On my journey to work I read some Schopenhauer to assuage my feelings of revenge. Arthur, who himself was conned out of a considerable income, writes:
When he suffers an injustice the natural man burns with a thirst for revenge, and it has often been said that revenge is sweet.
Ah, yes, I can certainly relate to that, having been conned out of my pension pot by an unscrupulous property company.
No suffering laid upon us by chance or nature or fate is so painful as that inflicted by a will of another, Arthur continues. This is so because we recognize nature and chance as the natural primal masters of the world and we can see what nature and chance do to us they would have done to anyone else… Suffering caused by the will of another, on the other hand, includes a quite peculiar and bitter addition to the pain or injury itself, namely the consciousness of someone else’s superiority, whether in a point of strength or of cunning, together with that of one’s own impotence.
Spot on Arthur, and you can see where Nietzsche derived his ideas about power, along with much else for that matter.
Revenge boils in me, revenge broils in me. The human dimension that Arthur identifies is key – one cannot feel a burning sense of injustice from a lightening strike. Only Man can be unjust. This is why Islam’s emphasis on justice is so powerful.
Elsewhere in his Essays and Aphorisms, Arthur wryly observes that if you try to define justice, you won’t get very far:
For the concept of justice is, like that of freedom, a negative concept: its content is pure negation. The concept of injustice is the positive one… It follows that the necessity for the state ultimately depends on the acknowledged injustice of the human race…
Islam recognizes this through God’s law – Sharia – implicitly acknowledging that only God can truly arbitrate justice. This is presumably why Islam encompasses both the divine and the human realm, in contrast to Christianity, which has traditionally separated the two.
The main problem with the Islamic concept is of course God’s law is mediated through Man who, according to Arthur, is inherently unjust.
I can get where it is coming from, however. Love and forgiveness are difficult to swallow when your life savings – and your future security – have been cynically stolen.
I plot and plan. Mostly I just want to hurt the perpetrators as much as they have hurt me.
But then an image of a stage comes to mind. More than twenty years ago, bathed blood red. Its the Jacobean Revenger’s Tragedy in which almost the entire cast end up butchered, including that of the initial avenger.
An eye for an eye, Mahatma Ghandi famously remarked, leaves the whole world blind.
Arthur too saw this danger, remarking:
As every fulfilled desire reveals itself more or less as a delusion, so does that for revenge.
Arthur’s advice for life, broadly-speaking, was to adopt a kind of Buddhist detachment from the impulses that drive us and are, as he saw it, at the root of our unhappiness.
But that didn’t prevent him from being a largely successful litigant. So I will accept the inherent injustice of Man, I decide, and the ultimate emptiness of revenge, and sue.







![Validate my RSS feed [Valid RSS]](/blog/images/rssvalid.gif)
![Validate my Atom 1.0 feed [Valid Atom 1.0]](/blog/images/atomvalid.png)













