Goodwill Violence When people hear the word violence, people often think about dirty images. This is because violence already has a negative meaning. When people think of cruel measures such as violence and compulsion they are often associated with evil. But in some cases, vandalism is needed to end the disaster and help to realize the profit. Many people believe that goodwill does not come from violence, but ignores positive factors arising from violence.
In Virtuous Violence it is the focus of discussion that violence is usually done by people who believe they do good through the ethical standards they are adhering to. Recognizing this fact will provide us with the best opportunity to make it possible to understand the underlying cause of violence and to take measures to reduce violence. Political leaders condemn terrorist attacks as right - we do not have to accept other people's moral standards to admit their existence. However, long-term solutions to terroristic atrocities and many other forms of violence in our society may benefit from believing that the perpetrator is good, just and correct.
This is a provocative discussion of goodwill violence by UCLA anthropologist Alan Pecksfisk and Northwestern University Kellogg School of Management psychologist and postdoctoral researcher Tage Rai. Their study has concluded that there is a motivation to hurt or kill as they explained recently in "New Scientists", "Crossing Culture and History". People are violent feeling this is the right thing. I feel they are morally obliged. "These explanations often quote violence - empathy, inhumanization, and simple sadism? The author believes that they will play a role in violence, but it rarely triggers