“Evil” is not some mystic and mysterious force with superpowers that rises somewhere from a fiery underground, staring you in the face with red eyes and breathing stench and fire.
A fine and not yet so modern phrase is: “Evil is that evil does.”
And that is entirely true. Before the advent of enlightenment and the civil society which also introduced the same right for everyone, evil was a term in religious contexts to make people afraid and manipulate them. Ghosts frequently played a role in that kind of thinking as well.
With the rise of a common basic education the term was critically reviewed and by and by found ‘old-fashioned’ and misleading.
But we need to come back to a modernized idea of it to state dangers more clearly:
EVIL is what people do by adhering to destructive values.
The values that worship money, the rich, the powerful, no matter what.
Some sort of currency is needed to make sure you can take care of your daily, basic needs. It wasn’t always money people used to exchange goods. Shells, sometimes even rare and beautiful ones were common in some parts of the world.
But whatever it is people use, when they start worshipping the wrong things and thus values we will get into trouble – such as the US currently are facing with a non-entity as their intended head of state.
How to Know Good?
The most basic two phrases putting it in a nutshell are these:
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- “Avoid pain.” For everyone.
- “Act in a manner that the principle of your actions could be transformed into common law any time.”
The first is the Buddhist concept.
The second is my translation of Immanuel Kant’s categorical imperative, that great philosopher of the 18th century and one of the leading figures of the enlightenment.
To get to the bottom of truths you need to take time to think. At first that could take some practice too.
But don’t worry! Because anything human beings do or create can be understood by other humans – even if it takes a little more time at first!
So in case you were wondering how to know evil from good, these are the yardsticks to use:
“Does it avoid pain?”“Could the action/behaviour be transformed into general law for all, any time?”