M. Scott Peck distinguishes between love, laziness and evil. “There really are people and institutions made up of people, who respond
with hatred in the presence of goodness and would destroy the good
insofar as it is in their power to do so. They do this not with
conscious malice but blindly, lacking awareness of their own evil —
indeed, seeking to avoid any such awareness. As has been described of
the devil in religious literature, they hate the light and instinctively
will do anything to avoid it, including attempting to extinguish it.
They will destroy the light in their own children and in all other
beings subject to their power.
Evil people hate the light because it
reveals themselves to themselves. They hate goodness because it reveals
their badness; they hate love because it reveals their laziness. They
will destroy the light, the goodness, the love in order to avoid the
pain of such self-awareness. My second conclusion, then, is that evil is
laziness carried to its ultimate, extraordinary extreme. As I have
defined it, love is the antithesis of laziness. Ordinary laziness is a
passive failure to love. Some ordinarily lazy people may not lift a
finger to extend themselves unless they are compelled to do so. Their
being is a manifestation of nonlove; still, they are not evil.
Truly evil people, on the other hand, actively rather than passively
avoid extending themselves. They will take any action in their power to
protect their own laziness, to preserve the integrity of their sick
self. Rather than nurturing others, they will actually destroy others in
this cause. If necessary, they will even kill to escape the pain of
their own spiritual growth. As the integrity of their sick self is
threatened by the spiritual health of those around them, they will seek
by all manner of means to crush and demolish the spiritual health that
may exist near them.
I define evil, then, as the exercise of
political power — that is, the imposition of one’s will upon others by
overt or covert coercion — in order to avoid extending one’s self for
the purpose of nurturing spiritual growth. Ordinary laziness is nonlove;
evil is antilove.”
From “The People of the Lie”
M. Scott Peck
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