TELEVISION

Understanding the Dark Side of Human Nature

Series: Understanding the Dark Side of Human Nature
4.3
(35)
Episodes
24
Rating
TVPG
Year
2021
Language
English

About

In Understanding the Dark Side of Human Nature, Professor Daniel Breyer takes you on a fascinating cross-cultural philosophical journey into many of the deepest, darkest questions that plague our souls. By looking carefully into these darkest aspects of ourselves and the human suffering in our world, we can better understand ourselves and appreciate our deep desire for meaning and purpose.

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Episodes

1 to 3 of 24

1. What Do We Mean by the "Dark Side"?

31m

Most of us think of ourselves as good people, and we reserve the concept of the "dark side" only for science fiction or psychopaths. But that's not really the truth of human nature. We'll begin to explore how the dark side relates both to our tendencies toward immorality and evil and to some of the most problematic aspects of the human condition.

2. Our Fundamental Nature: Good or Evil?

32m

Are people fundamentally good, fundamentally evil, or neither? To develop a sophisticated answer to this basic question, we reach back to a more than 2,000-year-old debate between great Confucian philosophers. Do you agree with optimism, pessimism, dualism, indifferentism, or individualism? Which theory of human nature speaks to you and frames your view of the world?

3. What Is Evil?

32m

You probably have some ideas about what it means to be "evil." But in order to fully examine the dark side of human nature, we need to go deeper""questioning both whether evil actually exists and what it means to call an action evil. Referencing a wide range of thinkers, some ancient, some contemporary, you'll explore the ontological and conceptual aspects of evil.

4. Moral Monsters and Evil Personhood

32m

Most of us have done something "bad" or immoral in our lives, although we wouldn't consider ourselves evil. But where exactly is that line? What does it take for us to label a person evil? By considering four models of evil (the Evildoer, Dispositional, Affect, and Moral Monster models) you'll begin to develop your own views of when an individual is, and is not, evil.

5. Evil and Responsibility

30m

Are psychopaths responsible for their actions? You might be surprised to learn that many psychologists and philosophers think they are not, due to their inability to recognize important moral facts. Guided by a variety of philosophers, you will consider how much responsibility evil-doers can and should accept for their crimes, and in what ways they might not be so different from the rest of us.

6. Sin: Original and Otherwise

34m

How would you know if you had committed a sin, and what would its consequences be? From the words of Jesus to Thomas Aquinas, Augustine, and modern theologians, you'll explore the Christian concepts of sin and how they relate to a secular notion of evil.

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