Are you good?
To answer this soul-searching question, you must also
require mindfulness—mindful of who you really are and what you have done to
self as well as to others, especially to those around you.
Is the nature of man inherently good or bad?
T
his is one of the most controversial questions that does
not have a definitive answer.
There are those who believe that man is created in God's
image to serve Him; if that is truly the case, man is inherently good. There
are, on the other hand, those who believe that man is inherently bad.
According to Hsun
Tzu (荀子),
a Confucian Chinese philosopher who lived approximately between 310-219 B.C.,
the nature of man is evil, and his goodness is the result of his right actions
and activities. Hsun Tzu’s explanation was that man’s innate nature is to seek
gain, which is often followed by strife and rapacity that may annihilate his
deference and compliance; man’s envy and hatred of others may obliterate his
loyalty and faithfulness; and man’s desire to gratify his five senses may
engender his own lewdness and licentiousness. This is how man may have become
bad and even evil.
According to many Western
philosophers, man from the outset is originally evil. For example, Thomas Hobbes, a 16th century English
philosopher, believed that the life of man in his natural state is “solitary,
poor, nasty, brutish, and short.” Sigmund
Freud, the famous Austrian neurologist and founding father of
psychoanalysis, also believed that man is innately evil and aggressive as
demonstrated by the fact that we are violent on criminals; but that in a
civilized society, the law is unable to prosecute the more subtle and smaller
aggression of man, which can sometimes be just as evil.
Essentially, good
and evil are only moral concepts that have coexisted since the
beginning of time; humans have been categorizing different actions and feelings
based on their own philosophical concepts. Good and evil are closely linked
together, just like the concept of yin and yang; one cannot exist without the
other, and they balance and complement each other.
Undeniably, we all have the
bright as well as the dark side of life. The Bible calls the dark side of human
nature “sin.” None of us is exempt from sin. Life is always an inner
struggle between what is perceived in an individual’s moral system as “right”
and the dark opposing force inside to do just the opposite as “wrong.” To make
matters worse, most of us are really quite good at our self-deception: either
we deceive ourselves into thinking that the dark opposing force does not exist
in ourselves, or we simply inflate our own personal virtues to overshadow the
dark force within us.
Robert Louis Stevenson, the famous Scottish
novelist, called this dark side of human nature the duality of man. In his
famous story “The Strange Case of Dr
Jekyll and Mr. Hyde,” he presented Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde both having a
dark side within them, where evil is always lurking to surface anytime. Both of
them hide their evil away, pretending it never exists. In the end, it turns out
that Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde are actually one and the same person.
No matter whether human
nature is inherently good or bad, how you view the nature of humans is
important because it shapes the way you look at life, and, more importantly, how
you live your own life.
No matter whether we were
born “good” or “bad”, we all have enough
“goodness” within us to change ourselves to become “better.”
“Evil exists to glorify the
good. Evil is negative good. It is a relative term. Evil can be transmuted into
good. What is evil to one at one time, becomes good at another time to somebody
else.” Mencius
Stephen Lau
Copyright© by Stephen Lau
No comments:
Post a Comment