Difference between revisions of "Violence"

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(See Also)
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==See Also==
 
==See Also==
* [[Unalienable rights|unalienable right]] to [[Self-defense]] via [[firearms]]: [[Second Amendment]]
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* [[Unalienable rights|Unalienable right]] to [[Self-defense]] via [[firearms]]: [[Second Amendment]]
 
* [[Murder and homosexuality]]
 
* [[Murder and homosexuality]]
 
* [[Alternatives to Violence Project]]
 
* [[Alternatives to Violence Project]]

Revision as of 05:16, December 10, 2014

Violence is physical force applied for unethical reasons such as aggression, abuse or exploitation. Its ethical opposite is self-defense or defense of another.

Virtually all moral codes forbid violence.

Most countries have laws against violence, although some governments habitually employ violence against their own citizenry. International legislation on human rights is meant to prevent this, but has proved difficult to enforce in practice.

Violence as a Sin

In Christian thought, violence can include any sin that is malicious, but does not use the human intellect. As well as direct physical violence, Dante's Inferno categorizes tyranny, suicide, self-harm, blasphemy, usury and homosexuality as forms of violence. The last three are considered the most serious forms, as the violence is directed against God or nature.

See Also


Atheism and violence: