Starts from “Why do they hate me?”, and then grows into “Why can’t they give me another chance?” and ends up with “I will take revenge!” that is how humans’ hatred toward other person caused him/her to do evils. When humans start to think about taking revenge, they will think of the worst thing they can do to those who they want to take revenge to, and there is a possibility that they want to kill them too. Imagine how if everyone in this world has that kind of feeling, the world will be in chaos. Of course no one wants to have a chaotic world to live in, so how can we make a peaceful world? As social beings, humans’ hearts, minds and attitudes are affected by how other people feel and act toward them. Humans tend to do and feel the same …show more content…
The other effect is when someone is loved she/he will feel happy, and the happiness makes humans healthy (The Holy Bible, Proverbs 17:22). The most important effect is that love can change other people into better people that can lead into a better world. All of you should know that love’s enemy is hatred. When love gives so many benefits, hatred gives bad results. One of the different results is love makes peace while hatred can cause a war. All people should know the fact that hating other people is bad, but why many people still hate each other? To love others is not a piece of cake, before humans can love others they need to love themselves, and before they can love themselves rightly they should love God (Matthew 22:37-39). Therefore, the key of loving others is by loving God wholly. In the novel Les Miserables, Jean Valjean who loves Cossette and Javert who hates Jean Valjean give a good example to explain about the different result between love and hate. Jean Valjean got happiness from loving Cossette (Hugo, page 332), while Javert could not feel peace and ended up committing suicide (Hugo, page 284). Jean Valjean used to be a man who was filled with hatred, so he kept stealing and did bad things. But after he was changed by love he tried as good as he can to help people around him and he also quoted “… Love each other dearly always. There is scarcely anything else in the world but that: to love one
The word revenge is heard all over the news today. The news shows how people are trying to get revenge such as terrorist groups or individuals harming each other. However, even though the use of the word is frequent, not everyone has a clear understanding of what revenge clearly means. Revenge is defined as someone taking action to harm someone who has done something wrong to that certain person. Bryce Nelson the author of Revenge: Sweet, Universal and Self-Destructive: [Home Edition] stated: “As the victim contemplates revenge, he hopes desperately to overcome his feelings of impotence and to regain his former sense of self-worth” (Nelson 1). This article demonstrated how revenge was human nature by showing an example of someone getting revenge. The examples are demonstrated in definitions, characteristics, stories, and real-life events.
If one hates someone or something that means they have an intense dislike towards them. Sometimes this hate can be so large it can be an influence for mass destruction. We have learned, or even have seen examples of hate turning into something bigger throughout our history. These examples include the multiple wars, terrorist’s attacks, and genocides. Many of these incidents were drove by hate, and did not end well. What drives this hate? How can people turn on one another with just feeling hate towards them? The Holocaust being one of the many genocides in our history was indeed influenced by an intense dislike. That intense dislike was towards certain types of people it ended up taking multiple lives.
As Martin Luther King Jr. once said, “The old law of ‘an eye for an eye’ leaves everybody blind.” By this, King is implying that revenge does not solve any issues, but instead affects multiple people who are involved in a conflict. Revenge is defined as the act of harming someone for any aggression towards another. “The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet,” written by William Shakespeare, gives an excellent example that the thirst for vengeance can ruin everyone who is connected. Some examples of the play are Romeo and Tybalt, whose actions caused them to meet an unfaithful end. Their actions, which were guided by hatred, not only affected them, but both of their families. Romeo and Tybalt’s actions show that revenge itself can lead to great losses,
Revenge is the act of doing something to hurt someone because that person did something that hurt them. People have been getting revenge on others for thousands of years. People usually get revenge to regain power because when someone wrongs them they feel like power has been taken from them. Sometimes people like to go outside of the law to get revenge. This is because they feel like the law is not enough to give the person who wronged them the right amount of punishment for what they have done. “Daddy” by Sylvia Plath, “Sweat” by Zora Neale Hurston, and “Cask of the Amontillado” by Edgar Allen Poe all show the things they or their characters would do to get revenge on the person that wronged them and the different ways they did it.
The theme hate is present in all the stories that we read this semester. Every story has an overwhelming amount of hatred, all hatred of another race. There is no other reason for the hatred other than the race they are. The goal they have is to mock or hurt or kill the others for being exactly who they are, and they can’t help it. I will talk about all the stories we learned about in this class and how this theme made it the book that it is.
Hell has been described in many different texts, all explaining how Hell may be organized. There have been many examples in the Bible, myths, folktales, and music through out time. One example in particular is in Dante's, The Inferno, where hell is described as having many layers, which are categorized by individual sins, such as thievery, and are punished for an eternity. In Dante's model, more sin centered, a soul would be sent to a certain layer of hell for one sin that he had committed. However, perhaps a more personalized Hell, sinner-centered, that deals with each sinner individually for each sin committed and its severity, would allow for people to be punished more effectively.
The single most destructive force in this world is revenge. An immense amount of wars, murders, division, and hatred is due to the evil that is revenge. There are many famous forms of literature that discuss revenge. One is “Of Revenge” by Sir Francis Bacon. In this essay Bacon explains the evil of revenge and why it shouldn’t be taken. Also, down-playing revenge, Robert Kennedy gave a speech called “A Eulogy for Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.” Immediately following the death of Dr. King, Kennedy pleads with the African American community and America to forgive this offense instead of taking revenge for King’s murder. The final piece of media that discusses revenge does it in a different manor. Edgar Allen Poe writes about revenge in a short story called “The Cask of Amontillado.” The plot of this story is that of a man named Montresor desperately seeks revenge upon a colleague and eventually murders him by trapping him in catacombs deep underground. No matter what the circumstances, revenge should never be taken because men become controlled and destroyed by revenge, and revenge creates division among people.
No emotion has such universal meaning as love. It is an integral part of the human condition. Love is the basis for by which all other emotions can be gauged. Friendship and even grief are steeped in love. Love is so central to our lives that it is fitting and proper that it should be the topic of so much discussion. Every culture and every writer has some commentary or evaluation of love. The New Testament has its share of love commentary. The entire basis of the Christian tradition is God's love for humanity. "God so loved the world that he gave his only Son." (John 3:6) Jesus preached a great deal about love of neighbor, love of God and even love of enemies. (Matt 5:44) Shakespeare's Biblical knowledge is well known and he
For instance like the saying “an eye for an eye”, If someone killed your child, what is your first reaction? It is to get revenge right? But getting revenge on someone is not the way to go. Revenge serves no justice at all. By choosing to go with revenge all you are doing is making matters worse, revenge does not solve anything, but can cause a never ending act of violence and revenge being committed.
Although revenge is ultimately a choice, it is still human instinct to tend towards getting some form of revenge. This is because people need to get back at the offender, get excited when thinking about revenge, and want to bring order to society. Revenge is naturally something that occurs
In Mark Mathabane’s “The Cycle of Revenge Can Be Broken” he thinks that hatred can be overcome by humanity. I agree to some extent because some hatred can not be overcome depending on the severity.
Love far exceeds any type of hate in the world. As the world grows and evolves, hatred becomes more prominent and those who hate grow in numbers. People are judged by every part of their existence if they try to be unique and go against the normal grain of society. As the world accepts different sexualities and races, more people emerge with views against these people. When someone is unhappy with themself and their state in life, they try to bring content people down to their level. Hate can easily be ignored in a peaceful state of mind, while love will always be in the back of a person’s mind. In the end, none of these hate filled actions deter people from expressing themselves and who they are or what they believe in. Wars never end, as
Some argue that vengeance educates people on what they shouldn’t do. In the play “The Tempest” written by William Shakespeare, he talks about Prospero trying to get revenge on everyone who did him wrong by the end
Every human being desires revenge against societal norms. When looking through the lens of sexism, gender roles and villainization of women, it is clear why the human desire for revenge is present a person's nature. Revenge is not just a trait found in women. Revenge is fundamental to human nature. No matter how bad a situation is there is always a way out -- just don't resort to
“Only the dead have seen the end of war.”- Plato. Plato was a philosopher in Classical Greece and the founder of the Academy in Athens, the first institution of higher learning in the Western world. War is nothing new, throughout history we have experienced over hundreds of wars with more in the future. For every war requires soldiers to fight for what they believe in. In most cases the soldiers are on a mission to fight the enemy for their country. Fighting is common between individuals because conflict is inevitable. It can try to be avoided, but as a nation, we can never eliminate it.The way to manage conflict and reduce the damage is less hate and more love. The overall goal of the soldiers is to fight for the interest of the country which is not peace but power. The power is sent to bring peace, once everyone is continent peace will appear. Conflict exists because there is always someone to fight, whether that be in gang or drug wars, or more importantly with politics and war between nations. There will always be a fight to win what someone wants, which can flare war.