Science of the Spirit
Why is the burden of proof on the victim to establish a legitimate case for his/her suffering? Why aren't these victims believed, and why are facilitators of an empirical science denying the psychological reality of evil?
The answers to these questions are complex. Many people, including clinicians, are blinded by the psychopath's mask of normalcy. We stigmatize victims, denouncing them as inferior given their emotional instability, while lauding the capable and convincing psychopath. Our innate tendency to maintain internal equilibrium and illusions of safety compel us to rely on elaborate psychological defenses to deny threatening information.
What is Human Evil?
Evil denotes an absence of good. It is that which is depraved and immoral. In this article we will address the conundrum of human evil - specifically the evil we inflict upon one another - and the collective denial of its very existence, which in turn allows for evil's proliferation.
In Religion Within the Boundaries of Mere Reason philosopher Immanuel Kant makes the claim that evil is innate to the human species. According to Kant, self-conceit is the trait responsible for moral corruption (Kant, I. Religion Within the Boundaries of Mere Reason, Robert M. Adams et al, Eds. Cambridge UK: Cambridge University Press;1998).
An extreme propensity for evil has been referred to by psychiatrist Hervey Cleckley as a neuropsychiatric defect that fuels the need to destroy. According to Cleckley, the psychopath has the uncanny ability to conceal this defect (Cleckley HM. The Mask of Sanity: An Attempt to Clarify Some Issues about the So-Called Psychopathic Personality. Whitefish, MT: Literary Licensing; 2011).
We are deceived, even deluded, by the psychopath's disguise of virtue, his glibness, ostensible calm, status, and charm. The psychopath's veneer of normality can be so seamless it becomes implausible to consider the malevolence behind the mask, even for trained clinicians.
How Evil Hurts Its Victims
Prolonged exposure to the psychopath's abuse and exploitation results in complex PTSD, and in the worst case scenarios dissociative identity disorder (DID). The victims of psychopaths are emotionally, psychologically, physically, financially, and socially devastated.
The visibility of their distress and symptoms makes victims vulnerable to being stigmatized. Sociologist Erving Goffman emphasized that stigma is an insidious barrier to recovery, and dehumanizes and depersonalizes victims, causing further damage and marginalization (Goffman E. Stigma: Notes on the Management of Spoiled Identity. New York: Simon and Schuster; 2009).
Essentially, stigma breeds contempt and contempt breeds blame. Following this line of reason, the stigmatized victim is ultimately blamed for the harm inflicted by the psychopath.
This socially Darwinistic paradigm illustrates how the psychopaths' advantages over their victims support a "survival of the fittest" template. The fittest are elevated, irrespective of their character. Signs of weakness and fragility are subject to condemnation. Power and status are the relevant markers for what is valued and esteemed.
There are other collective biases we adhere to in spite of contrary evidence. For example, the need to believe that the world is fundamentally just contributes to the rationalization that egregious maltreatment must be somehow deserved by the victim. The need to assure ourselves that we are invulnerable to evil affords us a false sense of control, which again, shifts the focus onto the victim's culpability.
Why We Deny the Existence of Evil
What deviates from the norm creates conflict with our social reality. This generates uncertainty and threatens our world-view. To return to a state of perceived equilibrium, we may limit the intrusion of new information or thinking about things in ways that contradict our pre-existing beliefs. We simply deny that which causes us distress.
Given that evil calls into question our basic trust in the order and structure of our world, we are compelled by our instinct for self-preservation to deny evil's existence and construct a reality that offers an illusory sense of safety and predictability.
My treatment of D, who was perpetrated by a pedophile over the course of many years, is an example of this phenomenon. The pedophile who I'll refer to as R was a highly regarded coach and educator in an affluent suburb. Years after the assault of D, the FBI arrested R in a sting operation. In spite of the irrefutable evidence implicating R, the community came to R's defense, citing his character and beneficent deeds as proof of his innocence. Even when allegations of sexual abuse made by a foster child in R's care came forth, the child's credibility was ironically damaged by his stigmatized status as an emotionally troubled ward of the state.
This case illustrates the ego's ability to censor and reconstruct distressing information so as to maintain consonance.
On a global scale we see the same defenses employed in response to allegations of clergy sexual abuse and cover-ups perpetrated by the Catholic Church. In spite of the church's heinous history of aligning with Hitler and Mussolini, implementing the Inquisition and Crusades, the Magdalene laundries, the witch-hunts, and the supported democide and slavery in the Americas, Africa, and Australia, the persistence with upholding naïve, illusory ideas of spiritual infallibility and idealized notions of virtue trump accountability and objective reality. When followers succumb to pathological influence, what results is a collusion with evil.
The Authoritative Power of Evil
Those who are pathologically evil are ruthlessly driven to acquire power and control. They command compliance and obedience. Hence, they are encouraged by the absence of critical thought, and the reliance on primitive psychological defenses intended to deny unacceptable truths.
Psychologist Stanley Milgram's experiments in the early 1960s illuminated how susceptible we are to the influence of authority. The impetus for Milgram's experiment was the defense that Nazi genocide was blind obedience to following orders, offered during the Nuremburg war trials. Milgram investigated this explanation by testing whether study participants would follow instructions to administer electric shocks to other participants. They did - 65% of the participants fully complied with the commands to administer up to 450 volts of electricity (Milgram, S. Obedience to Authority: An Experimental View. New York: HarperCollins Publishers; 2009).
This study reinforces what psychopaths understand; that the innate inclination to uphold and obey authority is rooted in sundry factors such as fear, identification with the aggressor, and the need to belong. As long as there are no serious repercussions, orders dispensed by an authority figure are generally obeyed, irrespective of whether they oppose our morals. This predisposition offers the psychopath malleable, yielding victims ripe for exploitation and abuse.
None of us are immune to the intimidation of authority. The world is rife with leaders in high positions of power who are pathologically evil. For myriad reasons our innate inclinations to conform and obey eclipse our moral judgment. Unknowingly, ignorantly, carelessly and unintentionally we collude with evil more often than not.
Is There a Panacea?
Mental health practitioners are bound to come in contact with victims of evil. As treatment providers, we need to vigilantly challenge our denial systems and demythologize evil if we are to adequately treat those seeking our help. This requires us to courageously face the harsh reality of life's dangers, including the potential for evil that lurks within.
Jung referred to the repressed, dark, unenlightened parts of the psyche as the shadow. As Jung explained, the denial and repression of the shadow unconsciously causes it to be projected onto the 'other.' If mental health clinicians collectively deny the reality of evil, to quote Jung, then "...how can evil be integrated? There is only one possibility: to assimilate it, that is to say, raise it to the level of consciousness" (Jung, C. "Good and Evil in Analytical Psychology" in Civilization in Transition; The Collected Works of C. G. Jung. Princeton NJ: Princeton University Press; 1970).
By bringing the reality of evil's influence into the therapeutic framework, a clinically significant factor in the healing process is consciously addressed. The dark side of humanity must be acknowledged if victims of evil are to assimilate what was done to them.
Summarily, it is our ethical responsibility as therapists to embody consciousness. Only then can we truly recognize evil, refuse complicity, and be reliable instruments of helping others heal from evil's wreckage.
Reader Comments
Among the worst symptoms of evil is the desire to construct conformity (so-called 'unity') where there should be difference, and the desire to create 'difference' where there should be unity.
Evil, in effect, does everything the opposite of what it should, were it good.
Evil exists and is potent and long-lasting, but is its own undoer, in the end.
Evil exists only because good exists. (Evil is the copy, good {or God} is the original.)
And because freedom or what-we-might call, 'timeless, eternal being' is paramount.
Each of us must find the way to do good, and then we will have our freedom as well.
ned
...is at work as well. There are agents of external forces of higher dimensions actively cultivating relationships, connections and other influence with seeming human beings on this plane. But to convey this in a useful or objective way, with no means of providing proof makes this a useless observation. And indeed, it probably doesn't matter.
The dynamics of the phenomenon are the same at all levels - the dark side originates from the sense of the Creator fearing what it has created - and hence the reaction is to seek to destroy. Ultimately, the inner most goal of evil is to destroy everything, including that subjective self.
So, in that sense, every one of us has (or had, if you prefer a linear time type of stance) the capacity to exhibit this characteristic.
But I do also believe that there are "units" on the earth which are not precisely (or even closely) human and that these units are or some form of essentially robotic nature. There are several bits of evidence for this in both ancient religious texts, as well as more contemporary sources - such as Laura Knight-Jadczyk's fantastic volumes of work with the C's.
If there are organized civilizations of higher order, but which are built around an organizing principle of evil (or so-called "negative polarity") then there would have to be such kinds of incursions into this aspect of reality. And we know that such civilizations exist, because we live in one at a lower level of dimension here. Our civilization is poised on the literal event horizon between teetering into a more total and committed state of darkness, or of veering back into the light, through a massive increase in sudden collective awareness.
It is my personal theory that this event horizon is the precise purpose of this place. If that is true in any sense, then the way to win is just to fight - by raising your own awareness, by invoking as much actual, concrete, real-world acts of accountability as possible, or at minimum to assist in the raising of awareness of as many others as possible.
We win if we fight - we win if we stand - we win every time we expose a psychopath. It will never be eradicated, as it is part of the universe. But it is sorely out of check on this planet.
Time to route the villains - just for fun!
just adding the lyrics by jimmy cliff:
Well they tell me of a pie up in the sky
Waiting for me when I die
But between the day you're born and when you die
They never seem to hear even your cry
CHORUS:
So as sure as the sun will shine
I'm gonna get my share now of what's mine
And then the harder they come the harder they'll fall, one and all
Ooh the harder they come the harder they'll fall, one and all
Well the officers are trying to keep me down
Trying to drive me underground
And they think that they have got the battle won
I say forgive them Lord, they know not what they've done
CHORUS
ooh yeah oh yeah woh yeah ooooh
And I keep on fighting for the things I want
Though I know that when you're dead you can't
But I'd rather be a free man in my grave
Than living as a puppet or a slave
CHORUS
Yeah, the harder they come, the harder they'll fall one and all
What I say now, what I say now, awww
What I say now, what I say one time
The harder they come the harder they'll fall one and all
Ooh the harder they come the harder they'll fall one and all
...it does not seem to me this article does much good describing evil in any real sense. What is evil? Name anything, and remember that some culture, in some time far past or far in the future, would disagree - in fact, would object!
Is evil to kill? But what if the killing is to protect one's own life? If killing another to protect one's own life is still killing, and killing is evil, isn't letting one's self die (at the hand of a killer) the same as killing one's self? And if killing another to protect one's own life is NOT killing, then what is it? And how do we define the necessary parameters of "protecting" one's life?
What about sex with children? Sounds awful, I agree! But at what age do we determine a child? 18 years? 16 years? Does it only boil down to those people of reproductive capability; i.e. 10-12 years? What happens in a culture (such as America) where children are becoming capable of reproduction earlier than before; i.e. 8-10 years? If it's something emotional and intellectual, what's to say our 23 year old "children" are capable of being dubbed adults?
Is evil to destroy the living? Obviously that can't be true. All things die - life is a cycle. In fact, most things are destroyed over time - even the mountains, the air we breathe, the sun itself. All things are eventually destroyed, but that does not denote some special evil.
So what is evil? Darkness? Anger? Aggression? Chaos? Power?
There are a number of comments already posted, but no one seems to touch on the elephant in the room. Evil is neither described nor addressed. Only the things some cultures fear is discussed. Frankly, I don't see a bit of evil in here.
You need the Law of Three to see evil. Once you recognize it at work, within and without, you see it at work everywhere. There's good (positive), bad (negative), and the specific context in which something is being measured or judged. 1-2-3.
It seems that some (most?) people 'see no evil' because they don't have the faculties necessary to see evil.
As Niall said below, it is a spiritual power that works through us.
You are not excluded.
At least your responses indicate others are interested in WHAT evil is, as opposed to simply accepting that evil exists. Evil does exist, and we need to understand it well before attempting to grapple with it.
Niall, I appreciated your response the most.
Michael Wynn's "The Soul Travelers" reveals the truth about mythology, the spirit world, magic, Satanism, and the Illuminati. This documentary reviews repeating themes in mythology and tales of ancient man. Then the video discusses the details of the spirit world, chakras, demons, and angels. It continues by delving into the details of magic, the occult, and Satanic Illuminati symbolism. The Soul Travelers is surely among the most revealing documentaries on the subject of magic and the occult, as it takes a revisionist look at the symbols of secret societies like the Freemasons. It concludes by examining the characters like Satan, Jesus, Babylon, and more from the perspective of the occult.
*Feel free to repost The Soul Travelers wherever you wish
[Link]







Comment: From Andrew Lobaczewski's Political Ponerology: