Being Evil, Luke Russell
Being Evil, Luke Russell
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Being Evil
A Philosophical Perspective

Author: Luke Russell

Narrator: James Cameron Stewart

Unabridged: 4 hr 26 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 12/29/2020


Synopsis

We regularly encounter appalling wrongdoing, with the media offering a depressing parade of violent assault, rape, and murder. Yet sometimes even the cynical and world-weary amongst us are taken aback. Sometimes we confront a crime so terrible, so horrendous, so deeply wrong, that we reach for the word evil. The 9/11 terrorist attacks were not merely wrong, but evil. A serial killer who tortures their victims is not merely a bad person. They are evil. And as the Holocaust showed us, we must remain vigilant against the threat of evil. But what exactly is it? If we use the word evil, are we buying into a naive Manichean worldview, in which two cosmic forces of good and evil are pitted against one another? Are we guilty of demonizing our enemies? How does evil go beyond what is merely bad or wrong?

This book explores the answers that philosophers have offered to these questions. Luke Russell discusses why some philosophers think that evil is a myth or a fantasy, while others think that evil is real. Along the way he asks whether evil is always horrific and incomprehensible, or if it can be banal. Considering if there is a special psychological hallmark that sets the evildoers apart from the rest of us, Russell also engages with ongoing discussions over psychopathy and empathy, analyzing the psychology behind evildoing.

About Luke Russell

Luke Russell is an associate professor in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Sydney, where he teaches ethics and critical thinking. He has written on various topics in the field of moral philosophy, including evil, forgiveness, virtue, and vice, and is the author of Evil: A Philosophical Investigation.


Reviews

Goodreads review by David

Mostly linguistic gymnastics that fall flat on the mat, highlighting the banality of philosophy 101. I am not sure if there are more syllogisms or strawmen.......more

Goodreads review by Antonio

This book has too many good ways to approach the concepts or issues of evil. That’s precisely the problem. In the process of simplicity, the tedium arrives. For a very short introduction, this slim volume dispatches complex issues at ease. Sometimes it reads like a Ted Talk, some other with eruditio......more

This was like an undergraduate seminar where the instructor writes “Evil” on the board and then you spend an hour trying to define it. I don’t think it changed my perspective on anything but I didn’t dislike it and I’ll be looking into some of the further reading.......more

Goodreads review by Paul

Super introductory course in the philosophical arguments around the nature of evil - with definitional analyses and clear insight into what it means to be evil.......more

Goodreads review by Roo

Interesting but I can’t help feeling it’s all semantics. In Spanish evil and wrongdoing are both ‘mal’ and so this entire idea that there is something special about ‘evil’ would not really work.......more