Abstract

Hatred is a complex and difficult thing, in life as well as in theory. Its history in Western philosophy is as long as the history of love. It begins, perhaps quite appropriately, with a warning. There is, said Socrates, nothing worse than misology, the hatred of rational argumentation. In this form (at least), hatred is a matter of pathology, an evil to be prevented at all costs. At almost the same time and in exactly the same place, Aristotle told aspiring orators how to incite hatred (misos) in an audience. What he had in mind was definitely not misology. In his Rhetoric, hatred is presented as a normal and moral emotion, a socially acknowledged antagonism toward people with a vicious character or a harmful disposition. Much later, David Hume asserted that hatred is “altogether impossible to define.” Apparently, Immanuel Kant disagreed. He clearly defined hatred as a passion. Still, he admitted that there is something particularly “deceitful and hidden” about it. In an exceptional poetic moment, he wrote that if the affect (Affekt) of anger is like water that breaks through a dam, the passion (Leidenschaft) of hatred is “like a river that digs itself deeper and deeper into its bed.” In fact, hatred has never been neatly defined or consistently categorized. Some philosophers have tried to delimit hatred by distinguishing it from anger, love, or revenge. Others have insisted on various sorts of entanglement between these same emotional phenomena. Some are preoccupied with the legitimacy of the modern criminalization of enactments of various kinds of group hatred. Others - dissatisfied with lazy notions that all hatred is a bad thing - are keen to provide “a word on behalf of good haters.” Taken as a whole, the history of views on hatred may serve to remind us that we can - and probably sometimes should - ponder what we mean when we talk about hatred. In the field of Holocaust and genocide studies, there is no shortage of reasons for such reflection. There is a sickening amount of evidence of hateful incitement in the archives on atrocity crimes, and hatred is a recurring theme in interviews and trials of perpetrators as well as in testimonies of victims and bystanders. Consider, for example, the case of Adolf Eichmann.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationEmotions and Mass Atrocity : Philosophical and Theoretical Explorations
Number of pages23
PublisherCambridge University Press
Publication date1 Jan 2018
Pages81-103
Chapter5
ISBN (Electronic) 9781316563281
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2018

Keywords

  • Faculty of Humanities
  • Hatred
  • Genocide

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Pondering Hatred'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this