jack: (Default)
[personal profile] jack
A recent conversation about Defence against the Dark arts teachers made me realise I use "evil" in two different ways. Sometimes I mean, "doing something bad on purpose". Sometimes I mean, "doing harm to other people". The greatest harm is often done by people who are indifferent to it. But people who maliciously hurt others are awful is a special way.

A couple of the professors were very indifferent-evil. They didn't set out to hurt people, but they didn't see any of the awful things they did to people. Others were malicious-evil, they were killing people all over the place.

And of course, it's more complicated by that. Most people who cause harm by inattention SHOULD notice, and exist somewhere on a scale from "I'm 8 and I haven't broken away from the worldview I'm immersed in" to "I'm really really really wilfully ignorant, and I must be actively avoiding thinking about this."

But insofar as it's helpful to be able to think about bad things, it's useful to realise that they often overlap, but when I say "very evil" I might mean one of two different things.

Date: 2017-01-17 01:39 pm (UTC)
gerald_duck: (mallard)
From: [personal profile] gerald_duck
Um… bad?

Or even, person who has done/is doing a bad thing?

Equally, I've met a few people I've gradually come to see as evil even though they're not particularly bad. Evil can be quite low-grade and banal, sometimes.