In "interpreting evil", Mark Bernstein boldly said: "There is evil in the world ... and examples of suffering and suffering that give us the most painful example to us There is none". ) These excessive pain include natural disasters, child malformations, even even animals hit by cars. However, Bernstein and others may think that diseases and malformations as childhood are the result of some sort of evil power, but it can be said that these pain is the cause of evil.
Emil Fackenheim is considered by some to be the most important theologian of the Holocaust. He distinguishes between "ordinary" evil of human nature and "extreme evil" where he calls Hitler's character. For Falkenheim, even the best explanation for Hitler (and many others) is destined to fail. Finally, "Only God can explain this extreme evil and he can not speak" (quoted from Hitler's Ron Rosenbaum, Macmillan, London, 1998, p. 279). Falkenheim believes that Hitler's evil exceeds scale and goes beyond reasonable attempts to understand it. "Families on difficulties, dysfunctional families, trauma and distortion are not related" The ideology of a bad man is enough to explain the seriousness of Hitler's crime "can be added.
Evil is a completely subjective concept created by mankind, essentially no evil in the universe at all either. Primitive culture believes that natural disasters are manifestations of evil. In this way, humans begin to draw unfavorable situations and tragedies first, so that they can grasp accompanying anxieties. However, in the formal structure of evolution and natural selection, there is no definition of evil 5. The cruel and cruel way of natural selection may lead us to believe in so-called natural wickedness. In addition, our own interpretation is always vague and culturally restrained and there is the possibility of evolution over time.
Mankind is a delicate balance of good and evil. In most cases, there is an unknown balance, evil is being suppressed, but if there is any change in cause, the dark side of human nature will emerge. At Edgar Allan Poe's "The Storytelling Center", readers met men for the wicked eyes of the elderly, his "blood cooling". It is this irrational fear that evokes the dark side of the narrator and ultimately leads to murder. The author uses "the heart of storytelling" to convey the essence of life and the way to lose madness. The author creates a horror story by combining this theme of humankind and delicate irony. This is a clearly interpreted sentence.