To call
something natural EVIL is evil, fool.
Not exact matches
On the whole, the Latin races have leaned more towards the former way of looking upon
evil, as made up of ills and sins in the plural, removable in detail; while the Germanic races have tended rather to think of Sin in the singular, and with a capital S, as of
something ineradicably ingrained in our
natural subjectivity, and never to be removed by any superficial piecemeal operations.
The happiness that comes, when any does come — and often enough it fails to return in an acute form, though its form is sometimes very acute — is not the simple ignorance of ill, but
something vastly more complex, including
natural evil as one of its elements, but finding
natural evil no such stumbling - block and terror because it now sees it swallowed up in supernatural good.
It's easy to say that Burke doesn't take
something like «
natural right» seriously, but he certainly had a standard of good and
evil by which he judged England and its constitution.
That Marr imagines that the
evils caused by capitalist «excesses» are a «betrayal» of
something more essential to capitalism, rather than just
natural expressions of the possibilities inherent within it, demonstrates a deep incoherence in his reasoning.
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