The Mirror's Edge: Why Humanity's Greatest Paradox Demands Our Awakening

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Název: The Mirror's Edge: Why Humanity's Greatest Paradox Demands Our Awakening
Autoři: Tan, Kwan Hong
Informace o vydavateli: Zenodo, 2025.
Rok vydání: 2025
Témata: evolutionary mismatch, Developmental psychology, Cognitive Neuroscience, Cognitive Neuroscience/economics, moral complexity, Contemporary philosophy, Cognitive Science/education, existential anxiety, Philosophy, ethics and religion, empathy paradox, Social psychology, Ethnic Violence/ethics, Cognitive Science/history, technological empathy gap, Modern philosophy, consciousness burden, Psychology, Cognitive Science/ethics, Cognitive Neuroscience/education, Ethics, Neurosciences/classification, FOS: Clinical medicine, compassion ethics, Ethnic Cleansing/ethics, Neurosciences, Cognitive neuroscience, human cruelty, Neurosciences/ethics, meaning-making, Moral Psychology, FOS: Philosophy, ethics and religion, FOS: Psychology, Cognitive Neuroscience/ethics, Philosophy, Political philosophy, moral psychology, Cognitive Science
Popis: Prologue: The Question That Haunts Us In the depths of a concentration camp, a Nazi guard forces a Jewish professor to scrub the streets with his bare hands while crowds gather to watch and laugh. The guard knows—with crystalline clarity—that this man before him is a human being capable of shame, dignity, and profound suffering. The guard understands that the professor once taught students, loved his family, and dreamed of a better world. It is precisely because the guard recognizes this humanity that the act becomes so exquisitely cruel. This scene, documented by historian Timothy Snyder, reveals a truth so disturbing that we have spent decades trying to explain it away. We tell ourselves that cruelty stems from ignorance, from failing to see others as human. We construct elaborate theories about dehumanization, believing that if we could just help people recognize the humanity in others, cruelty would vanish like morning mist. We are wrong. The truth is far more unsettling, far more complex, and ultimately far more hopeful than we have dared to imagine. Human cruelty is not the absence of empathy—it is empathy's dark twin, born from the same neurological systems that allow us to love, to care, and to sacrifice for others. Understanding this paradox is not merely an academic exercise. It is the key to humanity's survival in an age where our capacity for harm grows exponentially while our capacity for empathy remains trapped in the evolutionary past. This is the story of humanity's greatest paradox: how the same species that created art, music, philosophy, and medicine also perfected genocide, torture, and systematic oppression. It is the story of why technological advancement and intellectual progress have not eliminated cruelty but have instead given it new forms and unprecedented reach. Most importantly, it is a call to awakening—a recognition that understanding the true nature of cruelty is the first step toward transcending it.
Druh dokumentu: Book
Jazyk: English
DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.17122675
DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.17122674
Rights: CC BY
Přístupové číslo: edsair.doi.dedup.....24cf00f8944c7bff2e5dea8fa5c1fe76
Databáze: OpenAIRE
Popis
Abstrakt:Prologue: The Question That Haunts Us In the depths of a concentration camp, a Nazi guard forces a Jewish professor to scrub the streets with his bare hands while crowds gather to watch and laugh. The guard knows—with crystalline clarity—that this man before him is a human being capable of shame, dignity, and profound suffering. The guard understands that the professor once taught students, loved his family, and dreamed of a better world. It is precisely because the guard recognizes this humanity that the act becomes so exquisitely cruel. This scene, documented by historian Timothy Snyder, reveals a truth so disturbing that we have spent decades trying to explain it away. We tell ourselves that cruelty stems from ignorance, from failing to see others as human. We construct elaborate theories about dehumanization, believing that if we could just help people recognize the humanity in others, cruelty would vanish like morning mist. We are wrong. The truth is far more unsettling, far more complex, and ultimately far more hopeful than we have dared to imagine. Human cruelty is not the absence of empathy—it is empathy's dark twin, born from the same neurological systems that allow us to love, to care, and to sacrifice for others. Understanding this paradox is not merely an academic exercise. It is the key to humanity's survival in an age where our capacity for harm grows exponentially while our capacity for empathy remains trapped in the evolutionary past. This is the story of humanity's greatest paradox: how the same species that created art, music, philosophy, and medicine also perfected genocide, torture, and systematic oppression. It is the story of why technological advancement and intellectual progress have not eliminated cruelty but have instead given it new forms and unprecedented reach. Most importantly, it is a call to awakening—a recognition that understanding the true nature of cruelty is the first step toward transcending it.
DOI:10.5281/zenodo.17122675