I recall reading Dostoevsky's The Underground, for the first time, when i was 17,5. It made a great impression on me, although at the time i had a very different view of it than i now possess. But this thread is not so much about the book, as about a certain argument in it.
Dostoevsky mentions Plato's idea that all evil is created from ignorance of good, ie that if a person is evil, he is so because he has not known what it is to be good. Dostoevsky calls that sentence "childish naivety", and argues that one can be evil for many reasons, for example so that he can prove to himself that he can go against his morality.
At the time i first read it i tended to agree with Dostoevsky, since i too felt the pain of adolescence, and moreover thought i knew what good is, and that there is a lot of evil, and one must be evil in retaliation, or just so as to survive. That was not particularly close to Dostoevsky's argument, but i projected my own pain of the time onto the quote.
Now i am of the view that "good", while largely objective, can be defined by a moral compass, which possibly does not differ that much from individual to individual- counting out, or not counting out, pathological cases. And natural morality of this kind (not to be confused with christian morality, of which i have a similar view as Nietzsche, namely that it is a forced and artificial morality and not one which is natural for the individual) can be said, in my view, to be beneficial, if not for other reasons then because everyone seems to tend to want to be able to trust the other person, and that trust is based on the idea that that other person is something known. Now being known also goes with being good, unless one seeks pathological qualities in relations.
Dostoevsky, though, already has presented morality as important. He argued that one can be evil so as to show oneself that he has a free will, which goes beyond norms, either social, but mostly personal. In a way i think this means that he did not wish to negate morality, while being evil periodically was understood as having more freedom to act and think.
I would be interested to read your own view on this. Do you think Plato's argument was correct, or Dostoevsky's? And is the one really against the other (like Dostoevsky seems to think)?
Dostoevsky mentions Plato's idea that all evil is created from ignorance of good, ie that if a person is evil, he is so because he has not known what it is to be good. Dostoevsky calls that sentence "childish naivety", and argues that one can be evil for many reasons, for example so that he can prove to himself that he can go against his morality.
At the time i first read it i tended to agree with Dostoevsky, since i too felt the pain of adolescence, and moreover thought i knew what good is, and that there is a lot of evil, and one must be evil in retaliation, or just so as to survive. That was not particularly close to Dostoevsky's argument, but i projected my own pain of the time onto the quote.
Now i am of the view that "good", while largely objective, can be defined by a moral compass, which possibly does not differ that much from individual to individual- counting out, or not counting out, pathological cases. And natural morality of this kind (not to be confused with christian morality, of which i have a similar view as Nietzsche, namely that it is a forced and artificial morality and not one which is natural for the individual) can be said, in my view, to be beneficial, if not for other reasons then because everyone seems to tend to want to be able to trust the other person, and that trust is based on the idea that that other person is something known. Now being known also goes with being good, unless one seeks pathological qualities in relations.
Dostoevsky, though, already has presented morality as important. He argued that one can be evil so as to show oneself that he has a free will, which goes beyond norms, either social, but mostly personal. In a way i think this means that he did not wish to negate morality, while being evil periodically was understood as having more freedom to act and think.
I would be interested to read your own view on this. Do you think Plato's argument was correct, or Dostoevsky's? And is the one really against the other (like Dostoevsky seems to think)?