Reaching for Virtue, Stumbling on Sin: Concepts of Good and Evil in a Postmodern Era |
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Authors: | Ester S. Buchholz Joshua K. Mandel |
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Affiliation: | (1) Applied Psychology Department at New York University, USA;(2) Child and School Psychology, NYU, New York |
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Abstract: | Although our culture struggles to understand the origins and nature of good and evil behavior, the disciplines of psychology and psychoanalysis contribute to the discourse primarily indirectly. By examining early Judaism and Christianity, the authors seek to clarify the foundation of contemporary understanding of good and evil in Western society. Looking through the multiple filters of religion, philosophy, psychoanalysis and psychology, groundwork is laid for definitions of good and evil, which can be understood subjectively and measured objectively. As we investigate morality, will, and choice in the varied ologies and across time, we note how much emotion and volition are secondary in modern thinking about evil. Moreover, the place of will as a positive force in development is largely ignored, except by prescient thinkers like Otto Rank. To grasp evil's nature we need to integrate past with present, contrast conscious to unconscious desires, and allow that being bad is not necessarily unnatural or pathological, but can be a transitional stage in the growth of one's conscience. |
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Keywords: | evil will goodness badness as transitional stage |
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