Mole
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- Mar 20, 2008
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We perceive by making distinctions, and the more distinctions, the more we see.
An interesting distinction is between resentment and ressentiment.
We resent an individual who has harmed us or humiliated us, while reessentiment is quite different. Ressentiment is bone marrow deep hatred that is not directed at any discrete individual, but is a global hatred, a hatred without a particular object. And being bone marrow deep it is hidden, invisible, yet conditions our very attitude to the world, ressentiment conditions how we see the world, ressentiment is epistemological.
Alice Miller says ressentiment contributed to the holocaust.
A common ressentiment is when we are dependent financially and emotionally and are full of hatred, usually hidden to preserve our security, but covertly directed at the very person we are close to and dependent on.
And being intimate with our host, we are able to wreak havoc in them emotionally and ultimately their health, all under the radar so we can't be blamed,
For "Ressentiment" by Max Scheler click Ressentiment (Scheler) - Wikipedia.
And for Alice Miller click Alice Miller (psychologist) - Wikipedia.
An interesting distinction is between resentment and ressentiment.
We resent an individual who has harmed us or humiliated us, while reessentiment is quite different. Ressentiment is bone marrow deep hatred that is not directed at any discrete individual, but is a global hatred, a hatred without a particular object. And being bone marrow deep it is hidden, invisible, yet conditions our very attitude to the world, ressentiment conditions how we see the world, ressentiment is epistemological.
Alice Miller says ressentiment contributed to the holocaust.
A common ressentiment is when we are dependent financially and emotionally and are full of hatred, usually hidden to preserve our security, but covertly directed at the very person we are close to and dependent on.
And being intimate with our host, we are able to wreak havoc in them emotionally and ultimately their health, all under the radar so we can't be blamed,
For "Ressentiment" by Max Scheler click Ressentiment (Scheler) - Wikipedia.
And for Alice Miller click Alice Miller (psychologist) - Wikipedia.