Tag Archives: powers in play
The Romance of Life
There are people who suppose, whenever they learn of an act of unbelievable cruelty, that it must have been done in reaction to some unseen but equally towering grievance. To such people, the forces in the human situation are taken … Continue reading →
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Tagged Abigail L. Rosenthal's "A Good Look at Evil", action prompts reaction, acts of cruelty, assessing inward costs, authenticating apologies, blaming the victim, confrontations with malevolence, costs of moral action, costs of moral evaluation, country club antisemitism, cruel to the kind, deliberate evil, denial and displacement, deserving a happy ending, deserving to win, dialectical conversation, disguised insult, evidence of a healthy life, excuses for evil acts, fighting the good fight, forces in the room, forgiveness as social conformity, forgiveness for the sake of appearance, forgiveness so as not to make a scene, heaven on earth, helping the aggressor, heroes and heroic acts, human values expressed in physicalist terms, human values expressed in value-neutral language, human values understood as force and counterforce, insincere atonement, interpersonal harmony, inward costs of moral action, justice without mercy, kind to the cruel, kind to the kind, life themes, long term friendships, merciless to the merciless, mercy without justice, misdirected compassion, misplaced objectivity, moral judgement vs judgmentalism, moral neutrality, moral realities, Newton's Third Law of Motion, objectivity as a cop-out, people analyzed as billiard balls, physicalist analogies, physicalist analogy to moral reality, powers in play, premature forgiveness, pretended apology, pro forma apologies, psychologizing cruelty, psychologizing evil, pulling the rug from under, rationalizing antisocial acts, rationalizing bizarre behavior, recurring themes in life, scars of moral combat, smiles that bare the teeth, smiling insult, social harmony, social insult, social life as war, social miscalculation, solving social mysteries, strategies of denial, taking advantage of good manners, taking advantage of social norms, the pose of objectivity, the romance of life, to every action there is an equal and opposite reaction, transvaluation of values, truth-seeking, unwarranted forgiveness, valuing harmony, victim presumed guilty, what was she wearing, when politeness becomes vulnerability, willful harm
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