I'm not sure what you're claiming here Quid...
Is it?
1. That those killing witches actually thought they were prisoners...not witches?
2. That those killing witches didn't think they were in fact, evil, and that killing them was in fact, good?
Just trying to simplify the conversation and not get bogged down in needless semantics.
That the OT has nothing to do with the origins of witch-hunting until connected to the already existing phenomenon later. The LXX translated poisoner as Pharmakos, while the Vulgate as Maleficus. The latter meant 'wrong-doer' etymologically, so the word came to be connected to the popular conception of witches. However, it was a folkloric usage, not a Biblical one, at play here.
I'd be interested in seeing that argument. You're saying that Hitler didn't see the jews and various other peoples as in fact, inferior/evil, and that eliminating them was in fact a good thing?
Not sure which Soviet killings you're referring to...so I'll wait for you to elaborate.
The Nazis were moral relativists. Their underlying philosophy was based on Schopenhauer and a bastardised form of Nietsche. They believed in Will, in creating your own morality as a Superman, in overshooting by your own power the encumbrance of herd morality that keep the strong hobbled by the weak. They were strongmen.
You see this in their speaking of the Will of the German Volk or why Leni Riefenstahl called her movie 'Triumph of the Will'.
So the Jews were seen as inferior, weaker genetically than Germans. However, they undermined German greatness by defiling the better German genes and working behind the scenes against the betterment of Germany itself, in favour of Jewry. So in their morality that prioritises the German, they were therefore fit to be destroyed. The same argument was used for genetic disease or the mentally ill. He did see them as inferior, and therefore in the created morality by will and superiority, which is beyond good and evil, they are 'evil'. They weren't seen as intrinsically evil, just intrinsically inferior, Untermenschen therefore, so the superior Germans had a right to destroy them for their own good. In that sense, they were evil.
The Communists used similar ideas, based of of Utilitarian ideas of the maximum good ultimately, ie True Communism, so breaking a few eggs before hand was 'moral'. So I was thinking of the Great Ukrainian famine, or Katyn massacre or the Gulags. The same idea was at play in the Great Leap Forward or Killing Fields of Cambodhia. It is killing a few now, so that ultimately everyone would be better of. It grew out of 19th century relativistic thought too, as Marx was a scion of, and such ideas and atrocities were almost prophetically predicted by Dostoevsky and Nietsche years before they occurred.
It certainly does make them moral realists if they view these matters of evil and good as facts external to themselves and not simply matters of their own opinion. Judging by the arguments they made for their respective atrocities...I'd say they're pretty firmly moral realists.
They are only moral realists if they think good and evil actually exist. If they think it a human convention, even if externally determinable, they are relativists. Nazis and Communists are by their own definition moral relativists.
Their reasoning is explained by moral realism....that's not the same as saying moral realism caused their actions though. I'm certain you can understand the difference.
It is not explained by Moral realism. It cannot be supported theoretically thereby. A claim that evil exists, does not mean that any application of that concept to something, was therefore a valid one. So they might be moral realists, but that is immaterial to whether they burned witches or not. As I said, moral relativists killed people just as readily, and the cause of witch-hunting was basic scapegoating, not theoretical logical reasoning. It was a visceral, tribalistic, almost unthinking response. They didn't argue witches must exist and then went off and killed them. They didn't even seek to justify the killing on a theoretical basis really, as philosophers and theologians tended to disagree as to its morality. Your contention is simply untenable.
Indeed, I'd say the vast majority of people in the world view morality from some realist position....in that morals goods and bads are facts external to themselves. The overwhelming number of atrocities committed by mankind were most likely committed by realists.
Most people are Realists, yes, as this is the obvious position. Relativists are responsible for some of the most murderous acts of the 20th century though.
A fact external to themselves does not make you a moral realist if that fact is one you pragmatically and intersubjectively agree upon with another relativist. You are confusing an ontological realism with intersubjective determination of relativism.
I'm not sure why you would think there's no such thing as "good" to a relativist.
There is in their estimation. It is just determined relatively and therefore a rape or murder could also be so construed depending on the reasoning. I however am a moral realist, so such a good I consider nothing of the sort.
Read up on your history...the church's position on slavery at the beginning of the trans Atlantic slave trade was that it was acceptable because Africans weren't christian.
Now, there's some early writings between church leaders condemning slavery...when it's being perpetrated upon Christians...but if I'm not mistaken, the church didn't officially condemn slavery in principle till the late 1800s.
Read up on your history. Many Christians such as Las Casas were opposed as the Slave Trade arose.The enslavement of Indians and importation of Africans was opposed by Jesuits and priests on the ground, but ultimately prevailed on account of economic reasons. The principle of slavery was only unequivocally condemned later, but it was considered a symptom of the fall, not fully moral. It is the same position with money or governments or labour, necessary now, but not ultimately in the original edenic program. The Church just managed to get rid of slavery. The original abolitionists were Quakers and English non-Conformists. It is not coincidence that Europe rejected slavery in favour of other forms of indentured labour, whenever it became Christianised.
The Church condemned the idea of slaves as merely property and its 'rightness' since Paul. Such luminaries as Chrysostom, Augustine and Gregory I explained how it was undesirable, but an unfortunate current state. It was the same type of thinking that had Prohibitionists try to ban alcohol or such.
I would hardly call them immaterial lol.
They are though, whether you'd call them so or not, on the question of the underlying moral acceptability of Slavery. It was the same pragmatic approach the Church took to soldiers who obviously can't turn the other cheek, though that would be the most moral position.
Anyone from any moral position could argue for capital punishment...realist or relativist. The fundamental difference between the two is that the relativist realizes his morals are his opinions...while the realist thinks himself right in fact. Nazis are rather squarely in the realist column.
Please, I'd rather not have to start posting things nazis said about the jews to prove my point. You can look these things up for yourself. They did not see these things as matters of personal opinion, but as matters of fact.
You are wrong. Read Mein Kampf. Read about Nietsche, his sister, and the Nazis. The Nazis were explicitly moral relativists by their own theories, hence the Holocaust, support for Euthanasia, etc. This is merely ignorance of history, which judging by this thread is really not your strong suit. The Jews were seen as factually inferior, but their moral destruction was predicated on ideas of a Will to Power, not a Moral Realist position.
Somatoform and Conversion disorders are the current clinical definitions in Psychiatry. Hysteria is not used for anything but the Psychological manifestations within something like a mass panic. Connecting one with the other is not based on current definitions anymore than connecting Hysteria to its old meaning of 'Uppity women' seen as mentally ill accordingly.
The point was made that witch burnings were not conducted by people of sound mind...but by those afflicted by mass hysteria. It's a psychological argument at it's core.
You've got no cause to be upset that I then referred to a psychological explanation of mass hysteria.
They were of sound mind individually. Just not of sound reasoning corporately. Someone can be beholden to a Neuroses or Personality disorder, while being of 'sound mind'. These are psychological factors like ideology, tribalism and scapegoating that came together in a poisonous brew called Witch-hunting. I agree it is a psychological argument, then why on earth do you keep referring to Psychiatric constructs like Conversion disorder? You seem very confused.
The primary difference between the two is that psychiatry is about the clinical practice and treatment of mental disorders and health in general. It has no place in the historical context of witch burnings...but is relevant if we're to discuss modern examples of mass hysteria.
That's why I posted an article from Psychology Today.
That is not the primary difference. Psychiatry is about treating neurotransmitter imbalances and so forth, via drugs, while Psychology treats via behavioural therapy and counselling and the ilk. They are both clinical disciplines, that usually have to utilise each other.
Psychiatry is very much at play historically, if you would decide the cause of something was Schizophrenia or some form of Conversion disorder. This would be diagnosing of of the history provided. You continue to seem thoroughly confused.
At what point did I bring in psychiatry?
Did you even read the credentials of the article's author?
"He holds a doctorate in sociology from James Cook University in Queensland Australia, a Masters in American sociology from the State University of New York at Albany, a Masters in Australian sociology from The Flinders University of South Australia, a BA degree in Communications from The State University of New York at Plattsburgh, and a Certificate in Radio Broadcasting from the State University of New York - Adirondack campus.
He has written on an array of topics ranging from human social and cultural diversity, to mass psychogenic illness (aka “mass hysteria”), social delusions, moral panics, fads, collective behavior, the history of tabloid journalism, history of the paranormal, popular myths and folklore."
I'd say he's rather qualified on the topic at hand, wouldn't you? The guy has basically made unusual group behaviours his body of research and work. If he's not qualified to speak intelligently on mass hysteria, then perhaps you'd like to offer up someone who you prefer?
Edit- Just because I'm a nice guy, I looked up another article detailing the psychological view of mass hysteria (you'll see it referenced multiple times)
John Waller on the mystery of mass hysteria
Here's a notable passage...
" In 1749, a contagion of squirming, screaming and trance spread through a German convent; locals inferred the work of a witch, seized a nun as a likely candidate and beheaded her in the marketplace."
So again, when historians talk about mass hysteria being connected to witch burnings, they aren't talking about the people who are killing the witches. I can understand why there might be some confusion on your part regarding this...but I hope it clears things up.
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You keep talking of Conversion disorder and somehow intimated this to be equivalent to Mass Hysteria. The former is a Psychiatric diagnosis, the latter only a current Psychological one. So you do keep on mentioning Psychiatry. This was why I supplied a medical journal article on the subject, hoping you would read and understand the differentiation currently made, but it appears it was to no avail.
The credentials of your author are a bit incongruent. He is a sociologist, which is neither a Psychiatrist nor a Psychologist. So he talks on these things from a sociological perspective, not a clinical one. So no, he is not an expert at all, but from a related field. This would be as if trusting an historian of the Economic Theory on WWII military history. He may have good insights, he is a historian, but he isn't really talking from the strength of his own subject. I think you are reading too much into what is essentially a piece of pop-journalism anyway.
As to your Nun being beheaded story - that is classic scapegoating to account for a peculiar phenomenon. That is Psychological Mass Hysteria or Panic, as with the Popish plot or McCartheyism. That it started with some form of shared Conversion symptoms is immaterial, as it was the psychological response of the townspeople we are referring to. The response to supposed conversion in this case, not the conversion itself. Witch-hunting was looking for an Other, someone to sacrifice to relieve societal pressures or stressors.
You really do not seem to understand what I or Silmarien was saying, or I must conclude you are trolling. Anyway, I have no further inclination to try and educate further, as it has become far too tedious and I am not sure if my efforts are bearing any fruit, so I bid you good day.