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- <text id=91TT1295>
- <title>
- June 10, 1991: Evil
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- June 10, 1991 Evil
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 48
- Evil
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By LANCE MORROW
- </p>
- <p> I think there should be a Dark Willard.
- </p>
- <p> In the network's studio in New York City, Dark Willard
- would recite the morning's evil report. The map of the world
- behind him would be a multicolored Mercator projection. Some
- parts of the earth, where the overnight good prevailed, would
- glow with a bright transparency. But much of the map would be
- speckled and blotched. Over Third World and First World, over
- cities and plains and miserable islands would be smudges of
- evil, ragged blights, storm systems of massacre or famine,
- murders, black snows. Here and there, a genocide, a true abyss.
- </p>
- <p> "Homo homini lupus," Dark Willard would remark. "That's
- Latin, guys. Man is a wolf to man."
- </p>
- <p> Dark Willard would report the natural evils--the
- outrages done by God and nature (the cyclone in Bangladesh, an
- earthquake, the deaths by cancer). He would add up the moral
- evils--the horrors accomplished overnight by man and woman.
- Anything new among the suffering Kurds? Among the Central
- American death squads? New hackings in South Africa? Updating
- on the father who set fire to his eight-year-old son? Or on
- those boys accused of shotgunning their parents in Beverly Hills
- to speed their inheritance of a $14 million estate? An
- anniversary: two years already since Tiananmen Square.
- </p>
- <p> The only depravity uncharted might be cannibalism, a last
- frontier that fastidious man has mostly declined to explore.
- Evil is a different sort of gourmet.
- </p>
- <p> The oil fires over Kuwait would be evil made visible and
- billowing. The evil turns the very air black and greasy. It
- suffocates and blots out the sun.
- </p>
- <p> The war in the gulf had an aspect of the high-tech
- medieval. What Beelzebubs flew buzzing through the sky on the
- tips of Scuds and smart bombs, making mischief and brimstone?
- Each side demonized the other, as in every war: Gott mit Uns.
- Saddam Hussein had George Bush down as the Evil One. George Bush
- had Saddam down as Hitler. In most of the West, Hitler is the
- 20th century's term for Great Satan. After the war, quick and
- obliterating, Hussein hardly seems worthy of the name of evil
- anymore.
- </p>
- <p> Is there more evil now, or less evil, than there was five
- years ago, or five centuries?
- </p>
- <p> The past couple of years has brought a windfall of
- improvements in the world: the collapse of communism; the
- dismantling of apartheid; the end of the cold war and the
- nuclear menace, at least in its apocalyptic Big Power form.
- State violence (in the style of Hitler, Stalin, Ceausescu)
- seemed to be skulking off in disrepute. Francis Fukuyama, a
- former U.S. State Department policy planner, even proclaimed
- "the end of history." The West and democratic pluralism seemed
- to have triumphed: satellites and computers and communications
- and global business dissolved the old monoliths in much of the
- world. Humankind could take satisfaction in all that progress
- and even think for a moment, without cynicism, of Lucretius'
- lovely line: "So, little by little, time brings out each several
- thing into view, and reason raises it up into the shores of
- light." But much of the world has grown simultaneously darker.
- </p>
- <p> Each era gets its suitable evils. The end of the 20th
- century is sorting out different styles of malignity. Evil has
- been changing its priorities, its targets, its cast of
- characters.
- </p>
- <p> The first question to be asked, of course, is this: Does
- evil exist? I know a man who thinks it does not. I know another
- man who spent a year of his childhood in Auschwitz. I would
- like to have the two of them talk together for an afternoon,
- and see which one comes away persuaded by the other.
- </p>
- <p> The man who does not believe in the existence of evil
- knows all about the horrors of the world. He knows that humanity
- is often vicious, violent, corrupt, atrocious. And that
- nature's cruelties and caprices are beyond rational accounting:
- Bangladesh does not deserve the curse that seems to hover over
- it. But the man thinks that to describe all that as evil gives
- evil too much power, too much status, that it confers on what
- is merely rotten and tragic the prestige of the absolute. You
- must not allow lower instincts and mere calamities to get
- dressed up as a big idea and come to the table with their
- betters and smoke cigars. Keep the metaphysics manageable: much
- of what passes for evil (life in Beirut, for example) may be
- just a nightmare of accidents. Or sheer stupidity, that
- sovereign, unacknowledged force in the universe.
- </p>
- <p> The man's deeper, unstated thought is that acknowledging
- evil implies that Satan is coequal with God. Better not to open
- that door. It leads into the old Manichaean heresy: the world
- as battleground between the divine and the diabolical, the
- outcome very much in doubt: "La prima luce," Dante's light of
- creation, the brilliant ignition of God, against the satanic
- negation, the candle snuffer. Those uncomfortable with the idea
- of evil mean this: You don't say that the shadow has the same
- stature as the light. If you speak of the Dark Lord, of the
- "dark side of Sinai," do you foolishly empower darkness?
- </p>
- <p> Or, for that matter (as an atheist or agnostic would have
- it), do such terms heedlessly empower the idea of God? God,
- after all, does not enjoy universal diplomatic recognition.
- </p>
- <p> Is it possible that evil is a problem that is more
- intelligently addressed outside the religious context of God and
- Satan? Perhaps. For some, that takes the drama out of the
- discussion and dims it down to a paler shade of Unitarianism.
- Evil, in whatever intellectual framework, is by definition a
- monster. It has a strange coercive force: a temptation, a
- mystery, a horrible charm. Shakespeare understood that perfectly
- when he created Iago in his secular and motiveless malignity.
- </p>
- <p> In 1939, as World War II began, Albert Camus wrote in his
- notebook: "The reign of beasts has begun." In the past year or
- two, the reign of beasts seemed to end, in some places anyway:
- brilliant days, miraculous remissions. But as Jung thought,
- different people inhabit different centuries. There are many
- centuries still loose in the world today, banging against one
- another. The war in the gulf was in part a collision of
- different centuries and the cultural assumptions that those
- centuries carry with them. Camus's beasts are still wandering
- around in the desert and in the sometimes fierce nationalisms
- reawakening in the Soviet Union. They are alive and vicious in
- blood feuds from Northern Ireland to Sri Lanka.
- </p>
- <p> Saddam Hussein raised atavistic questions about evil. But
- the West has grown preoccupied by newer forms--greed,
- terrorism, drugs, AIDS, crime, child abuse, global pollution,
- oil spills, acid rain. The fear of nuclear holocaust, which not
- long ago was the nightmare at the center of the imagination, has
- receded with amazing speed.
- </p>
- <p> It is touching in this era, and rather strange, that
- nature, even at its most destructive, has clean hands. Humankind
- does not. For centuries nature's potential for evil, its
- overpowering menace, made it an enemy to be subdued. Today, at
- least in the developed world, nature is the vulnerable innocent.
- The human is the enemy.
- </p>
- <p> New forms of evil raise new moral questions. Who is to
- blame for them? Are they natural evils--that is, acts of God
- and therefore his responsibility, or acts of the blind universe
- and therefore no one's? Or are they moral evils, acts that men
- and women must answer for?
- </p>
- <p> Padrica Caine Hill, former bank teller, Washington mother
- and wife, dresses her three children one morning, makes
- breakfast for them, smokes some crack cocaine and lets the kids
- watch cartoons. Then with a clothesline she strangles
- eight-year-old Kristine and four-year-old Eric Jr. She tries to
- strangle two-year-old Jennifer, but leaves the girl still
- breathing softly on the floor. When the police come, Padrica
- Hill says she loves her children. Why did she kill them? "I
- don't know," she answers in apparently genuine bewilderment. "I
- hadn't planned on it."
- </p>
- <p> Who or what is responsible? The woman herself? She did
- smoke the crack, but presumably the effect she anticipated was
- a euphoric high, not the death of her children. The drug arrived
- like Visigoths in her brain and destroyed the civilization
- there, including the most powerful of human instincts, her
- mother love. The crack itself? The dealer who sold the crack?
- The others in the trade--kingpins and mules who brought the
- cocaine up from South America encased in condoms that they had
- swallowed? The peasants in Colombia who grew the coca plants in
- the first place?
- </p>
- <p> The widening stain of responsibility for evil on a
- constricting planet changes moral contexts. Microevil, the
- murder of an individual child, becomes part of the
- macroorganism: all the evils breathe the same air, they have the
- same circulatory system. They pass through the arteries of the
- world, from the peasant's coca plant in Colombia to the mother's
- brain in Washington, thence to her fingers and the clothesline
- that kills the children in the middle of morning cartoons.
- </p>
- <p> Many writers have said that one of evil's higher
- accomplishments has been to convince people that it does not
- exist. Ivan Karamazov's bitter diabology was a bit different:
- "If the devil doesn't exist, but man has created him, he has
- created him in his own image and likeness." In a nightmare, Ivan
- meets the devil, a character of oddly shabby gentility, who
- mentions how cold it was in space, from which he lately came,
- traveling in only an evening suit and open waistcoat. The devil
- speaks of the game of village girls who persuade someone to lick
- a frosted ax, to which of course the tongue sticks. The devil
- wonders idly, "What would become of an ax in space?" It would
- orbit there, "and the astronomers would calculate the rising and
- setting of the ax." Dostoyevsky's devil was prescient, speaking
- a century before bright metal began to fly up off the earth and
- circle round it. There is something spookily splendid about evil
- as an ax in space.
- </p>
- <p> You must ask what evil would be if it did exist. What does
- the word evil mean when people use it?
- </p>
- <p> Evil means, first of all, a mystery, the mysterium
- iniquitatis. We cannot know evil systematically or
- scientifically. It is brutal or elusive, by turns vivid and
- vague, horrible and subtle. We can know it poetically,
- symbolically, historically, emotionally. We can know it by its
- works. But evil is sly and bizarre. Hitler was a vegetarian. The
- Marquis de Sade opposed capital punishment.
- </p>
- <p> Evil is easier than good. Creativity is harder than
- destructiveness. Dictators have leisure time for movies in their
- private screening rooms. When Hitler was at Berchtesgaden, he
- loved to see the neighborhood children and give them ice cream
- and cake. Saddam Hussein patted little Stuart Lockwood's head
- with avuncular menace and asked if he was getting enough
- cornflakes and milk. Stalin for years conducted the Soviet
- Union's business at rambling, sinister, alcoholic dinner parties
- that began at 10 and ended at dawn. All his ministers attended,
- marinating in vodka and terror. Sometimes one of them would be
- taken away at first light by the NKVD, and never seen again.
- </p>
- <p> Evil is the Bad elevated to the status of the
- inexplicable. To understand is to forgive. Evil sometimes means
- the thing we cannot understand, and cannot forgive. The
- Steinberg case in New York City, in which a lawyer battered his
- six-year-old foster daughter Lisa to death, is an example. Ivan
- Karamazov speaks of a Russian nobleman who had his hounds tear
- an eight-year-old boy to pieces in front of the boy's mother
- because he threw a stone at one of the dogs. Karamazov asks the
- bitter question that is at the heart of the mystery of evil,
- "What have children to do with it, tell me, please?"
- </p>
- <p> Evil is anyone outside the tribe. Evil works by
- dehumanizing the Other. A perverse, efficient logic: identifying
- others as evil justifies all further evil against them. A man
- may kill a snake without compunction. The snake is an evil
- thing, has evil designs, is a different order of being. Thus:
- an "Aryan" could kill a Jew, could make an elaborate
- bureaucratic program of killing Jews. Thus: white men could come
- in the middle of the night in Mississippi and drag a black man
- out and hang him.
- </p>
- <p> Getting people to think in categories is one of the
- techniques of evil. Marxist-Leninist zealots thought of "the
- bourgeoisie," a category, a class, not the human beings, and it
- is easy to exterminate a category, a class, a race, an alien
- tribe. Mao's zealots in the Cultural Revolution, a vividly
- brainless evil, destroyed China's intellectual classes for a
- generation.
- </p>
- <p> Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge sent to the killing fields all who
- spoke French or wore glasses or had soft hands. The Khmer Rouge
- aimed to cancel all previous history and begin at Year Zero.
- Utopia, this century has learned the hard way, usually bears a
- resemblance to hell. An evil chemistry turns the dream of
- salvation into damnation.
- </p>
- <p> Evil is the Bad hardened into the absolute. Good and evil
- contend in every mind. Evil comes into its own when it crosses
- a line and commits itself and hardens its heart, when it becomes
- merciless, relentless.
- </p>
- <p> William James said, "Evil is a disease." But it can be an
- atrocious liberation, like the cap flying off a volcano. The
- mind bursts forth to explore the black possibilities. Vietnam
- taught many Americans about evil. Hasan i Sabbah, founder of a
- warrior cult of Ismailis in the 11th century in Persia, gave
- this instruction: "Nothing is true, everything is permitted."
- It is a modern thought that both charmed and horrified William
- Burroughs, the novelist and drug addict who like many in the
- 20th century somehow could not keep away from horror. During a
- drunken party in Mexico in 1951, Burroughs undertook to play
- William Tell, using a pistol to shoot a glass off his wife's
- head. He put a bullet in her brain instead.
- </p>
- <p> Evil is charismatic. A famous question: Why is Milton's
- Satan in Paradise Lost so much more attractive, so much more
- interesting, than God himself? The human mind romances the idea
- of evil. It likes the doomed defiance. Satan and evil have many
- faces, a flashy variety. Good has only one face. Evil can also
- be attractive because it has to do with conquest and domination
- and power. Evil has a perverse fascination that good somehow
- does not. Evil is entertaining. Good, a sweeter medium, has a
- way of boring people.
- </p>
- <p> Evil is a word we use when we come to the limit of humane
- comprehension. But we sometimes suspect that it is the core of
- our true selves. In Young Goodman Brown, Nathaniel Hawthorne's
- Everyman goes to a satanic meeting in a dark wood, and the devil
- declares, "Evil is the nature of mankind. Welcome again, my
- children, to the communion of your race."
- </p>
- <p> Three propositions:
- </p>
- <p> 1) God is all powerful.
- </p>
- <p> 2) God is all good.
- </p>
- <p> 3) Terrible things happen.
- </p>
- <p> As the theologian and author Frederick Buechner has
- written, the dilemma has always been this: you can match any two
- of those propositions, but never match all three.
- </p>
- <p> At the beginning of his Summa theologiae, Thomas Aquinas
- admitted that the existence of evil is the best argument against
- the existence of God.
- </p>
- <p> Theologians have struggled for centuries with theodicy,
- the problem of a good God and the existence of evil. Almost all
- such exertions have been unconvincing. Augustine, speaking of
- the struggle to understand evil, at last wrote fatalistically,
- "Do not seek to know more than is appropriate." At the time of
- the Black Death, William Langland wrote in Piers Plowman: "If
- you want to know why God allowed the Devil to lead us astray...then your eyes ought to be in your arse."
- </p>
- <p> The historian Jeffrey Burton Russell asks, "What kind of
- God is this? Any decent religion must face the question
- squarely, and no answer is credible that cannot be given in the
- presence of dying children." Can one propose a God who is partly
- evil? Elie Wiesel, who was in Auschwitz as a child, suggests
- that perhaps God has "retracted himself" in the matter of evil.
- Wiesel has written, "God is in exile, but every individual, if
- he strives hard enough, can redeem mankind, and even God
- himself."
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps evil is an immanence in the world, in the mind,
- just as divinity is an immanence. But evil has performed
- powerful works. Observes Russell: "It is true that there is evil
- in each of us, but adding together even large numbers of
- individual evils does not explain an Auschwitz, let alone the
- destruction of the planet. Evil on this scale seems to be
- qualitatively as well as quantitatively different. It is no
- longer a personal but a transpersonal evil, arising from some
- kind of collective unconscious. It is also possible that it is
- beyond the transpersonal and is truly transcendent, an entity
- outside as well as inside the human mind, an entity that would
- exist even if there were no human race to imagine it." So here
- evil rounds back again into its favored element, mystery.
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps God has other things on his mind. Perhaps man is
- to God as the animals of the earth are to man--picturesque,
- interesting and even nourishing. Man is, on the whole, a
- catastrophe to the animals. Maybe God is a catastrophe to man
- in the same way. Can it be that God visits evils upon the world
- not out of perversity or a desire to harm, but because our
- suffering is a byproduct of his needs? This could be one reason
- why almost all theodicies have about them a pathetic quality and
- seem sometimes undignified exertions of the mind.
- </p>
- <p> An eerie scene at the beginning of the Book of Job, that
- splendid treatise on the mysteries of evil, has God and Satan
- talking to each other like sardonic gentlemen gamblers who have
- met by chance at the racetrack at Saratoga. God seems to squint
- warily at Satan, and asks, in effect, So, Satan, what have you
- been doing with yourself? And Satan with a knowing swagger
- replies, in effect, I've been around the world, here and there,
- checking it out. Then God and Satan make a chillingly cynical
- bet on just how much pain Job can endure before he cracks and
- curses God.
- </p>
- <p> Satan wanders. Evil is a seepage across borders, across
- great distances. Herman Melville, in Moby Dick, wrote that a
- colt in rural Vermont, if it smells a fresh buffalo robe (the
- colt having no knowledge or experience of buffalo, which lived
- on the plains) will "start, snort, and with bursting eyes paw
- the ground in phrenzies of affright. Here thou beholdest even
- in a dumb brute the instinct of the knowledge of the demonism
- of the world."
- </p>
- <p> Evil and good have probably been more or less constant
- presences in the human heart, their proportions staying roughly
- the same over the centuries. And perhaps the chief dark
- categories have remained constant and familiar. The first time
- that death appeared in the world, it was murder. Cain slew Abel.
- "Two men," says Elie Wiesel, "and one of them became a killer."
- The odds have presumably been fifty-fifty ever since. The Old
- Testament is full of savageries that sound eerily contemporary.
- (The British writer J.R. Ackerley once wrote to a friend, "I am
- halfway through Genesis, and quite appalled by the disgraceful
- behavior of all the characters involved, including God.")
- </p>
- <p> Petrarch's rant against the papal court at Avignon in the
- 14th century sounds like a hyperbolic inventory of life in
- certain neighborhoods of the late 20th century: "This is a sewer
- to which all the filths of the universe come to be reunited.
- Here people despise God, they adore money, they trample
- underfoot both human laws and divine law. Everything here
- breathes falsehood: the air, the earth, the houses, and above
- all, the bedrooms."
- </p>
- <p> Western thought since the Renaissance has considered that
- the course of mankind was ascendant, up out of the shadow of
- evil and superstition and unreason. Thomas Jefferson, a
- brilliant creature of the Enlightenment, once wrote, "Barbarism
- has...been receding before the steady step of amelioration;
- and will in time, I trust, disappear from the earth."
- </p>
- <p> In the 20th century, Lucretius' shores of light vanished
- like the coasts of Atlantis, carried under by terrible
- convulsions. The ascendant civilizations (the Europeans,
- Americans, Japanese) accomplished horrors that amounted to a
- usurpation of the power of God over creation. The world in this
- century went about a work of de-creation--destroying its own
- generations in World War I; attempting to extinguish the Jews
- of Europe in the Holocaust, to destroy the Armenian people, the
- Ukrainian kulaks and, much later, the Cambodians--all the
- reverberating genocides.
- </p>
- <p> In any case, the 20th century shattered the lenses and
- paradigms, the very mind, of reason. The universe went from
- Newton's model to Einstein's, and beyond, into ab surdities even
- more profound. An underlying assumption of proportion and
- continuity in the world perished. The proportions between cause
- and effect were skewed. A minuscule event (indeed, an atom)
- could blossom into vast obliterations. Einstein said God does
- not play dice with the world. But if there was order, either
- scientific or moral, in God's universe, it became absurdly
- inaccessible.
- </p>
- <p> If evil is a constant presence in the human soul, it is
- also true that there are more souls now than ever, and by that
- logic both good and evil are rising on a Malthusian curve, or
- at any rate both good and evil may be said to be increasing in
- the world at the same rate as the population: 1.7% per annum.
- </p>
- <p> The world is swinging on a hinge between two ages. The
- prospect awakens, in the Western, secular mind, the idea that
- all future outcomes, good or evil, are a human responsibility.
- John Kennedy said in his Inaugural Address, "Here on earth,
- God's work must surely be our own." When there will no longer
- be any place to hide, it becomes important to identify the real
- evils and not go chasing after false evils. It is possible that
- people will even grow up on the subject of sex.
- </p>
- <p> Religions over many centuries developed elaborate
- codifications of sin and evil. The Catholic Church, for example,
- identified Sins that Cry to Heaven for Vengeance, (oppression
- of the poor, widows and orphans, for example, or defrauding
- laborers of their wages), Sins Against the Holy Spirit, and so
- on, sins mortal and venial, virtues cardinal and sins deadly.
- </p>
- <p> With the emergence of a new world will come a
- recodification of evils. Obviously offenses against the earth
- are coming to be thought of as evils in ways we would not have
- suspected a few years ago. The developed world, at least, is
- forming a consensus that will regard violence to the planet to
- be evil in the way we used to think of unorthodox sexual
- practices and partnerships as being outside the realm of
- accepted conduct.
- </p>
- <p> A Frenchman named Jean Baudrillard recently wrote a book
- called The Transparency of Evil. We live, says Baudrillard, in
- a postorgiastic age, in which all liberations have been
- accomplished, all barriers torn down, all limits abolished.
- Baudrillard makes the (very French) case that evil, far from
- being undesirable, is necessary--essential to maintaining the
- vitality of civilization. That suggests a refinement of an old
- argument favored by Romantics and 19th century anarchists like
- Bakunin, who said, "The urge for destruction is also a creative
- urge." It is not an argument I would try out on Elie Wiesel or
- on the mother of a political prisoner disappeared by the
- Argentine authorities.
- </p>
- <p> And yet...and yet...evil has such perversities, or
- good has such resilience, that a powerful (if grotesque) case
- can be made that Adolf Hitler was the founding father of the
- state of Israel. Without Hitler, no Holocaust, without
- Holocaust, no Israel.
- </p>
- <p> Scientists working with artificial intelligence have a
- fantasy--who knows if it is more than that?--that eventually
- all the contents of the human brain, a life, can be gradually
- emptied into a brilliant, nondecaying, stainless, deathless sort
- of robot ic personoid. And when the transfer of all the vast and
- intricately nuanced matter of the mind and soul has been
- accomplished, the memories of the cells etched onto microchips,
- the human body, having been replicated in a better container,
- will be allowed to wither and die.
- </p>
- <p> Will evil be transferred along with good and installed in
- the stainless personoid? Or can the scientists sift the soul
- through a kind of electronic cheesecloth and remove all the
- ancient evil traces, the reptilian brain, the lashing violence,
- the tribal hatred, the will to murder? Will the killer be
- strained out of the soul? Will the inheritance of Cain be left
- to wither and die with the human husk, the useless flesh?
- </p>
- <p> If so, will grace and love, evil's enemies, wither too?
- The question goes back to the Garden. Does the good become
- meaningless in a world without evil? Do the angels depart along
- with the devils? If the stainless canister knows nothing of
- evil, will Mozart sound the same to it as gunfire?
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
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