Sniffles wrote:
If all evil is learned, then where did the first evil person originate?
Thats a good point. Like someone else already said evil is subjective. One person learns killing is evil the other learns that, that person is evil (terrorists). Conflicting views and one kills another (not all killing is evil either, i.e. hunting to survive). Hunting is how they learned to kill and then they for some reason killed that other person (So many different ways, hunting accident, sacrifice, love triangle?). The killer enjoys the adrenaline rush he felt and kills another and another to get that same adrenaline rush. There is no way to know, but thats the best example I could come up with.
I look at it this way. When you are a child (when I say child I mean very young) you aren't afraid of things like spiders. People who fear dogs weren't born fearing dogs. Somewhere along their life they had a bad experience with dogs or spiders that brought life to their fear. For example, there was a psychologist who did a study where he gave a child a white rat. He would let the child play with the rat and the child was happy. Then the psychologist would make a loud noise to make the child cry. He made a loud noise every time he gave the child the white rat. After a while the child would cry whenever he was given the white rat. His fear didn't stop there, he would cry when he saw other white things, white dog, white bird, etc... I would have to assume the things people consider evil to be along the same lines.
Feep
Just because you get in a fight or steal something from someone doesn't make you evil. Humans make mistakes and fall victim to our emotions, feeling anger or jealousy doesn't make you evil. What makes you evil is enjoying hurting others or doing things you know are wrong. Hurting others just to make yourself happy. Things along those lines thats my take on evil anyway.