When Chamberlain met with Hitler on September 15 at the Burghof, Hitler's Berchtesgaden mountain retreat, he came away with a hopelessly mistaken impression of the German leader, writing to one of his sisters that "in spite of the hardness and ruthlessness I thought I saw in his face, I got the impression that here was a man who could be relied upon when he had given his word."
-- "Warlord: A Life of Winston Churchill at War, 1874-1945" by Carlo D'Este

-- "Warlord: A Life of Winston Churchill at War, 1874-1945" by Carlo D'Este

no subject
Date: 2008-12-31 09:38 pm (UTC)From:As for the nazi youth, I can appreciate what you're saying - largely kids sucked up in something much larger than themselves - everyone is just fighting for their countries, their families, and their lives. But I'm not sympatthetic at all with brushing over Hitler's murderous derangement. He was very much the captain of the nazi enterprise, and the man obviously knew no moral bounds in the pursuit of his dark empire. He's not worthy of your philosophical rationalizations.
no subject
Date: 2008-12-31 10:40 pm (UTC)From:But yeah, that was the point I was making about the youth on the U-boat.
Although the Hilter thing I'm not so sure of. I'm not by any means trying to excuse him...just understand him. And, yes, I do think we can understand evil somewhat even if to say it was Joker-style done for the sake of mayhem and chaos. Evil is a lot like art in that way. The opposite really--destruction rather than creation.
What I'm saying is that even as captain of the Nazi machine, there was method in the madness that makes him no less evil, but fully human. Humanity can be evil sometimes--often--even if I believe we lean towards good most of the time. In that way it makes evil--as has been pointed out before by people far smarter than me--quite boring and weak. It's the common low road and to understand, say, the Holocaust is to try to understand our very worst qualities by knowing that they are also pathetically easy to channel.
Light and dark is a good metaphor for that reason, right? It takes spark and energy to create light. Darkness thrives in the absence of that.
Nature of Evil
Date: 2009-01-01 07:21 am (UTC)From:If you do have time, take a look at this page. You might find it interesting.
If you do not have time, then take a look at my comment here and let me know what you think? :)
Re: Nature of Evil
Date: 2009-01-01 12:27 pm (UTC)From:But that opens a can of worms for me about not giving to the homeless who ask for change here in Chicago. It definitely makes me feel guilty to say no sometimes...one could make the argument that is a kind of evil.
No to Analysis
Date: 2009-01-01 07:30 am (UTC)From:I don't know man. I have heard many others hold the same view, and honestly, I agree with this girl that it is a cop-out.
``No, let us caricature the bastard.'' As if they were afraid that if other aspects of his human self were studied, it might somehow make him look like less of a demon.
Re: No to Analysis
Date: 2009-01-01 02:11 pm (UTC)From:Re: No to Analysis
Date: 2009-01-01 02:46 pm (UTC)From:Begging the question.
1. A good philosophical investigation must find some X as evil.
2. Investigation Y does not condemn X as strongly as you want.
3. Y is sub-standard.
Re: No to Analysis
Date: 2009-01-01 08:41 pm (UTC)From:But I understand that people can reach different conclusions, and I know that there are people today who worhsip the man and still want to carry out his agenda. And I'm just not going to agree with those people. I just hope that you personally won't think much of their aspirations, either, but it's your life.