J.L. Mackie’s, “Evil and Omnipotence,” criticizes the debate for the existence of God by arguing that the fundamentals of what a “perfect God” is are inconsistent with one another. The main theological doctrines of what a “perfect God” entails are as followed: God is omnipotent, omnibenevolent, and omniscient. J.L. Mackie rejects this by stating God cannot be omnipotent and omnibenevolent if evil exists. He asserts that the problem of evil proves that either no god exists. Mackie soon reaches the debate question of, “Can a perfect God exist when suffering exists?”…
Hitler was inhumane, so were many people of that time. Some people had more faith in Hitler then God. Since they lived in horrible conditions and treated as bad as there living conditions many Jews wanted to die. They felt like there god wouldn’t protect them or save them from the reality they know live in so many Jews lost their faith in their God. In the book, Night by Elie Wiesel he shows how being treated inhumanely had caused him and many others like him to lose his faith in God during the Holocaust.…
Thesis Statement: Painful encounters in distressing events like those in the battlefields are what make people realize the real value of compassion and belongingness.…
“the ultimate tragedy is not the oppression and cruelty by the bad people but the…
The main points discussed are the reason behind good people doing bad things, dehumanization, heroes and the effect of institutional power. The author was arguing that a person cannot quite literally be sweet, if they are surrounded by a sour environment. The strengths possessed in this article were that dehumanization is a very real notion as well as the fact that people change with the induction of anonymity. The weakness that is portrayed is that there are heroes around when in fact, yes they are around, but they are a quickly dying breed. My conclusion is that by uniting everyone and seeing each other as another human life regardless of being anonymous or not that maybe experiments like the Stanford experiment might not have needed to be done.…
Literature provides a case in which people exploit the choices adversity presents. In William Golding’s Lord of the Flies, characters make choices that lead them astray from human conscience. Bestial cruelty replaces the selflessness one expects from survivors. The characters in Lord of the Flies relinquish their humanity while, as Golding describes, “The world, that understandable and lawful world, [is] slipping away” (122). Still, the adversity itself is not to blame. Rather, the boys of Lord of the Flies make conscious decisions regarding their behavior. In making these choices, the characters allow adversity to amplify the barbarism lurking within humanity. Adversity itself is only as barbaric as those it…
Religious cruelty is the harassment of one religion to another. It involves the different views of all kind of beliefs as how they are beaten down by each other. In Beyond Good and Evil by Friedrich Nietzsche the discussion God being seen as a different figure to all religions is brought up. In my response, I will analysis the passages 55, 66, 67, 129, and 183. Passage 55 states, “There is a great ladder of religious cruelty with many rungs; but three of them are the most important. At one time one sacrificed human beings to one's god, perhaps precisely those human beings one loved best….” (Nietzsche 55). When this statement is made, he is explaining that the ladder of God is questioned of which direction it is going in. When we look at faith…
One sunny morning in Cleveland, Ohio, a homeless man receives a gift of new shoes from an honorable stranger. Yet at the same time, a young man robs a bank, and an innocent woman is shot at random. Humanity has positive aspects, such as people doing righteous acts towards other human beings, but also sadly has negative aspects such as violence for little to no reason. The world seems to withhold more negative events rather than positive all throughout history. Therefore, mankind is inherently evil, but also has the capability to overcome through positivity.…
Ascher, Barbara. “On Compassion”. 5O Essays. Ed. Samuel Cohen. Boston: Bedford/St.Martin 's, 2004. 35-38. Print.…
Bibliography: Robert C. Solomon and Clancy W. Martin, Morality and the Good Life: An introduction to Ethics through Classical Sources, 4th ed. (McGraw-Hill, 2003) 111,144…
Evil is intentionally behaving or making others act in ways that belittle, dehumanize, hurt, demolish, or execute guiltless individuals. This behaviorally-engaged definition makes an agent of agency responsible for purposeful, propelled activities that have a range of adverse outcomes to other individuals. It bars unintentional or unintended unsafe results, as well as the broader, generic forms of institutional evil, such as poverty, prejudice or destruction of the environment by agents of corporate greed. Be that as it may, it includes corporate duty regarding showcasing and offering items with known malady bringing on, death-managing properties, for example, cigarette makers, or other street pharmacists. It likewise stretches out past the proximal operator of hostility, as contemplated in research on interpersonal brutality, to envelop those in distal places of expert whose requests or plans are completed by functionaries. This is valid for military officers and national pioneers, for example, Hilter, Stalin, Mao, Pol Pot, Idi Amin, and other people who history has distinguished as despots for their complicity in the passing’s of untold a large number of guiltless individuals.…
Download free eBooks of classic literature, books and novels at Planet eBook. Subscribe to our free eBooks blog and email newsletter.…
Consequently, this quote explains why people become evil. There are many reasons that will be answered in this paper. Children who experience hardships at a young age will most likely be exposed to the behavior of a maniac, or a psychopath depending on the extremity. They feel that they cannot trust anyone and also believe others deserve to undergo their pain. Making others suffer the same treatment they received can also give them a sense of relief because of the anger they have built towards a certain conflict. Someone in this…
Over the decades, humanity has changed a substantial amount on several different aspects. Although many things have changed, the recurring themes of human greed and betrayal have both stayed persistent. By examining several stories this essay aims to critically assess the underlying theme of greed, specifically in the form of greed for personal rank and reputation, greed for wealth, greed over religion for worldly goods, and final greed and betrayal of loyalty for love. In this essay I will be looking at the underlying theme of greed by articulating four readings from World Literature and Thought and Classics of Western Thought, and finally by tying in the past examples to a modern day examples where applicable.…
In his article titled “the frivolity of evil,” Dr Dalrymple defines evil as,” the elevation of passing pleasure for oneself over the long-term misery of others to whom one owes a duty.” Dr. Dalrymple describes how his community and the people who live there are stuck in a cycle of evil. He believes that this cycle is a side effect of Great Brittan’s transformation in to a welfare state along with our culture of entitlement. The many years of dedicated study and extensive observations, has granted Dr Dalrymple unique perspective and a deep insight regarding the human condition and their social concerns. Using examples from his work in a prison psychiatrist hospital, we see how easily this type of evil spreads through a community…