Imagining Evil
It is in a way easier to imagine evil actions than we often suppose, but what it is thus relatively easy to do is not what we want to understand about evil. To argue for this conclusion I distin- guish between imagining why someone did something and imagining how they could have done it, and I try t...
Main Author: | Adam Morton |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Université de Montréal
2010-05-01
|
Series: | Les Ateliers de l’Ethique |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://www.creum.umontreal.ca/IMG/pdf_03_Morton.pdf |
Similar Items
-
Imagining Others
by: Heidi L. Maibom
Published: (2010-05-01) -
Introduction : Les vertus de l’imagination
by: Christine Tappolet
Published: (2010-05-01) -
Faussetés imaginaires
by: Yvan Tétreault
Published: (2010-05-01) -
Environmental Imagination: the Constitution and Projection of a Sustainable Ethos
by: Day, Philip Garrett
Published: (2014) -
L’imagination et les biais de l’empathie
by: Morgane Paris, et al.
Published: (2010-05-01)