at all, are we, in sooth, good Europeans and heirs of Europe's longest and bravest self-mastery." . . . All great things go to ruin by reason of themselves, by reason of an act of self-dissolution: so wills the law of life, the law of necessary "self-mastery" even in the essence of life—ever is the law-giver finally exposed to the cry, "patere legem quam ipse tulisti" [16] ; in thus wise did Christianity go to ruin as a dogma, through its own morality;” source