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Thread: Vengeance

  1. #46
    Registered User North Star's Avatar
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    Hammurabi's code was little more than institutionalized vengeance, and as far from justice as possible, e.g. an architect's family could be killed for an error he made.

    To quote Hamlet, 'Use every man after his desert, and who should scape whipping?'

  2. #47
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    True, but beside the point. The intention of the code was to end blood feuding that was causing internal weakness in the face of dangerous neighbors. My point was that Gandhi's position lacked historical perspective, not that Hammurabi's laws were humane. In fact, I don't even think I mentioned that law code. It wasn't the only or even the first attempt at a law code in Mesopotamia, contrary to what one often hears.

    Also, sorry to bump my post from the last page, but in case anyone else feels like responding:

    Quote Originally Posted by Lokasenna View Post
    Don't let the obvious troll bully you out of this conversation!
    Quote Originally Posted by Calidore View Post
    So bounty, don't give bullies power by capitulating.
    Yes, come back Bounty. You're opinion is important to us. Most of us aren't even reading the troll at this point.

    Quote Originally Posted by Lokasenna View Post
    If we all practised this, poor ol' Pike would have few people to talk to.
    Works for me. Don't feed a troll. Even giving him this much attention is too much, in my opinion. Starve narcissists of attention and they usually seek greener pastures.

    So on that note, on with the show:

    Quote Originally Posted by Lokasenna View Post
    Perhaps it’s because my usual literary stomping ground, the Old Norse sagas, are so invested in the concept of blood-feud, but I find myself increasingly convinced that taking vengeance for wrongs against oneself is not only a viable thing to do, but actually a moral prerogative. Not only should one take vengeance, but I think it is also a necessary social duty to take it.
    Thanks for starting this thread, Lokasenna. I've been reading it for the last few days and giving it some thought. Then in the evenings, I typically subject myself to the Evening News, which, when it is not about puppies being rescued from drainage pipes by children with leukemia, tends to be about the Middle East. Last night I saw a Yemenese man standing in front of a bombed out building with a discreetly positioned (from the Network's point of view) corpse of a child a few paces behind him. The man was yelling emotionally at the camera, addressing the new king of Saudi Arabia, and vowing to take his revenge. It made me wonder if he would be successful, and who would then inherit the "prerogative" of vengeance; and after that, then what?

    Then it struck me that a missing component of this conversation has been a consideration of the consequences of acting on vengeful feelings; especially in consideration of escalating cycles of revenge, perhaps in consideration of Gandhi's famous remark about an eye for an eye making the whole world blind. And even Gandhi was hardly being just, since the principle of "an eye for an eye" as originally codified in Mesopotamia was itself intended to end cycles of family blood feuding by providing a standard law.

    Don't think, by the way, that I am naive about Gandhi--I'm not. But I must say, as a middle aged Man, I have seen in even my short life a bloody cycle in which people who wanted to murder thousands in planes and buildings, motivated by a perceived prerogative for revenge; followed by a war against people who were uninvolved, hugely popular in the beginning due (whatever excuses were contrived at the time) to a perceived prerogative for vengeance for those events; followed by a radical insurgency that is presently murdering religious minorities en mass, beheading hostages with knives on Youtube, burning at least one prisoner of war alive, etc., with the foot soldiers at least motivated by the way Western treatment of Muslims has been portrayed to them; followed by what? Very likely a Shi'ite genocide against Sunni Muslims in response to the current troubles. And that, obviously, is the barest possible schematic; there are many more trajectories of perceived prerogatives for vengeance at play.

    So I guess my first question is: how much do we really want to live in 10th century Scandinavia? My second question would be something about the greater historical perspective of revanchism and the effects it had in Europe from the Napoleonic era to the Holocaust; but I'm off for a salad with hummus at the moment.
    Last edited by Pompey Bum; 04-22-2015 at 11:53 AM.

  3. #48
    confidentially pleased cacian's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Pike Bishop View Post
    Justice does not "believe" anything; it is a concept to which we choose, or choose not to, adhere. And, as I mentioned before, for many people throughout history--including today--vengeance was/is the only available mode of justice. One could not seek out a governing third party for justice for a wrongdoing suffered at the hands of a member of another tribe. And as I mentioned above, there is often no possible third party arbiter providing justice for personal wrongdoings between individuals; vengeance again is one of the only means for justice.
    do youmean to say
    there is no justice
    it does not exist which in this case i agree
    the law is a way to make money
    it is not interested in what people are or what they have to say
    it is evident to me
    can i ask who that is in your avatar picture?
    it may never try
    but when it does it sigh
    it is just that
    good
    it fly

  4. #49
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    Quote Originally Posted by cacian View Post
    do youmean to say
    there is no justice
    it does not exist which in this case i agree
    the law is a way to make money
    it is not interested in what people are or what they have to say
    it is evident to me
    can i ask who that is in your avatar picture?
    "
    No, I meant to say exactly what I said: "Justice does not "believe" anything; it is a concept to which we choose, or choose not to, adhere"...which is true. That doesn't mean it doesn't exist. It means it only materially exists if people bring it into material reality and adhere to it enough to maintain its existence.

    As to my avatar picture, it is a picture of Paul Auster, one of the best American Postmodern novelists--and best American novelists--of the last 50 years...as well as one of the best English translators of Mallarme.

  5. #50
    confidentially pleased cacian's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Pike Bishop View Post
    "
    No, I meant to say exactly what I said: "Justice does not "believe" anything; it is a concept to which we choose, or choose not to, adhere"...which is true. That doesn't mean it doesn't exist. It means it only materially exists if people bring it into material reality and adhere to it enough to maintain its existence.

    As to my avatar picture, it is a picture of Paul Auster, one of the best American Postmodern novelists--and best American novelists--of the last 50 years...as well as one of the best English translators of Mallarme.
    I am not read of him but he does look interesting.
    do you have a favourite story of him?
    it may never try
    but when it does it sigh
    it is just that
    good
    it fly

  6. #51
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    His greatest novel, New York Trilogy, is a brilliant intermingling of three novellas/short stories into one central text. If you want to try something a bit less challenging, his linear novel The Music of Chance is also brilliant. It is not quite the masterpiece New York Trilogy is, but is an elegantly written and crafted book.

  7. #52
    Registered User Iain Sparrow's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Pike Bishop View Post
    As to my avatar picture, it is a picture of Paul Auster, one of the best American Postmodern novelists--and best American novelists--of the last 50 years...as well as one of the best English translators of Mallarme.
    Best American novelists of the last 50 years?.. I enjoyed Moon Palace, but that was about it. The other book I read of his, forget the title, and a short story in either the Atlantic or perhaps The New Yorker was so emo I had to suppress my gag reflex.

  8. #53
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    Auster is definitely one of the best American novelists of the last 50 years. The New York Trilogy, The Music of Chance, In the Country of Last Things, The Book of Illusions, Oracle Night, The Brooklyn Follies, and even the lesser Moon Palace are all brilliant. Leviathan and Mr. Vertigo were solid novels as well. Judging him on the small sample you had is like condemning James for The Princess Casamassima, Faulkner for The Reivers and Soldier's Pay, and Melville for Mardi.

    You clearly have a clear idea of what constitutes the best American novelists of the last 50 years. So, what are your standards in determining who those authors are, and who do you think meets those qualifications and why? I hope you based those evaluations on more than one book and one short story you so eloquently deemed "emo"...
    Last edited by Pike Bishop; 04-22-2015 at 02:41 PM.

  9. #54
    Registered User bounty's Avatar
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    everyone---I appreciate your encouragement and invitation back, thank you...

    from ecurb: In certain cultures, vengeance can be seen the same way. It's a moral duty, restorative of justice and honor, rather than a personal vendetta.
    this is making me think of when a woman's "honor" has somehow been violated and the menfolk practice some personal justice on the perpetrator---especially as civil and criminal law doesn't touch on the issue.

    from ecurb: ...but the tradition of the Christian knight suggests they are also called upon to defend the weak from oppression....Injustice is a state of separation from God, and Christians must try to be reconciled with and one with God. Hence, they should fight injustice.
    I think this has an appeal to it, but I also know within Christian circles there are varied responses to the thought of physical confrontation (whether it be institutionalized war, or personal defense). the pacifistic religions come to mind--the quakers, Mennonites, church of the brethren, the amish.

    im reminded of Gandhi who I believe was influenced by Christ in his nonviolent/passive (and successful) resistance of british oppression in india.

    yet at the same time, there is this little story thats illustrative of the dual nature I think we have warring in us. there's a man who breaks into a quaker's house, bent on robbing it. he enters the kitchen and sees the quaker homeowner standing there with a rifle pointed at him and he says, "mister, I wouldn't harm thee for the world, but you happen to be standing right where im about to shoot my gun."

    how all that is reconciled with "pray for those who persecute you" is a toughie!

    from lokasenna: Taking personal vengeance may very well be just, but once taken I would imagine it can be harder to move to a position of forgiveness
    I think that's insightful. the very act of forgiveness means you are giving up your "right" to inflict harm on the other person for the harm he has caused you. I can see it being really difficult to whup someone and then say right at the end, "okay, now I forgive you."

    from YesNo: Vengeance seems like a perversion of defense or justice, but I am unsure where the perversion lies.
    I think lokasenna has some insight into that when he says its a refusal to defer to authority.

    from cacian: justice does not believe in vengeance taking the law to its own hand
    yes, you can indeed speak in a personification like that.

    from pompey: especially in consideration of escalating cycles of revenge
    I think this is especially true at the individual level. one wonders, short of being killed, how often the other person would say, "well, he certainly showed me what's what, I got what I deserved and I guess we'll be leaving it at that."

    from pompey: I have seen in even my short life a bloody cycle in which people who wanted to murder thousands in planes and buildings, motivated by a perceived prerogative for revenge...(and then you gave a short version of subsequent events)
    this one is a whole lot tougher I think---we might have to propose an alternate universe where we have to answer the question, what might have been the better response as opposed to "followed by a war against people who were uninvolved, hugely popular in the beginning due...to a perceived prerogative for vengeance for those events...?"

    which makes me think this though too---is there such a thing as institutional vengeance at the nation state level?

  10. #55
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    From Cacian: "justice does not believe in vengeance taking the law to its own hand."

    Quote Originally Posted by bounty View Post
    yes, you can indeed speak in a personification like that.
    You can speak in a personification about an abstract concept all you like, that doesn't change the fact "justice" is still an abstract concept which humans successfully or unsuccessfully bring into material reality. So, "justice" still doesn't believe in anything, and since nothing about the definition of "justice" inherently precludes vengeance, justice does not inherently reject vengeance and/or taking the law in one's own hand.

  11. #56
    Registered User North Star's Avatar
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    A better response would have been to hunt down those people actually responsible for the attack.

    The Lillehammer affair, and the whole Israel response to the Munich massacre is another good example of vengeance leading to plain injustice.

    In a February 2006 interview, former Mossad chief Zvi Zamir answered direct questions:

    Was there no element of vengeance in the decision to take action against the terrorists?
    "No. We were not engaged in vengeance. We are accused of having been guided by a desire for vengeance. That is nonsense. What we did was to concretely prevent in the future. We acted against those who thought that they would continue to perpetrate acts of terror. I am not saying that those who were involved in Munich were not marked for death. They definitely deserved to die. But we were not dealing with the past; we concentrated on the future."
    Did you not receive a directive from Golda Meir along the lines of 'take revenge on those responsible for Munich?
    "Golda abhorred the necessity that was imposed on us to carry out the operations. Golda never told me to 'take revenge on those who were responsible for Munich.' No one told me that."

    The Israeli mission later became known as Operation Wrath of God or Mivtza Za'am Ha'El. Reeve quotes General Aharon Yariv—who, he writes, was the general overseer of the operation—as stating that after Munich the Israeli government felt it had no alternative but to exact justice.

    We had no choice. We had to make them stop, and there was no other way ... we are not very proud about it. But it was a question of sheer necessity. We went back to the old biblical rule of an eye for an eye ... I approach these problems not from a moral point of view, but, hard as it may sound, from a cost-benefit point of view. If I'm very hard-headed, I can say, what is the political benefit in killing this person? Will it bring us nearer to peace? Will it bring us nearer to an understanding with the Palestinians or not? In most cases I don't think it will. But in the case of Black September we had no other choice and it worked. Is it morally acceptable? One can debate that question. Is it politically vital? It was.

  12. #57
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    Nobody's denying vengeance can't go wrong; it can. And hunting down those who initiated the Munich attack would have been vengeance, and justice, as well. I've only correctly claimed that much of what we consider justice does have an aspect of vengeance to it. Also, as I've said in my earlier posts, past and present tribal cultures--in all continents--only had, and some still only have, vengeance as a means of justice. When a member of one Plains Indian tribe killed a member of another one, there was no third-party governing body to administer justice. The members of the aggrieved tribe only had vengeance as a venue for justice.

    This also, as I've noted earlier, applies to justice in personal relations as well. There are few governing "bodies" ready and able to administer justice to address a wrong between two people. It usually has to come from the aggrieved party his or herself. That doesn't always require vengeance, but savvy, thoughtful vengeance in these cases can bring justice without extensive damage to either side.

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    @North: I agree, although the modern state of Israel is hardly a model for overcoming spiraling cycles of retribution.

    @Bounty: Thanks for coming back. I encourage you to continue ignoring rudeness and to enjoy talking here among friends.

    I don't really buy the presumption that the human need for revenge is categorically different from what nation states or even terrorists organization do with it. I wonder if we can agree that the hunger for vengeance is a natural to the human condition (whether we actually take revenge or not). Then we can decide if we want to fully honor what God or evolution has given us (to live in 10th century Scandinavia, as it were), or turn ourselves (if we even can) fully or in part from our "default value" and try to live in some other way. For me that is the real issue.

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    10 Best Vengeance Scenes in Film:

    1. Carrie: The prom scene
    2. The Godfather: The baptism scene
    3. Inglorious Basterds: The screening scene
    4. Hard Candy: The roof scene
    5. Unforgiven: The parlor scene
    6. Pulp Fiction: The basement scene
    7. Kill Bill 2: The trailer battle with Elle Driver
    8. The Virgin Spring: The scene where the rejuvenating spring appears
    9. Enter the Dragon: The mirror room scene where Bruce avenges his sister
    10. John Wick: The final scene where John avenges his dog

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    10 Best Vengeance Scenes in Literature and High-End Fiction:

    1. Macbeth: Where Macduff reveals he wasn't "of woman-born"...before he ices Macbeth.
    2. Hamlet: Where Hamlet--finally--kills Claudius when he realizes he's out of time
    3. Julius Caesar: Where Marc Antony delivers his brilliant funeral elegy sealing Brutus' and Cassius' fate
    4. Titus Andronicus: Where Titus serves Tamora that special pie
    5. The Libation Bearers: Where Orestes asks his existential query before dispatching his father's killer
    6. The Golden Bowl: Where Densher realizes Milly has left him all her money, leaving him eternally guilt-ridden
    7. The Cask of Amontillado: The cellar scene where Montresor proves to Fortunato he's no chump
    8. A Storm of Swords: Where The Red Viper lethally poisons the Mountain--and crows about it--before his own brutal demise
    9. The Secret Agent: Where the previously timid Mrs. Verloc repays her husband for his misuse of her brother
    10. Dolores Claiborne: Where Dolores "repays" her husband for his years of violent abuse
    Last edited by Pike Bishop; 04-25-2015 at 12:11 PM.

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