Affluent Savvy
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This is followed by a useful breakdown of what Svendsen considers to be the four types of evil: • Demonic Evil. Demonic evil is evil for its own sake, performed for the express purpose of harming others, or for the enjoyment of the experience of watching others suffer. ... • Instrumental Evil. ... • Idealistic Evil. ... • Stupid Evil.
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Learn More »I recently impulse-bought A Philosophy of Evil by Lars Svendsen, a Norwegian philosopher I’d never heard of. The book called out to me from the bookstore shelf, the title on the stark cover promising a brave attempt to tackle a very difficult subject head-on. The nature of evil — along with the closely related question of the nature of good — is one of the primary unresolved questions of ethical philosophy, and has remained unresolved from the age of Plato to today. To frame the terms “good” and “evil” in a philosophical setting is to suggest that they can be defined in some kind of meaningful, pragmatic and universal way, but few attempts to provide these definitions have ever been considered successful. Religions and rigid political doctrines define good and evil, sure — but academic philosophy is held to a different standard of objectivity, and tends to fall far short of a sturdy anchoring point for any kind of moral language. Friedrich Nietzsche advised us to give up on morality and follow him “beyond good and evil” in 1886, and it’s probably fair to say that academic philosophy has remained in that Nietzschean zone — beyond any common or widely accepted agreement on the meanings of the terms “good” and “evil” — ever since. This is where modern philosophy rests. So it’s exciting to find Lars Svendsen taking a new look at the question, and one wonders how he’ll tackle this job. To use the term “evil” at all is to use it with some amount of irony, because we all know the term is slippery. It is human nature to soundly reject “evil”, and to equate it to whatever forces harm us. Yet we know it is impossible to exist without also being considered evil by others in the world. Whatever “evil” is, it appears to be all around us and inside us as well. It will take a very honest philosopher to write convincingly about this word. Lars Svendsen turns out not to be a doctrinaire with a strong original theory about the meaning of evil, but rather a generalist who has also written books called A Philosophy of Boredom and A Philosophy of Fear. This book amounts to a search for a theory, not an explanation of one. Svendsen is in the same position as the author of this book as we are in as its readers: he doesn’t know what evil means, and he wants to figure it out. His one precondition is an admirably pragmatic and ambitious one: he refuses to discuss the nature of evil in a detached or theoretical way, but rather hopes to discover an answer that will make us all better people. This book is meant to make a difference. “Evil should never be justified, should never be explained away,” Svendsen writes. “It should be fought.” The book begins by rejecting several obviously unsatisfactory theories about the nature of evil. This is followed by a useful breakdown of what Svendsen considers to be the four types of evil:
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