to date, ponerology will make it possible to achieve results
POLITICAL PONEROLOGY
179
which are also better than the sum of their useful effects. By
reinforcing trust in familiar moral values, it will make it possi-
ble to answer many heretofore unanswerable questions and
utilize means not used thus far, especially on a larger social
scale.
gated to use effective means for this purpose, and to use them
as skillfully as possible.88 In order to discharge this essential
function, nations obviously utilize the information available at
the time in that given civilization relating to the nature and
genesis of evil, as well as whatever means they can muster.
Society’s survival must be protected, but abuse of power and
sadistic degenerations come about all too easily.
We now have rational and moral doubts about prior genera-
tions’ comprehension and counteraction of evil. Simple obser-
vation of history justifies this. The general developing opinion
in free societies requires that evil repressing measures be hu-
manized and limited so as to set boundaries to possible abuse.
This seems to be due to the fact that morally sensitive individu-
als want to protect their personalities and those of their children
from the destructive influence conveyed by the awareness that
severe punishment, especially capital punishment, is still being
meted out.
And so it is that the methods of counteracting evil are being
mitigated in their severity, but at the same time effective meth-
ods to protect the citizenry against the birth of evil and force
are not indicated. This creates an ever-widening gap between
the need for counteraction and the means at our disposal; as a
result, many kinds of evil can develop at every social scale.
Under such circumstances, it may be understandable that some
voices clamor for a return to the old-fashioned, iron-fisted
methods so inimical to the development of human thought.
Ponerology studies the nature of evil and the complex proc-
esses of its genesis, thereby opening new ways for counteract-
ing it. It points out that evil has certain weaknesses in its struc-
ture and genesis which can be exploited to inhibit its develop-
88 Unless, of course, the government itself is the evil that threatens and har-
asses the people. [Editor’s note.]
180
PONEROLOGY
ment as well as to quickly eliminate the fruits of such devel-
opment. If the ponerogenic activity of pathological factors -
deviant individuals and their activities - is subjected to con-
scious controls of a scientific, individual, and societal nature,
we can counteract evil as effectively as by means of persistent
calls to respect moral values. The ancient method and this
completely new one can thus combine to produce results more
favorable than an arithmetic sum of the two. Ponerology also
leads to the possibilities of
of individual, societal, and macrosocial evil. This new ap-
proach ought to enable societies to feel safe again, both at the
internal level and on the scale of international threats.
Methods of counteracting evil which are conditioned upon
causation, supported by ever-increasing scientific progress, will
of course be much more complex, just as the nature and genesis
of evil are complex. Any allegedly fair relationship between a
person’s crime and the punishment meted out is a survival of
archaic thinking, something ever more difficult to comprehend.
That is why our times demand that we further develop the dis-
cipline initiated herein and undertake detailed research, espe-
cially as regards the nature of many pathological factors which
take part in ponerogenesis. An appropriately ponerological
reading of history is an essential condition for understanding
macrosocial ponerogenic phenomena whose duration exceeds
the observation possibilities of a single person. The author
utilized this method in the following chapter, reconstructing the
phase wherein characteropathic factors dominated in the initial
period of the creation of pathocracy.
In teaching us about the causes and genesis of evil, ponerol-
ogy barely addresses human guilt. Thus, it does not solve the
perennial problem of human responsibility, although it does
shed additional light from the side of causation. We become
aware of just how little we understand in this area, and how
much remains to be researched, while attempting to correct our
comprehension of the complex causation of phenomena and
acknowledging greater individual dependence upon the opera-
tion of outside factors. At that point, any moral judgment about