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Forget about "good as gold".
Today it's going to get evil.
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But who or what is evil at all?
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The devil?
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The Illuminati?
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The mother-in-law?
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Usually evil stands for
morally wrong decisions,
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a basic power influencing
the history of the world
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and being the opponent of good.
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Meaning: where there is light,
there is also shadow.
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Of course! God against the devil,
the West against the terrorists,
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Aspirin against a headache ...
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But let's go back to
the individual human being.
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Who actually defines
what is “morally wrong”?
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Depending on one's ethic position,
definitons differ significantly.
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According to Bible critic
Benedict de Spinoza, evil is everything
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that blocks the self-assertion
of an individual.
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So it's a force from outside
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that prevents us humans
from developing freely.
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According to Kant, evil is
an essential part of human nature,
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since humans are not only
equipped with reason,
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but also with "empirical",
entirely worldly needs.
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So the inclination to the "dark side"-
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has always been a part of us?
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His fellow Enlightenment thinker
Rousseau sees things differently.
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For him, humans are born good.
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Only living in the community is what
poisons them, makes them evil.
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So, are we actually born evil,
or is it society that makes us evil?
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Nietzsche threw all of this overboard,
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declared "good" to be "bad",
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and "evil" simply to be a construct
of Christian "slave morality.”
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Leibniz thoroughly examined evil.
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He separated it into three categories.
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First the malum physicum:
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pain, loss, loneliness, poverty...
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things you wouldn’t even
wish on your worst enemy.
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Then Leibniz described
the malum metaphysicum:
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small imperfections, breaking points
built in by a divine hand.
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According to Leibniz, man himself
can only be evil in one way -
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through the malum morale, the moral evil.
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The sin which you commit,
when you turn away from God.
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In the 20th century,
existential philosopher Karl Jaspers
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also divided evil within man
into three categories.
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First: urges of any kind.
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Second: lacking will to do good.
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And third: the will to do evil.
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That is indeed interesting!
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Haven’t we always been
more fascinated by Darth Vader
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than by Luke Skywalker
clad in shabby eco-linen?!
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Regardless of your religious or
ideological point of view -
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"pure" evil: killing, stealing, lying
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is what is bad for
the individual and society.
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Yet it seems that we need evil.
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Good and evil are
in a dualistic relationship.
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One cannot exist without the other.
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Otherwise, Ozzy Osborne
would just be a doddering father,
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and every Hollywood film
would begin with the happy-end
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and plod along without antagonists.
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We need evil as an antithesis
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in order to find our way
in the world of ethics.