Auschwitz or how good people can do evil: an ethical interpretation of the perpetrators and the victims of the Holocaust in light of the French thinker Tzvetan Todorov
TítuloAuschwitz or how good people can do evil: an ethical interpretation of the perpetrators and the victims of the Holocaust in light of the French thinker Tzvetan Todorov
Autor
Call number940.5318/0271
Número del objeto04659f
Lugar de publicaciónLanham, Maryland, United States
EditorialUniversity Press of America
Año de publicación
1997
Paginación91-118
MaterialArticle
SerieStudies in the Shoah; v.19
ISBN0761807268
NotesArticle from the book'Confronting the Holocaust: a mandate for the 21st century' pp91-118
Descripción
Explores the question of what Auschwitz can teach us about the origins of human evil. The Nazi's did not violate the social contract of their time by killing the Jews; by their participatiion, Germans did not break the law, but were obedient to it. There is a physical boundary to the amount one can kill out of hate, fanaticiasm or sadism. Goodness was not completely absent.