You’re right, and I think that the reason it’s so hard to make that point tactfully is because of how scary it is. If we go down that line of thought honestly, we can imagine ourselves firing up the ovens, or dragging manacled people into the belly of a slave ship, and feeling good about it. This is not a comfortable idea.
But there’s another, more hopeful side to this. As MartinB points out, it’s possible to understand how such monstrous acts feel to the people committing them, and train yourself to avoid making the same mistakes. This is a problem we can actually attack, as long as we can accept that our own thoughts are fallible.
(On a lighter note: how many people here regularly catch themselves using fallacious logic, and quickly correct their own thoughts? I would hope that the answer is “everyone”, or at least “almost everyone”. If you do this, then it shows that you’re already being significantly less wrong, and it should give a fair amount of protection against crazy murderous ideologies.)
You’re right, and I think that the reason it’s so hard to make that point tactfully is because of how scary it is. If we go down that line of thought honestly, we can imagine ourselves firing up the ovens, or dragging manacled people into the belly of a slave ship, and feeling good about it. This is not a comfortable idea.
But there’s another, more hopeful side to this. As MartinB points out, it’s possible to understand how such monstrous acts feel to the people committing them, and train yourself to avoid making the same mistakes. This is a problem we can actually attack, as long as we can accept that our own thoughts are fallible.
(On a lighter note: how many people here regularly catch themselves using fallacious logic, and quickly correct their own thoughts? I would hope that the answer is “everyone”, or at least “almost everyone”. If you do this, then it shows that you’re already being significantly less wrong, and it should give a fair amount of protection against crazy murderous ideologies.)