Nietzsche abyss vs Algorithmic abyss
“Whoever fights monsters should see to it that in the process he does not become a monster..”
I have seen this quote resurface on my feed again and again. Sounds validating, isn’t it? That’s precisely the problem.
This quote of Friedrich Nietzsche is frequently used as an excuse for individual wrongdoings, as if suffering grants a license to be cruel or cynical. People argue: The world hurt me, so I am allowed to hurt back.
But Nietzsche would have despised this. He was not idealising the darkness but warning us about consequences of avoidance.

What Nietzsche was actually warning us about?
In Beyond Good and Evil, one finds clear distinction between active suffering and passive suffering. I think it is important to understand this distinction to stand firm on moral ground even in tough times.
Passive suffering occurs when failure produces resentment, external blame, self-pity and this is the suffering Nietzsche attacked most viciously. It creates what he called a reactive personalities ie people who dont act and only react.
Active suffering is different; it occurs when pain becomes training. It assumes responsibility, adaptation, direction and growth through resistance. In my personal life, the gym hurts, but it strengthens the body. Studying exhausts, but it expands capacity. All the restrictions (discipline) I impose on myself to stop acting out of impulse feel oppressive until it becomes freedom.
“What does not kill me makes me stronger – but only for those strong enough to endure it.”
But the Abyss of Algorithms…
Here is the uncomfortable truth, algorithms don’t care about the truth. They care about engagement. This fosters negativity, deepens emotional loop, keeps you scrolling and at last rewards despair with validation. Understand this is not a conspiracy theory. It is a design.
This modern abyss is not philosophical–it is algorithmic. You gazing into it and it gazes into you by feeding you more of the same emotional tone. And with time, this conditions people to equate depth with darkness.
How purpose changes everything?
Nietzsche rejected the hope that anaesthetises. He never rejected the hope that orients. Suffering will be meaningful when it has a purpose.
I was watching one of Jordan Peterson’s interviews, and he has a very good take on ‘gazing into the abyss’. He says,
“…bring it on. If you gaze into the abyss long enough, you’ll see the light.”
Not because the abyss disappears but because your vision sharpens.
It is argued that hope delays acceptance of harsh reality. But Nietzsche’s real enemy was never hope–it was avoidance (of failure, darkness). Thus, hope without effort is delusion. Hope, with proper direction, is a strategy.
Don’t let the abyss choose for you.
Suffering will follow; it won’t be a compromise of life. What is in your control is to choose whether suffering makes you bitter or it makes you capable of handling tough times with strong ethics. If you have a purpose, suffering has a meaning that will eventually lead to good. Don’t let these algorithms fool you, and whatever life throws at you, just say “bring it on”.
