THE PSHYLOGY OF EVIL: SITUATED CHARACTER TRANSFORMATIONS
Description
Power said to the world,
"You are mine."
The world kept it prisoner on her throne.
Love said to the world, "I am thine."
The world gave it the freedom of her house.
— Rabindranath Tagore, Stray Birds"
THE PSHYLOGY OF EVIL: SITUATED CHARACTER
TRANSFORMATIONS
ONCE AWARE OF THE CONGRUENCE BETWEEN GOOD AND EVIL YOU CANNOT SEE
ONLY ONE AND NOT THE OTHER
We fear evil, but are fascinated by it. We create myths of evil conspiracies and come to believe them enough to mobilize
forces against them. We reject the "Other" as different and dangerous because it's unknown, yet we are thrilled by
contemplating sexual excess and violations of moral codes by those who are not our kind
TRANSFORMATIONS: ANGELS, DEVILS,
AND THE REST OF US MERE MORTALS
"What makes people go wrong?" What makes human behavior
work? What determines human thought and action? What makes some of us lead moral, righteous lives,
while others seem to slip easily into immorality and crime?
Annotations:
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We attempt to search for an idea that
will separate good people from bad
people, to essentialize evil pointing
bad tyrants in our era. We are talking
about the contradiction between the
church and the state, talking about
ideologies which stand in both sides of
evil and good.
The bad apple: is it the
apple that is rotten, is it
the barrel, or is it the
barrel maker. It is when
power is wedded to
chronic fear that it
becomes formidable.
It is when power is
wedded to chronic fear
that it becomes
formidable. — Eric Hoffer,
The Passionate State of
Mind The Power to Create
"The Enemy"
We live in the "mass murder century." More than 50 million people have been systematically murdered by
government decrees, enacted by soldiers and civilian forces willing to carry out the kill orders.
A report by the United Nations
estimates that be- tween 800,000
and a million Rwandans were
murdered in about three months'
time, making the massacre the
most ferocious in recorded history.
Japanese soldiers butchered between
260,000 and 350,000 Chinese civil ians in
just a few bloody months of 1937. Those
figures represent more deaths than the
total annihilation caused by the atomic
bombing of Japan and all the civilian
deaths in most European countries during
all of World War 2.
Soviet Red Army soldiers
raped an estimated
100,000 Berlin women
toward the end of Word
War II and between 1945
and 1948. In addition to the
rapes and murders of more
than 500 civilians at the My
Lai massacre in 1968,
recently released secret
Pentagon evidence de-
scribes 320 incidents of
American atrocities against
Vietnamese and
Cambodian civilians.
"Men are not prisoners of fate, but
only prisoners of their own minds," said
President Franklin Roosevelt. Prisons
are metaphors for constraints on
freedom, both literal and symbolic.
The Stanford Prison Experiment went from initially
being a symbolic prison to becoming an all-too-real
one in the minds of its prisoners and guards. What
are other self-imposed prisons that limit our basic
freedoms? Neurotic disorders, low self-esteem,
shyness, prejudice, shame, and excessive fear of
terrorism are just some of the chimeras that limit our
potentiality for freedom and happiness, blinding our
full appreciation of the world around us.
Power said to the world,
"You are mine." The
world kept it prisoner on
her throne. Love said to
the world, "I am thine."
The world gave it the
freedom of her house. —
Rabindranath Tagore,
Stray Birds"