Darker side of Human Nature
I'm not sure where I should have posted this, or if there is a forum that discusses this topic already, (and please feel free to move this thread if I posted in the wrong forum) but I have a question that I was wondering if anybody could help me clarrify:
What exactly is the darker side of human nature?
We have done some work on this in class (I am a high school student currently studying Literature), but I have never really gotten an answer that I fully understand.
The teacher described it as the faults and flaws of humans, the things that are part of the human condition, and that we hide behind a facade because we don't want people to see. One of my friends described it simply as the 'bad' stuff about humans. I didn't find either of these explainations very useful (particularly the latter!) because I don't quite understand what 'the human condition' is either. Does anyone know a better way of explaining it?? It would be much appreciated!
a pessimistic way of looking at things
Quote:
Originally Posted by
laymonite
This means that, as human beings, we are born with desires for good and evil, but in order to function in society we must learn to suppress the "darker" intentions (e.g. via religion, ethics, or some other discipline...even existentialism).
I believe sadly that more people learn these darker intentions as a means to get on in society, after they advance in age, though some people can be both complicated and innocent, or in other words, baby-like throughout their life.
ya I some what agree to that
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Adagio
For me the darker side of humanity suggests a darkness in the psyche. Where the inner turmoils rage. For instance, a stranger is walking down the street - he looks pretty mundane and normal; he isn't disturbing society in any way; he is just walking to the shops; he isn't committing any acts of evil and he could even seem flawless. However, he could be struggling, psychologically, with thoughts of suicide; or he could be suffering with complex relationship issues such as a heavy break-up. This, to me, is what "the darker side" of humanity represents.
There is a wide range or literature which presents this kind of darkness. Here are some of my favourites, you should check them out:
Shakespeare's Hamlet
Keats' Ode to a Nightingale
Faulkner's As I Lay Dying
Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment
Lawrence's Sons and Lovers
ya I some what agree to that & thanks for that list of literature