On Lucifer
Things We Don’t Like
Saturday, May 7, 2011
I mourn the loss of thousands of precious lives, but I will not rejoice in the death of one, not even an enemy. Returning hate for hate multiplies hate, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars. Darkness cannot drive out darkness: only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate: only love can do that.
~Mangled quote from Martin Luther King, Jr.
This quote has achieved instant fame/notoriety on the Internet in recent days because of the powerful virality of Facebook, Twitter, and other social media.
Tam Hunt
It turned out, after some Internet sleuthing by various intrepid journalists, that one Jessica Dovey, a teacher based in Japan, had posted these words on her Facebook status update, expressing her own sentiments in the first sentence and then following with an actual quote from King. Others inspired by her words copied the paragraph in full as though it were all from King. And thus it spread.
Despite the mangled nature of the King quote, did it express a wise and compassionate sentiment even with respect to the world’s most notorious terrorist, a modern-day Lucifer?
This brief history is meant to be a light introduction to a heavy topic: Lucifer, the devil, Satan, evil. What do these words mean? Why is there evil? Is there evil?
Lucifer is, of course, the name used in the Christian tradition for a particular fallen angel, a powerful adversary to the God of the Old Testament. Lucifer was at God’s right hand until he fell out of favor and was cast out of Heaven by God. Lucifer has been waging war on God and the good ever since. (Interestingly, Lucifer means, in Latin, “light bearer” and was originally the Latin name for the Morning Star, Venus; it was only later that Lucifer became synonymous with the devil).
Very few people take this story literally today – we are generally more sophisticated than this. But the metaphor of Lucifer is still in many ways apt. Lucifer is more generally known as Satan today – conceived as not merely a fallen angel, but the powerful counter-balance to God’s goodness. Where there is light there must also be dark, so Satan, evil, is in some ways inevitable, according to many thinkers.
Satan, however, simply means “adversary” or “the accuser” in Hebrew. Satan doesn’t appear as the “devil” or as the embodiment of evil in the Old Testament at all.
Long before the New Testament was written, the Greek tradition shed some light on good and evil. Plato, in his most famous work, The Republic, was anxious to make his case that Zeus, the king of the gods in folk religion and also the single God in Plato’s philosophical system, could only be responsible for good and not bad:
“Then God, if he be good, is not the author of all things, as the many assert, but he is the cause of a few things only, and not of most things that occur to men. For few are the goods of human life, and many are the evils, and the good is to be attributed to God alone, of the evils the causes are to be sought elsewhere, and not in him.”
These dichotomies between good and evil have continued until the present day with discussions of the “problem of evil” in theology. If there is a God, why does he/she/it allow evil? I won’t delve into the many answers offered and will instead simply acknowledge that many theologians and philosophers agree that there are many things deserving of the name “evil” and that there’s no easy answer as to why it persists.
Let me shift gears here and bring these philosophical and theological musings back into the real world. Osama Bin Laden was recently killed by US Navy seals in a private compound in Abottabad, Pakistan, not far from the capital of Islamabad.
Was Osama a modern-day Satan or Lucifer? Was he the epitome of evil? What Osama did, or at least encouraged (his role is not clear), was horrific – let’s be clear on this. There is no justification for killing innocent civilians or encouraging such killing. Islamist fundamentalists seem to be focused on a dogmatic religious view of the world and accompanying morality that is more appropriate for the 7th Century than the 21st Century.
By the same token, there is no justification for killing innocent civilians as “collateral damage” when it is 100 percent certain that civilians will be killed through US military actions. The US has killed countless civilians in the ten years since 9/11, in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen, and perhaps many other countries. Far more civilians have died at our hands than died at Al Qaeda’s hands in 9/11 or all other attacks they’ve perpetrated. Far more. Various surveys of civilian casualties in Iraq alone, since the US invasion, report deaths of 100,000 (news accounts and US secret documents revealed by Wikileaks) to one million (private surveys).
Increasingly, our preferred method of violence is the unmanned drone – known aptly and chillingly as Reapers or Predators. Every week or so a new tragedy occurs as US drones or other machines of war, guided by “pilots” based in the US, kill women, children, and other non-combatants.
Outside of these unmanned drones, there are the inevitable garden-variety errors using more traditional war technology. In March of this year nine Afghan boys were killed by NATO helicopter rockets while gathering firewood on a hillside. NATO (a proxy for the US) apologized for the mistake. Even more tragically, a number of US Army soldiers have been indicted for actively targeting Afghan civilians and killing them in faked gunfights. Rolling Stone reported in detail on the activities of a US “kill team” in Afghanistan; Jeremy Morlock, a US enlisted soldier who admitted to these activities on camera, was recently sentenced to life with the possibility of parole in March of this year. The kind of behavior that is condoned, if not officially approved, for US troops in Afghanistan, revealed through reports on these incidents, should shock the conscience.
How does Obama’s decision to wage aggressive and illegal drone warfare in Pakistan and Afghanistan, knowing with certainty that hundreds or thousands of civilians will be killed, truly differ from Osama’s role in 9/11 and other attacks on civilians? There is a difference, but it’s a very fine difference. Perhaps what could be called a “distinction without a difference.”
Obama’s actions have perpetuated the overly aggressive foreign policy of Bush before him. Bush, however, brought us back to a far older era when he told the world after 9/11 that “you’re either with us or against us.” There should be no room in the modern era for such an atavistic view of morality – just as there should be no room for the Islamist fundamentalist worldview. This approach perpetuates “evil” through its unreflective dichotomizing. It is more similar to Bin Laden’s version of morality than it is different. It is more similar to the attitude of foes of the US who label us the Great Satan than it is different.
Good and evil are simply labels we give to what would be more accurately labeled “things we like” and “things we don’t like.” As more and more people agree on things we like and don’t like, particular labeling of certain things as good and evil gains traction. There is nothing objective about this process.
Does this bring us to moral relativism? Yes. There is no objective morality. For those who believe in objective morality, it is generally grounded in “my holy book says” rhetoric. If one doesn’t accept the holy book at issue as authoritative, the moral claim will be equally lacking in authority – unless it can be based in more generally acceptable arguments. And it becomes very difficult to accept religious morality when, for example, a holy book like the Bible includes passages such as “love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you” (Matthew 5:44) alongside far more savage sentiments (Psalm 137):
O Daughter of Babylon, doomed to destruction,
happy is he who repays you
for what you have done to us —
he who seizes your infants
and dashes them against the rocks.
This kind of dissonance is why secularists are adamant that hope for the future should be placed on secular morality and not religious morality. One doesn’t have to be an atheist (I’m not an atheist) to be a secularist (I am a secularist) – all we have to do is witness the suffering caused by religious dogma over the millennia to see a brighter light in secular morality.
Secular morality generally doesn’t use terms like “evil,” because of obvious religious connotations. Secular morality makes arguments based on the common good. The common good is what most of us can agree are beneficial goals and outcomes, independent of any particular religious creed. Democracy, human rights, good jobs, being kind to your neighbor, are all examples of secular morality that may or may not be shared by any particular brand of religious morality. And there is nothing set in stone about secular morality: It’s always changing, always debatable. The debate itself is very much part of the common good.
There is no necessary conflict between secular and religious morality – it all depends on what the commonalities are. There are various types of religious or spiritual morality that can be entirely compatible with a secular morality. I will flesh out in later essays a “process theology” view on morality that shares much with the Vedanta tradition of the East. But secular morality doesn’t require any theological justification.
Violence is not a solution, as King stated so eloquently: “Darkness cannot drive out darkness: only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate: only love can do that.” Even though King was a Christian minister his arguments did not rely on the Bible for authority. They relied as much or more on basic human decency, our secular sense of right and wrong. He reminded us, as did Jesus, that we should abandon the primordial “us versus them” mentality that gives rise to so many emotionally-driven conflicts.
We all have angels and demons within us, we all have God and Lucifer within us. By celebrating Osama’s death, we give in to those demons and stifle our better angels. Only through exalting our better (secular) angels will we be able to achieve a better world for all people.
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Tam Hunt is a philosopher, lawyer and biologist who is blessed enough to live in Santa Barbara. His blog is www.tamhunt.blogspot.com.
Comments
I agree so strongly with your final paragraph. I think there are many who feel the same, and are afraid to give voice to their feelings publicly. I don't believe loving my country demands I rejoice in anyone's death, even that of a villain.
The mangled King quote ends with a version of a verse from the Dhammapada, a core Buddhist text in verse form. It's verse 5. Many translations exist. The one I hear most often is this:
"Hatred never ceases by hatred, but by love alone is healed. This is the ancient and immutable law."
Maha Ghosananda, a Cambodian Buddhist monk sometimes called the Gandhi of Cambodia, chanted this verse with refugees from the Khmer Rouge in their camps. His own family and most of his friends had been killed by Pol Pot. 90% of the Buddhist monastics in Cambodia were killed by the Khmer Rouge, along with millions of other civilians. This was his response, to offer healing.
mtndriver (anonymous profile)
May 7, 2011 at 2:59 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Human nature is evil. A child raised with no discipline will generally turn out antisocial. A person blessed with power over others will often abuse it. Recognizing this within us is a key step.
billclausen (anonymous profile)
May 7, 2011 at 9:22 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Dude, stick to writing about energy analysis and policy.
John_Adams (anonymous profile)
May 8, 2011 at 7:13 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Tam
It's a curious moral calculus that finds no significant difference between a man who intends to harm as many civilians as possible in an effort to sow chaos and destruction, and a man who intends to harm as few civilians as possible (and hopefully none at all) in an effort to end chaos and destruction.
Violence can be a solution. How effective it is depends on context and goals.
This says nothing: "There is no necessary conflict between secular and religious morality – it all depends on what the commonalities are."--In other words, when people agree, they agree. In fact, the issue is, what do we do when there is conflict about what is morally acceptable?
I imagine you'll be addressing these issues in your further comments on how you ground your moral values.
pk (anonymous profile)
May 8, 2011 at 9:01 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Thanks mtndriver!
TamHunt (anonymous profile)
May 8, 2011 at 3:21 p.m. (Suggest removal)
pk, how are Obama's actions in Afghanistan and Pakistan (not to mention Yemen and other nations where the US is actively targeting suspected terrorists, but often hitting civilians) seeking to end chaos and destruction?
It seems pretty clear to me that US foreign policy is about trying to end chaos and destruction for us here at home - clearly a good objective - but at the expense of exporting chaos and destruction elsewhere.
Even if you believe only the low estimates of civilian casualties in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, etc., Bush and Obama have been directly responsible for well over 100,000 civilians dead (the high estimates are over a million). How is this "ending chaos and destruction"? It is only through the Vietnam logic of "we had to destroy the village in order to save it" that your assertion holds.
It is an ongoing profound tragedy that Americans don't seem to give a whit about the countless civilians who die at our hands each year abroad. We, and humans in general, it seems, are unable to feel much compassion for others far removed - out of sight, out of mind, aided by a complicit media.
A foreign policy that treats crimes as crimes and not as acts of war that engulf entire nations and regions under a barrage of violence is the wise course. Obama campaigned on "ending the mentality that got us into the Iraq war." He has, instead, extended that war into Pakistan and now Libya. This is profoundly misguided.
I will indeed be laying out my further ideas on morality in later essays.
TamHunt (anonymous profile)
May 8, 2011 at 3:31 p.m. (Suggest removal)
A thought-provoking piece. Lots to agree with, disagree with, and mull over.
Ironically, I was curious to read it after watching a recent episode of SNL where Satan appears on Weekend Update and laments the death of Osama Bin Laden (for not so obvious reasons).
EastBeach (anonymous profile)
May 8, 2011 at 3:55 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Redemptive violence remains a myth. It disappoints me that we as Americans can so blithely overlook the lives we have taken while forbidding in depth camera coverage of even our own dead, much less the "others". Another question is, was it really worth a trillion dollars to "get him"? And, might OBL say "mission accomplished" if his target was the US economic hegemony/empire?
Tavis Smiley:I am certain that the world is free of another gangsta. Free of another thug. On the other hand, I’m not sure that makes us any safer.
Cornel West: Justice does not come out of the barrel of a gun. It was retaliation and revenge. Is that who we are as a people? I hope not.
ahem (anonymous profile)
May 9, 2011 at 1:58 a.m. (Suggest removal)
"Very few people take this story literally today – we are generally more sophisticated than this."
-- Tam Hunt
"...this story" is referring to satan and god.
You gotta be kidding me. Huge swaths of Americans take this crap literally. Go spend some time in the backwoods of Idaho or the swamps of Mississippi and come back to make the same assertion. Over 60% of Americans think that bin Laden is in literal hell. Don't talk to me about sophistication.
“...evil” and that there’s no easy answer as to why it persists. Actually, there is. We live in a universe that is overwhelmingly hostile to life. Where life does exist (Earth, in our present knowledge) life is tenuous, brutal and short. That this fact is labeled as "evil" does not make it any less explanatory. That is simply the nature of the universe we live in. Get over it.
While I may or may not agree with your subsequent discussion of bin Laden, your introductory paragraphs left much to be desired.
SezMe (anonymous profile)
May 9, 2011 at 2:40 a.m. (Suggest removal)
"Beware of Foreign Entanglements" -George Washington-
Washington left a lot to be desired on the issue of equal rights but he saw into the future on his military approach.
I was conditioned to believe that not voting was unpatriotic, but from the look of things, I don't see any party at this time that isn't caught up in self-righteous doctrinaire illogical nonsense.
I for one, am sick and tired of this endless war. While we can define and argue about when it all started, this theater started with the Saddam Hussein/Kuwait deal. To put that one into perspective, soldiers are fighting over there who were not even born with Saddam went into Kuwait.
As for those arguing about whether Osama is in hell, who are they to judge? I'm assuming based on the geographical location of these people that they profess Christianity; that having been said, according to the Bible, even the most depraved sinner can repent and find mercy so these people are ignorant of their own religion. (To Wit: When Jesus turned to the thief on the cross next to him and told him that he would be with him in paradise)
billclausen (anonymous profile)
May 9, 2011 at 2:58 a.m. (Suggest removal)
A great piece on the increasing disguising of the consequences and costs of war as we shift to more robotic and remote means of warfare:
http://www.creators.com/opinion/david...
A very chilling trend that harms not only our victims but also eventually will bite us in the butt (again) as our export of violence abroad finds its way back to us.
TamHunt (anonymous profile)
May 10, 2011 at 2:04 p.m. (Suggest removal)
I may be way too late to get a response, but I do agree with assessments that I read, yours and some of the responses. As I said in other comments, I think that our perceptions of reality are based on our logic, which we make-up as we go. Most people would say that the worst crime that a person could commit, and the crime that deserves the harshest punishment, would be murder. But there are exceptions to that.... we can execute someone committed of that crime, we can kill an enemy in war, there has been death in the name of God forever. We make up the rules as we go along.
Also, I am real hesitant to bring this idea up in this forum, but I'll go for it anyway. I dont think that a person can ever be evil. Even the worst cases, OBL, Hitler, or the countless others, they all felt justified. If one can justify their cause, one would consider himself right. Thats why we have exceptions to every rule, we make it all up as we go.
Thanks for the opportunity to have a say.
RLP (anonymous profile)
January 19, 2012 at 5:32 p.m. (Suggest removal)
RLP, Tam can also be reached by clicking on his by-line above and sending an email.
-- Web Admin
webadmin (webadmin)
January 19, 2012 at 5:58 p.m. (Suggest removal)