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Evil

Evil, or badness, in a general sense, is defined as the opposite or absence of good. It can be an extremely broad concept, although in everyday usage it is often more narrowly used to talk about profound wickedness and against common good. It is generally seen as taking multiple possible forms, such as the form of personal moral evil commonly associated with the word, or impersonal natural evil (as in the case of natural disasters or illnesses), and in religious thought, the form of the demonic or supernatural/eternal.[1] While some religions, world views, and philosophies focus on "good versus evil", others deny evil's existence and usefulness in describing people.

Sendan Kendatsuba, one of the eight guardians of Buddhist law, banishing evil in one of the five paintings of Extermination of Evil.

Evil can denote profound immorality,[2] but typically not without some basis in the understanding of the human condition, where strife and suffering (cf. Hinduism) are the true roots of evil. In certain religious contexts, evil has been described as a supernatural force.[2] Definitions of evil vary, as does the analysis of its motives.[3] Elements that are commonly associated with personal forms of evil involve unbalanced behavior including anger, revenge, hatred, psychological trauma, expediency, selfishness, ignorance, destruction and neglect.[4]

In some forms of thought, evil is also sometimes perceived as the dualistic antagonistic binary opposite to good,[5] in which good should prevail and evil should be defeated.[6] In cultures with Buddhist spiritual influence, both good and evil are perceived as part of an antagonistic duality that itself must be overcome through achieving Nirvana.[6] The ethical questions regarding good and evil are subsumed into three major areas of study:[7] meta-ethics concerning the nature of good and evil, normative ethics concerning how we ought to behave, and applied ethics concerning particular moral issues. While the term is applied to events and conditions without agency, the forms of evil addressed in this article presume one or more evildoers.

Etymology

The modern English word evil (Old English yfel) and its cognates such as the German Übel and Dutch euvel are widely considered to come from a Proto-Germanic reconstructed form of *ubilaz, comparable to the Hittite huwapp- ultimately from the Proto-Indo-European form *wap- and suffixed zero-grade form *up-elo-. Other later Germanic forms include Middle English evel, ifel, ufel, Old Frisian evel (adjective and noun), Old Saxon ubil, Old High German ubil, and Gothic ubils.[8]

The root meaning of the word is of obscure origin though shown to be akin to modern German übel (noun: Übel, although the noun evil is normally translated as "das Böse") with the basic idea of social or religious transgression.[citation needed]

Chinese moral philosophy

As with Buddhism, in Confucianism or Taoism there is no direct analogue to the way good and evil are opposed although reference to demonic influence is common in Chinese folk religion. Confucianism's primary concern is with correct social relationships and the behavior appropriate to the learned or superior man. Thus evil would correspond to wrong behavior. Still less does it map into Taoism, in spite of the centrality of dualism in that system[citation needed], but the opposite of the cardinal virtues of Taoism, compassion, moderation, and humility can be inferred to be the analogue of evil in it.[9][10]

European philosophy

In response to the practices of Nazi Germany, Hannah Arendt concluded that "the problem of evil would be the fundamental problem of postwar intellectual life in Europe", although such a focus did not come to fruition.[11]

Spinoza

Baruch Spinoza states

  1. By good, I understand that which we certainly know is useful to us.
  2. By evil, on the contrary, I understand that which we certainly know hinders us from possessing anything that is good.[12]

Spinoza assumes a quasi-mathematical style and states these further propositions which he purports to prove or demonstrate from the above definitions in part IV of his Ethics:[12]

  • Proposition 8 "Knowledge of good or evil is nothing but affect of joy or sorrow in so far as we are conscious of it."
  • Proposition 30 "Nothing can be evil through that which it possesses in common with our nature, but in so far as a thing is evil to us it is contrary to us."
  • Proposition 64 "The knowledge of evil is inadequate knowledge."
    • Corollary "Hence it follows that if the human mind had none but adequate ideas, it would form no notion of evil."
  • Proposition 65 "According to the guidance of reason, of two things which are good, we shall follow the greater good, and of two evils, follow the less."
  • Proposition 68 "If men were born free, they would form no conception of good and evil so long as they were free."

Psychology

Carl Jung

Carl Jung, in his book Answer to Job and elsewhere, depicted evil as the dark side of God.[13] People tend to believe evil is something external to them, because they project their shadow onto others. Jung interpreted the story of Jesus as an account of God facing his own shadow.[14]

Philip Zimbardo

In 2007, Philip Zimbardo suggested that people may act in evil ways as a result of a collective identity. This hypothesis, based on his previous experience from the Stanford prison experiment, was published in the book The Lucifer Effect: Understanding How Good People Turn Evil.[15]

Milgram experiment

In 1961, Stanley Milgram began an experiment to help explain how thousands of ordinary, non-deviant, people could have reconciled themselves to a role in the Holocaust. Participants were led to believe they were assisting in an unrelated experiment in which they had to inflict electric shocks on another person. The experiment unexpectedly found that most could be led to inflict the electric shocks,[16] including shocks that would have been fatal if they had been real.[17] The participants tended to be uncomfortable and reluctant in the role. Nearly all stopped at some point to question the experiment, but most continued after being reassured.[16]

A 2014 re-assessment of Milgram's work argued that the results should be interpreted with the "engaged followership" model: that people are not simply obeying the orders of a leader, but instead are willing to continue the experiment because of their desire to support the scientific goals of the leader and because of a lack of identification with the learner.[18][19] Thomas Blass argues that the experiment explains how people can be complicit in roles such as "the dispassionate bureaucrat who may have shipped Jews to Auschwitz with the same degree of routinization as potatoes to Bremerhaven". However, like James Waller, he argues that it cannot explain an event like the Holocaust. Unlike the perpetrators of the Holocaust, the participants in Milgram's experiment were reassured that their actions would cause little harm and had little time to contemplate their actions.[17][20]

Religions

Abrahamic

Baháʼí Faith

The Baháʼí Faith asserts that evil is non-existent and that it is a concept reflecting lack of good, just as cold is the state of no heat, darkness is the state of no light, forgetfulness the lacking of memory, ignorance the lacking of knowledge. All of these are states of lacking and have no real existence.[21]

Thus, evil does not exist and is relative to man. `Abdu'l-Bahá, son of the founder of the religion, in Some Answered Questions states:

"Nevertheless a doubt occurs to the mind—that is, scorpions and serpents are poisonous. Are they good or evil, for they are existing beings? Yes, a scorpion is evil in relation to man; a serpent is evil in relation to man; but in relation to themselves they are not evil, for their poison is their weapon, and by their sting they defend themselves."[21]

Thus, evil is more of an intellectual concept than a true reality. Since God is good, and upon creating creation he confirmed it by saying it is Good (Genesis 1:31) evil cannot have a true reality.[21]

Christianity

 
The devil, in opposition to the will of God, represents evil and tempts Christ, the personification of the character and will of God. Ary Scheffer, 1854.

Christian theology draws its concept of evil from the Old and New Testaments. The Christian Bible exercises "the dominant influence upon ideas about God and evil in the Western world."[1] In the Old Testament, evil is understood to be an opposition to God as well as something unsuitable or inferior such as the leader of the fallen angels Satan[22] In the New Testament the Greek word poneros is used to indicate unsuitability, while kakos is used to refer to opposition to God in the human realm.[23] Officially, the Catholic Church extracts its understanding of evil from its canonical antiquity and the Dominican theologian, Thomas Aquinas, who in Summa Theologica defines evil as the absence or privation of good.[24] French-American theologian Henri Blocher describes evil, when viewed as a theological concept, as an "unjustifiable reality. In common parlance, evil is 'something' that occurs in the experience that ought not to be."[25]

Islam

There is no concept of absolute evil in Islam, as a fundamental universal principle that is independent from and equal with good in a dualistic sense.[26] Although the Quran mentions the biblical forbidden tree, it never refers to it as the 'tree of knowledge of good and evil'.[26] Within Islam, it is considered essential to believe that all comes from God, whether it is perceived as good or bad by individuals; and things that are perceived as evil or bad are either natural events (natural disasters or illnesses) or caused by humanity's free will. Much more the behavior of beings with free will, then they disobey God's orders, harming others or putting themselves over God or others, is considered to be evil.[27] Evil does not necessarily refer to evil as an ontological or moral category, but often to harm or as the intention and consequence of an action, but also to unlawful actions.[26] Unproductive actions or those who do not produce benefits are also thought of as evil.[28]

A typical understanding of evil is reflected by Al-Ash`ari founder of Asharism. Accordingly, qualifying something as evil depends on the circumstances of the observer. An event or an action itself is neutral, but it receives its qualification by God. Since God is omnipotent and nothing can exist outside of God's power, God's will determine, whether or not something is evil.[29]

Rabbinic Judaism

In Judaism and Jewish theology, the existence of evil is presented as part of the idea of free will: if humans were created to be perfect, always and only doing good, being good would not mean much. For Jewish theology, it is important for humans to have the ability to choose the path of goodness, even in the face of temptation and yetzer hara (the inclination to do evil).[30][31]

Ancient Egyptian

Evil in the religion of ancient Egypt is known as Isfet, "disorder/violence". It is the opposite of Maat, "order", and embodied by the serpent god Apep, who routinely attempts to kill the sun god Ra and is stopped by nearly every other deity. Isfet is not a primordial force, but the consequence of free will and an individual's struggle against the non-existence embodied by Apep, as evidenced by the fact that it was born from Ra's umbilical cord instead of being recorded in the religion's creation myths.[32]

Indian

Buddhism

 
Extermination of Evil, The God of Heavenly Punishment, from the Chinese tradition of yin and yang. Late Heian period (12th-century Japan).

The primal duality in Buddhism is between suffering and enlightenment, so the good vs. evil splitting has no direct analogue in it. One may infer from the general teachings of the Buddha that the catalogued causes of suffering are what correspond in this belief system to 'evil'.[33][34]

Practically this can refer to 1) the three selfish emotions—desire, hate and delusion; and 2) to their expression in physical and verbal actions. Specifically, evil means whatever harms or obstructs the causes for happiness in this life, a better rebirth, liberation from samsara, and the true and complete enlightenment of a buddha (samyaksambodhi).

"What is evil? Killing is evil, lying is evil, slandering is evil, abuse is evil, gossip is evil: envy is evil, hatred is evil, to cling to false doctrine is evil; all these things are evil. And what is the root of evil? Desire is the root of evil, illusion is the root of evil." Gautama Siddhartha, the founder of Buddhism, 563–483 BC.

Hinduism

In Hinduism, the concept of Dharma or righteousness clearly divides the world into good and evil, and clearly explains that wars have to be waged sometimes to establish and protect Dharma, this war is called Dharmayuddha. This division of good and evil is of major importance in both the Hindu epics of Ramayana and Mahabharata. The main emphasis in Hinduism is on bad action, rather than bad people. The Hindu holy text, the Bhagavad Gita, speaks of the balance of good and evil. When this balance goes off, divine incarnations come to help to restore this balance.[35]

Sikhism

In adherence to the core principle of spiritual evolution, the Sikh idea of evil changes depending on one's position on the path to liberation. At the beginning stages of spiritual growth, good and evil may seem neatly separated. Once one's spirit evolves to the point where it sees most clearly, the idea of evil vanishes and the truth is revealed. In his writings Guru Arjan explains that, because God is the source of all things, what we believe to be evil must too come from God. And because God is ultimately a source of absolute good, nothing truly evil can originate from God.[36]

Sikhism, like many other religions, does incorporate a list of "vices" from which suffering, corruption, and abject negativity arise. These are known as the Five Thieves, called such due to their propensity to cloud the mind and lead one astray from the prosecution of righteous action.[37] These are:[38]

One who gives in to the temptations of the Five Thieves is known as "Manmukh", or someone who lives selfishly and without virtue. Inversely, the "Gurmukh, who thrive in their reverence toward divine knowledge, rise above vice via the practice of the high virtues of Sikhism. These are:[39]

  • Sewa, or selfless service to others.
  • Nam Simran, or meditation upon the divine name.

Question of a universal definition

A fundamental question is whether there is a universal, transcendent definition of evil, or whether one's definition of evil is determined by one's social or cultural background. C. S. Lewis, in The Abolition of Man, maintained that there are certain acts that are universally considered evil, such as rape and murder. However, the rape of women, by men, is found in every society, and there are more societies that see at least some versions of it, such as marital rape or punitive rape, as normative than there are societies that see all rape as non-normative (a crime).[40] In nearly all societies, killing except for defense or duty is seen as murder. Yet the definition of defense and duty varies from one society to another.[41] Social deviance is not uniformly defined across different cultures, and is not, in all circumstances, necessarily an aspect of evil.[42][43]

Defining evil is complicated by its multiple, often ambiguous, common usages: evil is used to describe the whole range of suffering, including that caused by nature, and it is also used to describe the full range of human immorality from the "evil of genocide to the evil of malicious gossip".[44]: 321  It is sometimes thought of as the generic opposite of good. Marcus Singer asserts that these common connotations must be set aside as overgeneralized ideas that do not sufficiently describe the nature of evil.[45]: 185, 186 

In contemporary philosophy, there are two basic concepts of evil: a broad concept and a narrow concept. A broad concept defines evil simply as any and all pain and suffering: "any bad state of affairs, wrongful action, or character flaw".[46] Yet, it is also asserted that evil cannot be correctly understood "(as some of the utilitarians once thought) [on] a simple hedonic scale on which pleasure appears as a plus, and pain as a minus".[47] This is because pain is necessary for survival.[48] Renowned orthopedist and missionary to lepers, Dr. Paul Brand explains that leprosy attacks the nerve cells that feel pain resulting in no more pain for the leper, which leads to ever increasing, often catastrophic, damage to the body of the leper.[49]: 9, 50–51  Congenital insensitivity to pain (CIP), also known as congenital analgesia, is a neurological disorder that prevents feeling pain. It "leads to ... bone fractures, multiple scars, osteomyelitis, joint deformities, and limb amputation ... Mental retardation is common. Death from hyperpyrexia occurs within the first 3 years of life in almost 20% of the patients."[50] Few with the disorder are able to live into adulthood.[51] Evil cannot be simply defined as all pain and its connected suffering because, as Marcus Singer says: "If something is really evil, it can't be necessary, and if it is really necessary, it can't be evil".[45]: 186 

The narrow concept of evil involves moral condemnation, therefore it is ascribed only to moral agents and their actions.[44]: 322  This eliminates natural disasters and animal suffering from consideration as evil: according to Claudia Card, "When not guided by moral agents, forces of nature are neither "goods" nor "evils". They just are. Their "agency" routinely produces consequences vital to some forms of life and lethal to others".[52] The narrow definition of evil "picks out only the most morally despicable sorts of actions, characters, events, etc. Evil [in this sense] ... is the worst possible term of opprobrium imaginable”.[45] Eve Garrard suggests that evil describes "particularly horrifying kinds of action which we feel are to be contrasted with more ordinary kinds of wrongdoing, as when for example we might say 'that action wasn't just wrong, it was positively evil'. The implication is that there is a qualitative, and not merely quantitative, difference between evil acts and other wrongful ones; evil acts are not just very bad or wrongful acts, but rather ones possessing some specially horrific quality".[44]: 321  In this context, the concept of evil is one element in a full nexus of moral concepts.[44]: 324 

Philosophical questions

Approaches

Views on the nature of evil belong to the branch of philosophy known as ethics—which in modern philosophy is subsumed into three major areas of study:[7]

  1. Meta-ethics, that seeks to understand the nature of ethical properties, statements, attitudes, and judgments.
  2. Normative ethics, investigates the set of questions that arise when considering how one ought to act, morally speaking.
  3. Applied ethics, concerned with the analysis of particular moral issues in private and public life.[7]

Usefulness as a term

There is debate on how useful the term "evil" is, since it is often associated with spirits and the devil. Some see the term as useless because they say it lacks any real ability to explain what it names. There is also real danger of the harm that being labeled "evil" can do when used in moral, political, and legal contexts.[46]: 1–2  Those who support the usefulness of the term say there is a secular view of evil that offers plausible analyses without reference to the supernatural.[44]: 325  Garrard and Russell argue that evil is as useful an explanation as any moral concept.[44]: 322–326 [53] Garrard adds that evil actions result from a particular kind of motivation, such as taking pleasure in the suffering of others, and this distinctive motivation provides a partial explanation even if it does not provide a complete explanation.[44]: 323–325 [53]: 268–269  Most theorists agree use of the term evil can be harmful but disagree over what response that requires. Some argue it is "more dangerous to ignore evil than to try to understand it".[46]

Those who support the usefulness of the term, such as Eve Garrard and David McNaughton, argue that the term evil "captures a distinct part of our moral phenomenology, specifically, 'collect[ing] together those wrongful actions to which we have ... a response of moral horror'."[54] Claudia Card asserts it is only by understanding the nature of evil that we can preserve humanitarian values and prevent evil in the future.[55] If evils are the worst sorts of moral wrongs, social policy should focus limited energy and resources on reducing evil over other wrongs.[56] Card asserts that by categorizing certain actions and practices as evil, we are better able to recognize and guard against responding to evil with more evil which will "interrupt cycles of hostility generated by past evils".[56]: 166 

One school of thought holds that no person is evil and that only acts may be properly considered evil. Some theorists define an evil action simply as a kind of action an evil person performs.[57]: 280  But just as many theorists believe that an evil character is one who is inclined toward evil acts.[58]: 2  Luke Russell argues that both evil actions and evil feelings are necessary to identify a person as evil, while Daniel Haybron argues that evil feelings and evil motivations are necessary.[46]: 4–4.1 

American psychiatrist M. Scott Peck describes evil as a kind of personal "militant ignorance".[59] According to Peck, an evil person is consistently self-deceiving, deceives others, psychologically projects his or her evil onto very specific targets,[60] hates, abuses power, and lies incessantly.[59][61] Evil people are unable to think from the viewpoint of their victim. Peck considers those he calls evil to be attempting to escape and hide from their own conscience (through self-deception) and views this as being quite distinct from the apparent absence of conscience evident in sociopaths. He also considers that certain institutions may be evil, using the My Lai Massacre to illustrate. By this definition, acts of criminal and state terrorism would also be considered evil.

Necessity

 
Martin Luther believed that occasional minor evil could have a positive effect.

Martin Luther argued that there are cases where a little evil is a positive good. He wrote, "Seek out the society of your boon companions, drink, play, talk bawdy, and amuse yourself. One must sometimes commit a sin out of hate and contempt for the Devil, so as not to give him the chance to make one scrupulous over mere nothings ... "[62]

The international relations theories of realism and neorealism, sometimes called realpolitik advise politicians to explicitly ban absolute moral and ethical considerations from international politics, and to focus on self-interest, political survival, and power politics, which they hold to be more accurate in explaining a world they view as explicitly amoral and dangerous. Political realists usually justify their perspectives by stating that morals and politics should be separated as two unrelated things, as exerting authority often involves doing something not moral. Machiavelli wrote: "there will be traits considered good that, if followed, will lead to ruin, while other traits, considered vices which if practiced achieve security and well being for the prince."[63]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b Griffin, David Ray (2004) [1976]. God, Power, and Evil: a Process Theodicy. Westminster. p. 31. ISBN 978-0-664-22906-1.
  2. ^ a b . Oxford University Press. 2012. Archived from the original on July 12, 2012.
  3. ^ Ervin Staub. Overcoming evil: genocide, violent conflict, and terrorism. New York: Oxford University Press, p. 32.
  4. ^ Matthews, Caitlin; Matthews, John (2004). Walkers Between the Worlds: The Western Mysteries from Shaman to Magus. New York City: Simon & Schuster. p. 173. ASIN B00770DJ3G. Archived from the original on 2021-09-17. Retrieved 2021-09-17.
  5. ^ de Hulster, Izaak J. (2009). Iconographic Exegesis and Third Isaiah. Heidelberg, Germany: Mohr Siebeck Verlag. pp. 136–37. ISBN 978-3-16-150029-9.
  6. ^ a b Ingram, Paul O.; Streng, Frederick John (1986). Buddhist-Christian Dialogue: Mutual Renewal and Transformation. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. pp. 148–49. ISBN 978-1-55635-381-9.
  7. ^ a b c Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy ""Ethics"".
  8. ^ Harper, Douglas (2001). "Etymology for evil".
  9. ^ C.W. Chan (1996). . The Philosopher. LXXXIV. Archived from the original on 2006-05-29.
  10. ^ Feng, Yu-lan (1983). "Origin of Evil". History of Chinese Philosophy, Volume II: The Period of Classical Learning (from the Second Century B.C. to the Twentieth Century A.D. Translated by Bodde, Derk. New Haven, CN: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-02022-8.
  11. ^ Neiman, Susan (2015). Evil in Modern Thought: An Alternative History of Philosophy. Princeton University Press. p. 2. ISBN 978-0-691-16850-0. OCLC 1294864456.
  12. ^ a b de Spinoza, Benedict (2017) [1677]. "Of Human Bondage or of the Strength of the Affects". Ethics. Translated by White, W.H. New York: Penguin Classics. p. 424. ASIN B00DO8NRDC.
  13. ^ "Answer to Job Revisited : Jung on the Problem of Evil".
  14. ^ Stephen Palmquist, Dreams of Wholeness: A course of introductory lectures on religion, psychology and personal growth (Hong Kong: Philopsychy Press, 1997/2008), see especially Chapter XI.
  15. ^ "Book website".
  16. ^ a b Milgram, Stanley (1963). "Behavioral Study of Obedience". Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology. 67 (4): 371–8. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.599.92. doi:10.1037/h0040525. PMID 14049516. S2CID 18309531. as PDF. April 4, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
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  21. ^ a b c Coll, 'Abdu'l-Bahá (1982). Some answered questions. Translated by Barney, Laura Clifford (Repr. ed.). Wilmette, IL: Baháʼí Publ. Trust. ISBN 978-0-87743-162-6.
  22. ^ Hans Schwarz, Evil: A Historical and Theological Perspective (Lima, Ohio: Academic Renewal Press, 2001): 42–43.
  23. ^ Schwarz, Evil, 75.
  24. ^ Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologica, translated by the Fathers of the English Dominican Province (New York: Benziger Brothers, 1947) Volume 3, q. 72, a. 1, p. 902.
  25. ^ Henri Blocher, Evil and the Cross (Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press, 1994): 10.
  26. ^ a b c Jane Dammen McAuliffe Encyclopaedia of the Qurʼān Brill 2001 ISBN 978-90-04-14764-5 p. 335
  27. ^ B. Silverstein Islam and Modernity in Turkey Springer 2011 ISBN 978-0-230-11703-7 p. 124
  28. ^ Jane Dammen McAuliffe Encyclopaedia of the Qurʼān Brill 2001 ISBN 978-90-04-14764-5 p. 338
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  55. ^ Card, Claudia (2010). Confronting Evils: Terrorism, Torture, Genocide. Cambridge University Press. p. i. ISBN 9781139491709.
  56. ^ a b Card, Claudia (2005). The Atrocity Paradigm A Theory of Evil. Oxford University Press. p. 109. ISBN 9780195181265.
  57. ^ Haybron, Daniel M. (2002). "Moral Monsters and Saints". The Monist. Oxford University Press. 85 (2): 260–284. doi:10.5840/monist20028529. JSTOR 27903772.
  58. ^ Kekes, John (2005). The Roots of Evil. Cornell University Press. ISBN 9780801443688.
  59. ^ a b Peck, M. Scott. (1983, 1988). People of the Lie: The hope for healing human evil. Century Hutchinson.
  60. ^ Peck, 1983/1988, p. 105
  61. ^ Peck, M. Scott. (1978, 1992), The Road Less Travelled. Arrow.
  62. ^ Martin Luther, Werke, XX, p. 58
  63. ^ Niccolo Machiavelli, The Prince, Dante University of America Press, 2003, ISBN 978-0-937832-38-7

Further reading

  • Baumeister, Roy F. (1999). Evil: Inside Human Violence and Cruelty. New York: W.H. Freeman / Owl Book[ISBN missing]
  • Bennett, Gaymon, Hewlett, Martinez J, Peters, Ted, Russell, Robert John (2008). The Evolution of Evil. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. ISBN 978-3-525-56979-5
  • Katz, Fred Emil (1993). Ordinary People and Extraordinary Evil, SUNY Press, ISBN 0-7914-1442-6;
  • Katz, Fred Emil (2004). Confronting Evil, SUNY Press, ISBN 0-7914-6030-4.
  • Neiman, Susan (2002). Evil in Modern Thought – An Alternative History of Philosophy. Princeton: Princeton University Press.[ISBN missing]
  • Oppenheimer, Paul (1996). Evil and the Demonic: A New Theory of Monstrous Behavior. New York: New York University Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-6193-9.
  • Shermer, M. (2004). The Science of Good & Evil. New York: Time Books. ISBN 0-8050-7520-8
  • Steven Mintz; John Stauffer, eds. (2007). The Problem of Evil: Slavery, Freedom, and the Ambiguities of American Reform. University of Massachusetts Press. ISBN 978-1-55849-570-8.
  • Stapley, A.B. & Elder Delbert L. (1975). Using Our Free Agency. Ensign May: 21[ISBN missing]
  • Stark, Ryan (2009). Rhetoric, Science, and Magic in Seventeenth-Century England. Washington, DC: The Catholic University of America Press. 115–45.
  • Vetlesen, Arne Johan (2005). Evil and Human Agency – Understanding Collective Evildoing New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-85694-2
  • Wilson, William McF., Julian N. Hartt (2004). Farrer's Theodicy. In David Hein and Edward Hugh Henderson (eds), Captured by the Crucified: The Practical Theology of Austin Farrer. New York and London: T & T Clark / Continuum. ISBN 0-567-02510-1

External links

  • Evil on In Our Time at the BBC
  • "Concept of Evl" entry by Todd Calder in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
  • Good and Evil in (Ultra Orthodox) Judaism
  • ABC News: Looking for Evil in Everyday Life
  • Booknotes interview with Lance Morrow on Evil: An Investigation, October 19, 2003.
  • "Good and Evil", BBC Radio 4 discussion with Leszek Kolakowski and Galen Strawson (In Our Time, Apr. 1, 1999).
  • "Evil", BBC Radio 4 discussion with Jones Erwin, Stefan Mullhall and Margaret Atkins (In Our Time, May 3, 2001)

evil, other, uses, disambiguation, badness, general, sense, defined, opposite, absence, good, extremely, broad, concept, although, everyday, usage, often, more, narrowly, used, talk, about, profound, wickedness, against, common, good, generally, seen, taking, . For other uses see Evil disambiguation Evil or badness in a general sense is defined as the opposite or absence of good It can be an extremely broad concept although in everyday usage it is often more narrowly used to talk about profound wickedness and against common good It is generally seen as taking multiple possible forms such as the form of personal moral evil commonly associated with the word or impersonal natural evil as in the case of natural disasters or illnesses and in religious thought the form of the demonic or supernatural eternal 1 While some religions world views and philosophies focus on good versus evil others deny evil s existence and usefulness in describing people Sendan Kendatsuba one of the eight guardians of Buddhist law banishing evil in one of the five paintings of Extermination of Evil Evil can denote profound immorality 2 but typically not without some basis in the understanding of the human condition where strife and suffering cf Hinduism are the true roots of evil In certain religious contexts evil has been described as a supernatural force 2 Definitions of evil vary as does the analysis of its motives 3 Elements that are commonly associated with personal forms of evil involve unbalanced behavior including anger revenge hatred psychological trauma expediency selfishness ignorance destruction and neglect 4 In some forms of thought evil is also sometimes perceived as the dualistic antagonistic binary opposite to good 5 in which good should prevail and evil should be defeated 6 In cultures with Buddhist spiritual influence both good and evil are perceived as part of an antagonistic duality that itself must be overcome through achieving Nirvana 6 The ethical questions regarding good and evil are subsumed into three major areas of study 7 meta ethics concerning the nature of good and evil normative ethics concerning how we ought to behave and applied ethics concerning particular moral issues While the term is applied to events and conditions without agency the forms of evil addressed in this article presume one or more evildoers Contents 1 Etymology 2 Chinese moral philosophy 3 European philosophy 3 1 Spinoza 4 Psychology 4 1 Carl Jung 4 2 Philip Zimbardo 4 3 Milgram experiment 5 Religions 5 1 Abrahamic 5 1 1 Bahaʼi Faith 5 1 2 Christianity 5 1 3 Islam 5 1 4 Rabbinic Judaism 5 2 Ancient Egyptian 5 3 Indian 5 3 1 Buddhism 5 3 2 Hinduism 5 3 3 Sikhism 6 Question of a universal definition 7 Philosophical questions 7 1 Approaches 7 2 Usefulness as a term 7 3 Necessity 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksEtymologyThe modern English word evil Old English yfel and its cognates such as the German Ubel and Dutch euvel are widely considered to come from a Proto Germanic reconstructed form of ubilaz comparable to the Hittite huwapp ultimately from the Proto Indo European form wap and suffixed zero grade form up elo Other later Germanic forms include Middle English evel ifel ufel Old Frisian evel adjective and noun Old Saxon ubil Old High German ubil and Gothic ubils 8 The root meaning of the word is of obscure origin though shown to be akin to modern German ubel noun Ubel although the noun evil is normally translated as das Bose with the basic idea of social or religious transgression citation needed Chinese moral philosophyMain articles Confucius Ethics Confucianism and Taoism Ethics As with Buddhism in Confucianism or Taoism there is no direct analogue to the way good and evil are opposed although reference to demonic influence is common in Chinese folk religion Confucianism s primary concern is with correct social relationships and the behavior appropriate to the learned or superior man Thus evil would correspond to wrong behavior Still less does it map into Taoism in spite of the centrality of dualism in that system citation needed but the opposite of the cardinal virtues of Taoism compassion moderation and humility can be inferred to be the analogue of evil in it 9 10 European philosophyIn response to the practices of Nazi Germany Hannah Arendt concluded that the problem of evil would be the fundamental problem of postwar intellectual life in Europe although such a focus did not come to fruition 11 Spinoza Baruch Spinoza states By good I understand that which we certainly know is useful to us By evil on the contrary I understand that which we certainly know hinders us from possessing anything that is good 12 Spinoza assumes a quasi mathematical style and states these further propositions which he purports to prove or demonstrate from the above definitions in part IV of his Ethics 12 Proposition 8 Knowledge of good or evil is nothing but affect of joy or sorrow in so far as we are conscious of it Proposition 30 Nothing can be evil through that which it possesses in common with our nature but in so far as a thing is evil to us it is contrary to us Proposition 64 The knowledge of evil is inadequate knowledge Corollary Hence it follows that if the human mind had none but adequate ideas it would form no notion of evil Proposition 65 According to the guidance of reason of two things which are good we shall follow the greater good and of two evils follow the less Proposition 68 If men were born free they would form no conception of good and evil so long as they were free PsychologyCarl Jung Carl Jung in his book Answer to Job and elsewhere depicted evil as the dark side of God 13 People tend to believe evil is something external to them because they project their shadow onto others Jung interpreted the story of Jesus as an account of God facing his own shadow 14 Philip Zimbardo In 2007 Philip Zimbardo suggested that people may act in evil ways as a result of a collective identity This hypothesis based on his previous experience from the Stanford prison experiment was published in the book The Lucifer Effect Understanding How Good People Turn Evil 15 Milgram experiment Main article Milgram experiment In 1961 Stanley Milgram began an experiment to help explain how thousands of ordinary non deviant people could have reconciled themselves to a role in the Holocaust Participants were led to believe they were assisting in an unrelated experiment in which they had to inflict electric shocks on another person The experiment unexpectedly found that most could be led to inflict the electric shocks 16 including shocks that would have been fatal if they had been real 17 The participants tended to be uncomfortable and reluctant in the role Nearly all stopped at some point to question the experiment but most continued after being reassured 16 A 2014 re assessment of Milgram s work argued that the results should be interpreted with the engaged followership model that people are not simply obeying the orders of a leader but instead are willing to continue the experiment because of their desire to support the scientific goals of the leader and because of a lack of identification with the learner 18 19 Thomas Blass argues that the experiment explains how people can be complicit in roles such as the dispassionate bureaucrat who may have shipped Jews to Auschwitz with the same degree of routinization as potatoes to Bremerhaven However like James Waller he argues that it cannot explain an event like the Holocaust Unlike the perpetrators of the Holocaust the participants in Milgram s experiment were reassured that their actions would cause little harm and had little time to contemplate their actions 17 20 ReligionsAbrahamic Bahaʼi Faith The Bahaʼi Faith asserts that evil is non existent and that it is a concept reflecting lack of good just as cold is the state of no heat darkness is the state of no light forgetfulness the lacking of memory ignorance the lacking of knowledge All of these are states of lacking and have no real existence 21 Thus evil does not exist and is relative to man Abdu l Baha son of the founder of the religion in Some Answered Questions states Nevertheless a doubt occurs to the mind that is scorpions and serpents are poisonous Are they good or evil for they are existing beings Yes a scorpion is evil in relation to man a serpent is evil in relation to man but in relation to themselves they are not evil for their poison is their weapon and by their sting they defend themselves 21 Thus evil is more of an intellectual concept than a true reality Since God is good and upon creating creation he confirmed it by saying it is Good Genesis 1 31 evil cannot have a true reality 21 Christianity See also Devil in Christianity nbsp The devil in opposition to the will of God represents evil and tempts Christ the personification of the character and will of God Ary Scheffer 1854 Christian theology draws its concept of evil from the Old and New Testaments The Christian Bible exercises the dominant influence upon ideas about God and evil in the Western world 1 In the Old Testament evil is understood to be an opposition to God as well as something unsuitable or inferior such as the leader of the fallen angels Satan 22 In the New Testament the Greek word poneros is used to indicate unsuitability while kakos is used to refer to opposition to God in the human realm 23 Officially the Catholic Church extracts its understanding of evil from its canonical antiquity and the Dominican theologian Thomas Aquinas who in Summa Theologica defines evil as the absence or privation of good 24 French American theologian Henri Blocher describes evil when viewed as a theological concept as an unjustifiable reality In common parlance evil is something that occurs in the experience that ought not to be 25 Islam See also Islamic views on sin There is no concept of absolute evil in Islam as a fundamental universal principle that is independent from and equal with good in a dualistic sense 26 Although the Quran mentions the biblical forbidden tree it never refers to it as the tree of knowledge of good and evil 26 Within Islam it is considered essential to believe that all comes from God whether it is perceived as good or bad by individuals and things that are perceived as evil or bad are either natural events natural disasters or illnesses or caused by humanity s free will Much more the behavior of beings with free will then they disobey God s orders harming others or putting themselves over God or others is considered to be evil 27 Evil does not necessarily refer to evil as an ontological or moral category but often to harm or as the intention and consequence of an action but also to unlawful actions 26 Unproductive actions or those who do not produce benefits are also thought of as evil 28 A typical understanding of evil is reflected by Al Ash ari founder of Asharism Accordingly qualifying something as evil depends on the circumstances of the observer An event or an action itself is neutral but it receives its qualification by God Since God is omnipotent and nothing can exist outside of God s power God s will determine whether or not something is evil 29 Rabbinic Judaism See also Satan in Judaism In Judaism and Jewish theology the existence of evil is presented as part of the idea of free will if humans were created to be perfect always and only doing good being good would not mean much For Jewish theology it is important for humans to have the ability to choose the path of goodness even in the face of temptation and yetzer hara the inclination to do evil 30 31 Ancient Egyptian Further information Ancient Egyptian religion Evil in the religion of ancient Egypt is known as Isfet disorder violence It is the opposite of Maat order and embodied by the serpent god Apep who routinely attempts to kill the sun god Ra and is stopped by nearly every other deity Isfet is not a primordial force but the consequence of free will and an individual s struggle against the non existence embodied by Apep as evidenced by the fact that it was born from Ra s umbilical cord instead of being recorded in the religion s creation myths 32 Indian Buddhism Main article Buddhist ethics nbsp Extermination of Evil The God of Heavenly Punishment from the Chinese tradition of yin and yang Late Heian period 12th century Japan The primal duality in Buddhism is between suffering and enlightenment so the good vs evil splitting has no direct analogue in it One may infer from the general teachings of the Buddha that the catalogued causes of suffering are what correspond in this belief system to evil 33 34 Practically this can refer to 1 the three selfish emotions desire hate and delusion and 2 to their expression in physical and verbal actions Specifically evil means whatever harms or obstructs the causes for happiness in this life a better rebirth liberation from samsara and the true and complete enlightenment of a buddha samyaksambodhi What is evil Killing is evil lying is evil slandering is evil abuse is evil gossip is evil envy is evil hatred is evil to cling to false doctrine is evil all these things are evil And what is the root of evil Desire is the root of evil illusion is the root of evil Gautama Siddhartha the founder of Buddhism 563 483 BC Hinduism In Hinduism the concept of Dharma or righteousness clearly divides the world into good and evil and clearly explains that wars have to be waged sometimes to establish and protect Dharma this war is called Dharmayuddha This division of good and evil is of major importance in both the Hindu epics of Ramayana and Mahabharata The main emphasis in Hinduism is on bad action rather than bad people The Hindu holy text the Bhagavad Gita speaks of the balance of good and evil When this balance goes off divine incarnations come to help to restore this balance 35 Sikhism In adherence to the core principle of spiritual evolution the Sikh idea of evil changes depending on one s position on the path to liberation At the beginning stages of spiritual growth good and evil may seem neatly separated Once one s spirit evolves to the point where it sees most clearly the idea of evil vanishes and the truth is revealed In his writings Guru Arjan explains that because God is the source of all things what we believe to be evil must too come from God And because God is ultimately a source of absolute good nothing truly evil can originate from God 36 Sikhism like many other religions does incorporate a list of vices from which suffering corruption and abject negativity arise These are known as the Five Thieves called such due to their propensity to cloud the mind and lead one astray from the prosecution of righteous action 37 These are 38 Moh or Attachment Lobh or Greed Karodh or Wrath Kaam or Lust Ahankar or EgotismOne who gives in to the temptations of the Five Thieves is known as Manmukh or someone who lives selfishly and without virtue Inversely the Gurmukh who thrive in their reverence toward divine knowledge rise above vice via the practice of the high virtues of Sikhism These are 39 Sewa or selfless service to others Nam Simran or meditation upon the divine name Question of a universal definitionA fundamental question is whether there is a universal transcendent definition of evil or whether one s definition of evil is determined by one s social or cultural background C S Lewis in The Abolition of Man maintained that there are certain acts that are universally considered evil such as rape and murder However the rape of women by men is found in every society and there are more societies that see at least some versions of it such as marital rape or punitive rape as normative than there are societies that see all rape as non normative a crime 40 In nearly all societies killing except for defense or duty is seen as murder Yet the definition of defense and duty varies from one society to another 41 Social deviance is not uniformly defined across different cultures and is not in all circumstances necessarily an aspect of evil 42 43 Defining evil is complicated by its multiple often ambiguous common usages evil is used to describe the whole range of suffering including that caused by nature and it is also used to describe the full range of human immorality from the evil of genocide to the evil of malicious gossip 44 321 It is sometimes thought of as the generic opposite of good Marcus Singer asserts that these common connotations must be set aside as overgeneralized ideas that do not sufficiently describe the nature of evil 45 185 186 In contemporary philosophy there are two basic concepts of evil a broad concept and a narrow concept A broad concept defines evil simply as any and all pain and suffering any bad state of affairs wrongful action or character flaw 46 Yet it is also asserted that evil cannot be correctly understood as some of the utilitarians once thought on a simple hedonic scale on which pleasure appears as a plus and pain as a minus 47 This is because pain is necessary for survival 48 Renowned orthopedist and missionary to lepers Dr Paul Brand explains that leprosy attacks the nerve cells that feel pain resulting in no more pain for the leper which leads to ever increasing often catastrophic damage to the body of the leper 49 9 50 51 Congenital insensitivity to pain CIP also known as congenital analgesia is a neurological disorder that prevents feeling pain It leads to bone fractures multiple scars osteomyelitis joint deformities and limb amputation Mental retardation is common Death from hyperpyrexia occurs within the first 3 years of life in almost 20 of the patients 50 Few with the disorder are able to live into adulthood 51 Evil cannot be simply defined as all pain and its connected suffering because as Marcus Singer says If something is really evil it can t be necessary and if it is really necessary it can t be evil 45 186 The narrow concept of evil involves moral condemnation therefore it is ascribed only to moral agents and their actions 44 322 This eliminates natural disasters and animal suffering from consideration as evil according to Claudia Card When not guided by moral agents forces of nature are neither goods nor evils They just are Their agency routinely produces consequences vital to some forms of life and lethal to others 52 The narrow definition of evil picks out only the most morally despicable sorts of actions characters events etc Evil in this sense is the worst possible term of opprobrium imaginable 45 Eve Garrard suggests that evil describes particularly horrifying kinds of action which we feel are to be contrasted with more ordinary kinds of wrongdoing as when for example we might say that action wasn t just wrong it was positively evil The implication is that there is a qualitative and not merely quantitative difference between evil acts and other wrongful ones evil acts are not just very bad or wrongful acts but rather ones possessing some specially horrific quality 44 321 In this context the concept of evil is one element in a full nexus of moral concepts 44 324 Philosophical questionsApproaches Main article Ethics Views on the nature of evil belong to the branch of philosophy known as ethics which in modern philosophy is subsumed into three major areas of study 7 Meta ethics that seeks to understand the nature of ethical properties statements attitudes and judgments Normative ethics investigates the set of questions that arise when considering how one ought to act morally speaking Applied ethics concerned with the analysis of particular moral issues in private and public life 7 Usefulness as a term There is debate on how useful the term evil is since it is often associated with spirits and the devil Some see the term as useless because they say it lacks any real ability to explain what it names There is also real danger of the harm that being labeled evil can do when used in moral political and legal contexts 46 1 2 Those who support the usefulness of the term say there is a secular view of evil that offers plausible analyses without reference to the supernatural 44 325 Garrard and Russell argue that evil is as useful an explanation as any moral concept 44 322 326 53 Garrard adds that evil actions result from a particular kind of motivation such as taking pleasure in the suffering of others and this distinctive motivation provides a partial explanation even if it does not provide a complete explanation 44 323 325 53 268 269 Most theorists agree use of the term evil can be harmful but disagree over what response that requires Some argue it is more dangerous to ignore evil than to try to understand it 46 Those who support the usefulness of the term such as Eve Garrard and David McNaughton argue that the term evil captures a distinct part of our moral phenomenology specifically collect ing together those wrongful actions to which we have a response of moral horror 54 Claudia Card asserts it is only by understanding the nature of evil that we can preserve humanitarian values and prevent evil in the future 55 If evils are the worst sorts of moral wrongs social policy should focus limited energy and resources on reducing evil over other wrongs 56 Card asserts that by categorizing certain actions and practices as evil we are better able to recognize and guard against responding to evil with more evil which will interrupt cycles of hostility generated by past evils 56 166 One school of thought holds that no person is evil and that only acts may be properly considered evil Some theorists define an evil action simply as a kind of action an evil person performs 57 280 But just as many theorists believe that an evil character is one who is inclined toward evil acts 58 2 Luke Russell argues that both evil actions and evil feelings are necessary to identify a person as evil while Daniel Haybron argues that evil feelings and evil motivations are necessary 46 4 4 1 American psychiatrist M Scott Peck describes evil as a kind of personal militant ignorance 59 According to Peck an evil person is consistently self deceiving deceives others psychologically projects his or her evil onto very specific targets 60 hates abuses power and lies incessantly 59 61 Evil people are unable to think from the viewpoint of their victim Peck considers those he calls evil to be attempting to escape and hide from their own conscience through self deception and views this as being quite distinct from the apparent absence of conscience evident in sociopaths He also considers that certain institutions may be evil using the My Lai Massacre to illustrate By this definition acts of criminal and state terrorism would also be considered evil Necessity Main article Necessary evil nbsp Martin Luther believed that occasional minor evil could have a positive effect Martin Luther argued that there are cases where a little evil is a positive good He wrote Seek out the society of your boon companions drink play talk bawdy and amuse yourself One must sometimes commit a sin out of hate and contempt for the Devil so as not to give him the chance to make one scrupulous over mere nothings 62 The international relations theories of realism and neorealism sometimes called realpolitik advise politicians to explicitly ban absolute moral and ethical considerations from international politics and to focus on self interest political survival and power politics which they hold to be more accurate in explaining a world they view as explicitly amoral and dangerous Political realists usually justify their perspectives by stating that morals and politics should be separated as two unrelated things as exerting authority often involves doing something not moral Machiavelli wrote there will be traits considered good that if followed will lead to ruin while other traits considered vices which if practiced achieve security and well being for the prince 63 See also nbsp Philosophy portalAkrasia Antagonist Archenemy Dystopia Banality of evil Evil Emperor disambiguation Evil empire disambiguation Graded absolutism Moral evil Natural evil Ponerology Problem of evil Sin Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde Theodicy Theodicy and the Bible Value theory Villain WickednessReferencesNotes a b Griffin David Ray 2004 1976 God Power and Evil a Process Theodicy Westminster p 31 ISBN 978 0 664 22906 1 a b Evil Oxford University Press 2012 Archived from the original on July 12 2012 Ervin Staub Overcoming evil genocide violent conflict and terrorism New York Oxford University Press p 32 Matthews Caitlin Matthews John 2004 Walkers Between the Worlds The Western Mysteries from Shaman to Magus New York City Simon amp Schuster p 173 ASIN B00770DJ3G Archived from the original on 2021 09 17 Retrieved 2021 09 17 de Hulster Izaak J 2009 Iconographic Exegesis and Third Isaiah Heidelberg Germany Mohr Siebeck Verlag pp 136 37 ISBN 978 3 16 150029 9 a b Ingram Paul O Streng Frederick John 1986 Buddhist Christian Dialogue Mutual Renewal and Transformation Honolulu University of Hawaii Press pp 148 49 ISBN 978 1 55635 381 9 a b c Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Ethics Harper Douglas 2001 Etymology for evil C W Chan 1996 Good and Evil in Chinese Philosophy The Philosopher LXXXIV Archived from the original on 2006 05 29 Feng Yu lan 1983 Origin of Evil History of Chinese Philosophy Volume II The Period of Classical Learning from the Second Century B C to the Twentieth Century A D Translated by Bodde Derk New Haven CN Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 02022 8 Neiman Susan 2015 Evil in Modern Thought An Alternative History of Philosophy Princeton University Press p 2 ISBN 978 0 691 16850 0 OCLC 1294864456 a b de Spinoza Benedict 2017 1677 Of Human Bondage or of the Strength of the Affects Ethics Translated by White W H New York Penguin Classics p 424 ASIN B00DO8NRDC Answer to Job Revisited Jung on the Problem of Evil Stephen Palmquist Dreams of Wholeness A course of introductory lectures on religion psychology and personal growth Hong Kong Philopsychy Press 1997 2008 see especially Chapter XI Book website a b Milgram Stanley 1963 Behavioral Study of Obedience Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology 67 4 371 8 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 599 92 doi 10 1037 h0040525 PMID 14049516 S2CID 18309531 as PDF Archived April 4 2015 at the Wayback Machine a b Blass Thomas 1991 Understanding behavior in the Milgram obedience experiment The role of personality situations and their interactions PDF Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 60 3 398 413 doi 10 1037 0022 3514 60 3 398 Archived from the original PDF on March 7 2016 Haslam S Alexander Reicher Stephen D Birney Megan E September 1 2014 Nothing by Mere Authority Evidence that in an Experimental Analogue of the Milgram Paradigm Participants are Motivated not by Orders but by Appeals to Science Journal of Social Issues 70 3 473 488 doi 10 1111 josi 12072 hdl 10034 604991 ISSN 1540 4560 Haslam S Alexander Reicher Stephen D 13 October 2017 50 Years of Obedience to Authority From Blind Conformity to Engaged Followership Annual Review of Law and Social Science 13 1 59 78 doi 10 1146 annurev lawsocsci 110316 113710 James Waller February 22 2007 What Can the Milgram Studies Teach Us Google Books Oxford University Press pp 111 113 ISBN 978 0199774852 Retrieved June 9 2013 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help a b c Coll Abdu l Baha 1982 Some answered questions Translated by Barney Laura Clifford Repr ed Wilmette IL Bahaʼi Publ Trust ISBN 978 0 87743 162 6 Hans Schwarz Evil A Historical and Theological Perspective Lima Ohio Academic Renewal Press 2001 42 43 Schwarz Evil 75 Thomas Aquinas Summa Theologica translated by the Fathers of the English Dominican Province New York Benziger Brothers 1947 Volume 3 q 72 a 1 p 902 Henri Blocher Evil and the Cross Downers Grove InterVarsity Press 1994 10 a b c Jane Dammen McAuliffe Encyclopaedia of the Qurʼan Brill 2001 ISBN 978 90 04 14764 5 p 335 B Silverstein Islam and Modernity in Turkey Springer 2011 ISBN 978 0 230 11703 7 p 124 Jane Dammen McAuliffe Encyclopaedia of the Qurʼan Brill 2001 ISBN 978 90 04 14764 5 p 338 P Koslowski 2013 The Origin and the Overcoming of Evil and Suffering in the World Religions Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 978 94 015 9789 0 p 37 Gurkow Lazer Why Did G d Create Evil Chabad Retrieved October 17 2023 rabbifisdel 2010 07 08 The Human Dichotomy Good and Evil Classical Kabbalist Retrieved 2023 10 18 Kemboly Mpay 2010 The Question of Evil in Ancient Egypt London Golden House Publications ISBN missing Philosophy of Religion Charles Taliaferro Paul J Griffiths eds Ch 35 Buddhism and Evil Martin Southwold p 424 Lay Outreach and the Meaning of Evil Person Taitetsu Unno Archived 2012 10 18 at the Wayback Machine Perumpallikunnel K 2013 Discernment The message of the bhagavad gita Acta Theologica 33 271 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 1032 370 Singh Gopal 1967 Sri guru granth sahib english version New York Taplinger Publishing Co Singh Charan 2013 12 11 Ethics and Business Evidence from Sikh Religion Social Science Research Network Indian Institute of Management Bangalore SSRN 2366249 Sandhu Jaswinder February 2004 The Sikh Model of the Person Suffering and Healing Implications for Counselors International Journal for the Advancement of Counselling 26 1 33 46 doi 10 1023 B ADCO 0000021548 68706 18 S2CID 145256429 Singh Arjan January 2000 The universal ideal of sikhism Global Dialogue 2 1 Brown Jennifer Horvath Miranda eds 2013 Rape Challenging Contemporary Thinking Taylor amp Francis p 62 ISBN 9781134026395 Humphrey J A Palmer S 2013 Deviant Behavior Patterns Sources and Control Springer US p 11 ISBN 9781489905833 McKeown Mick Stowell Smith Mark 2006 The Comforts of Evil Dangerous Personalities in High Security Hospitals and the Horror Film Forensic Psychiatry pp 109 134 doi 10 1007 978 1 59745 006 5 6 ISBN 9781597450065 Milgram Stanley 2017 Obedience to Authority Harper Perennial pp Foreword ISBN 9780062803405 a b c d e f g Garrard Eve April 2002 Evil as an Explanatory Concept Pdf The Monist Oxford University Press 85 2 320 336 doi 10 5840 monist200285219 JSTOR 27903775 a b c Marcus G Singer Marcus G Singer April 2004 The Concept of Evil Philosophy Cambridge University Press 79 308 185 214 doi 10 1017 S0031819104000233 JSTOR 3751971 S2CID 146121829 a b c d Calder Todd 26 November 2013 The Concept of Evil Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Stanford University Retrieved 17 January 2021 Kemp John 25 February 2009 Pain and Evil Philosophy 29 108 13 doi 10 1017 S0031819100022105 S2CID 144540963 Retrieved 8 January 2021 Reviews The Humane Review E Bell 2 5 8 374 1901 Yancey Philip Brand Paul 2010 Fearfully and Wonderfully Made Zondervan ISBN 9780310861997 Rosemberg Sergio Kliemann Suzana Nagahashi Suely K 1994 Congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy type IV Pediatric Neurology Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery 11 1 50 56 doi 10 1016 0887 8994 94 90091 4 PMID 7527213 Retrieved 8 January 2021 Cox David 27 April 2017 The curse of the people who never feel pain BBC Retrieved 8 January 2021 Card Claudia 2005 The Atrocity Paradigm A Theory of Evil Oxford University Press p 5 ISBN 9780195181265 a b Russell Luke July 2009 He Did It Because He Was Evil American Philosophical Quarterly University of Illinois Press 46 3 268 269 JSTOR 40606922 Garrard Eve McNaughton David 2 September 2012 Speak No Evil Midwest Studies in Philosophy 36 1 13 17 doi 10 1111 j 1475 4975 2012 00230 x Card Claudia 2010 Confronting Evils Terrorism Torture Genocide Cambridge University Press p i ISBN 9781139491709 a b Card Claudia 2005 The Atrocity Paradigm A Theory of Evil Oxford University Press p 109 ISBN 9780195181265 Haybron Daniel M 2002 Moral Monsters and Saints The Monist Oxford University Press 85 2 260 284 doi 10 5840 monist20028529 JSTOR 27903772 Kekes John 2005 The Roots of Evil Cornell University Press ISBN 9780801443688 a b Peck M Scott 1983 1988 People of the Lie The hope for healing human evil Century Hutchinson Peck 1983 1988 p 105 Peck M Scott 1978 1992 The Road Less Travelled Arrow Martin Luther Werke XX p 58 Niccolo Machiavelli The Prince Dante University of America Press 2003 ISBN 978 0 937832 38 7 Further reading Baumeister Roy F 1999 Evil Inside Human Violence and Cruelty New York W H Freeman Owl Book ISBN missing Bennett Gaymon Hewlett Martinez J Peters Ted Russell Robert John 2008 The Evolution of Evil Gottingen Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht ISBN 978 3 525 56979 5 Katz Fred Emil 1993 Ordinary People and Extraordinary Evil SUNY Press ISBN 0 7914 1442 6 Katz Fred Emil 2004 Confronting Evil SUNY Press ISBN 0 7914 6030 4 Neiman Susan 2002 Evil in Modern Thought An Alternative History of Philosophy Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN missing Oppenheimer Paul 1996 Evil and the Demonic A New Theory of Monstrous Behavior New York New York University Press ISBN 978 0 8147 6193 9 Shermer M 2004 The Science of Good amp Evil New York Time Books ISBN 0 8050 7520 8 Steven Mintz John Stauffer eds 2007 The Problem of Evil Slavery Freedom and the Ambiguities of American Reform University of Massachusetts Press ISBN 978 1 55849 570 8 Stapley A B amp Elder Delbert L 1975 Using Our Free Agency Ensign May 21 ISBN missing Stark Ryan 2009 Rhetoric Science and Magic in Seventeenth Century England Washington DC The Catholic University of America Press 115 45 Vetlesen Arne Johan 2005 Evil and Human Agency Understanding Collective Evildoing New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 85694 2 Wilson William McF Julian N Hartt 2004 Farrer s Theodicy In David Hein and Edward Hugh Henderson eds Captured by the Crucified The Practical Theology of Austin Farrer New York and London T amp T Clark Continuum ISBN 0 567 02510 1External links nbsp Look up evil in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Evil nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Evil Evil on In Our Time at the BBC Concept of Evl entry by Todd Calder in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Good and Evil in Ultra Orthodox Judaism ABC News Looking for Evil in Everyday Life Psychology Today Indexing Evil Booknotes interview with Lance Morrow on Evil An Investigation October 19 2003 Good and Evil BBC Radio 4 discussion with Leszek Kolakowski and Galen Strawson In Our Time Apr 1 1999 Evil BBC Radio 4 discussion with Jones Erwin Stefan Mullhall and Margaret Atkins In Our Time May 3 2001 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Evil amp oldid 1184624303, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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