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Try 1887 with Nietzsche's, 'On the Genealogy of Morals'. Good only became moral when the priests inverted the term for their own benefit. Good originally meant lively, powerful and full of strength.. I'm surprised you think you're the first to discover this.
Oh, I've read the Genealogy of Morality as well as other works by Nietzsche as well as Hegel, Kant and Schopenhauer.
Nietzsche, was a philologist so certainly he would have been aware of how language changes over time. However any suggestion by Nietzsche as to why the change occurred, like the majority of his work, is based purely on speculation.
Nietzsche is an interesting philosopher in the sense that he really is playing with the reader. He will state, restate, then contradict what he stated and unabashedly so. The two biggest mistakes people make in reading Nietzsche is firstly not reading his predecessors, and secondly assuming he wants to be understood.
Practically everything Nietzsche wrote was in response to previous philosophers. Everything else that he writes about is largely Absurdist. So for example when he writes, "God is Dead," he is largely responding to Schopenhauer and his World as Will. Also, he is responding to the decadence of his generation. There are major debates among philosophers whether in stating, "God is Dead," Nietzsche meant it in the absolute or whether he meant it relative to the habits of his contemporaries and the idealism of previous works.
I mean everything Nietzsche wrote was written by him intentionally to be debated, or as he, himself indicates sardonically, "ruminated over." However from my education and my understanding, the only truly valid way to interpret Nietzsche is in light of his generation and his predecessors.
Bringing his back to the etymology of, "nice." The term, "nice guy," did not exist in Nietzsche's time. The word, "nice," alone may have been used. However, there is no specific evidence the word itself was generally associated with a type of man. That is purely a more contemporary use of the word, "nice." Consequently, any relevance to Nietzsche in the debate of the term, "nice guy," is at most perfunctory but more accurately irrelevant.