0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Aren't emotions little more that a package of preconditioned reactions (part habitual conditioning, part instinct) that form a particular pattern that we class together as an emotion?
Many people say that hate is just a higher form of dislike, some say it is impossible to realy hate someone. I think you have to be in a situation or have a series of events happen to truely know hate and all other emotions.In a time when we are supposed to be calmer and more intouch with our feelings, we are supposed to be a nicer society. I think this is all part of "the plan" to make us more submissive, can you realy hate? Oh yes.
Do we teach our young to hate? I hear kids spew out all the time "I hate you!" I don't recall many people going around screaming I hate you and I am sure it happens...but kids tend to use that phrase more.
Well don't you need love, to know what hate is? If there isn't love, you wouldn't be able to compare to something, thus you wouldn't realise what hate was!And it is vice versa. You need hate to be able to love. If you didn't hate, you wouldn't have anything to compare, to make it feel like love! Comprendo? HeeheeIt's a bit like Yin-Yang!! Evil - Kind.. Dark - Light.. Black - White.
Oh wait sorry.. I may have gone a bit off track!
I do not see hate as an extension of dislike, and I think it often has more to do with fear. Detestation is extreme dislike, but hate is something else.You don't need to destroy someone or something that you merely dislike, or even detest them; you simply avoid them. You do need to destroy that which you fear. To hate someone, you usually fear they are out to destroy you, which you fear, and so need to destroy them.It is true that the alienation that starts with dislike or detestation can develop into distrust, which them develops into fear and hatred; so dislike may be a seed that creates an environment for the fear that leads to hatred, but I don't think you can have true hatred without that element of fear.
I have never thought anyone was out to destroy me, but i do know hate.
Quote from: paul.fr on 23/05/2007 09:35:54I have never thought anyone was out to destroy me, but i do know hate.There you have an advantage over me, if advantage it be, because I cannot feel that I can rightly say I have ever hated anybody.
I agree in part, George. Some hatred does need or stem from fear, but it can also be straightforward hatred nothing to do with fear. The fear factor would only come in to play if you thought someone was out to destroy you, like you said.
OK, I would ask the following:Is the hatred returned in kind, or is it unrequited?
Secondly, does the hatred include an element to desire harm upon the person (I don't mean that you have serious criminal intents upon them, only that if you had the opportunity to cause some slight harm, or to undermine them in some small way, would you do so)? Do you believe that they, whether you feel they hate you or not, would choose to undermine you in any way?
I should add that hatred can be a habitual thing, where a past fear was converted into hatred, and lingered as such even when the thing you once feared no longer gives rational reason to be feared, but the memory of that fear still lingers.