@James, with or without religions,
humans conducted evils.
Not exact matches
Human beings are capable of both good and
evil conduct, and societies make both right and wrong demands.
If MacIntyre is captive to the terms of this disjunction, it is because, with Aristotle, he fails to distinguish adequately two branches of knowledge: eudaimonology, the object of which is
human happiness and the means to attain it; and ethics, the object of which is
human conduct in the light of reason as differentiating good from
evil.
The monster's brutal treatment at the hands of its maker and of the
humans it encounters leads it to violence and murder, but it lays the blame for its
evil conduct entirely on the man who made it.