James Hillman writes: “Crooks and criminals, sadistic guards
and serial rapists—all the creatures large and small of the underworld—did
their souls descend from the lap of Necessity? Can the acorn harbor a bad seed?
Or, perhaps the criminal psychopath has no soul at all? In reply to this
question of the bad seed, a question which asks about nothing less than the
nature of evil, we shall inquire into that figure who was the ultimate criminal
psychopathic murderer of modern times, if not of all times: Adolf Hitler
(1889-1945).
“One major drawback to this concentration upon the worst is
that lesser crooks and smoother murderers slip by. By looking closely at
Hitler, we may miss the demon closer to home. Faceless corporate boards and
political administrators make decisions that wreck communities, ruin families,
and despoil nature. The successful psychopath pleases the crowd and wins
elections. The thick glass of the TV tube and its chameleon-like versatility in
displaying whatever is wanted favors distance, coldness, and the front of
charm, as do many of the sleek accouterments of high station in the political,
legal, religious, and corporate structures. Anyone who rises in a world that
worships success should be suspect, for this is an age of psychopathy.
“The habits of Hitler, reported by reliable informants and
assessed by reliable historians and biographers, give evidence of an
identification with or possession by his daimon. The principal difference
between Hitler’s possession and that of others lies in the nature of his
personality and the nature of the daimon—a bad seed in a personality that
offered no doubts and no resistance. “I go the way that Providence dictates for
me with all the assurance of a sleepwalker,” Hitler said in a speech in 1936.
“Hitler’s call gave him the self-appointed right to be a
sleepwalker outside the human world. Outside also means transcendent, where the
gods themselves live. Hitler’s certitude also confirmed his sense of always
being right, and this utter conviction utterly convinced his nation, carrying
it forward in its wrongs. Absolute certainty, utter conviction—these, then are
signs of the demonic.
“We begin to see how power corrupts as the guiding whisper
becomes a demonic voice obliterating all others. The seed comes with sure and
uncanny knowledge. But while a god is omniscient, a human becomes a
know-it-all, and so Hitler had no use for exchange with others. There was nothing
they could teach him. To show this omniscience he memorized masses of
facts—locations of regiments and reserves, displacement and armature of ships,
kinds of vehicles—all of which he used to overpower his questioners and
embarrass his commanders. This information ‘proved’ his transcendence and
disguised his lack of thought and reflection and his inability to hold a
conversation. The demonic does not engage; rather, it smothers with details and
jargon any possibility of depth.
“Our republic should learn this lesson from Hitler, for we
might one day vote into power a hero who wins a giant TV trivia contest and
educate our children to believe the Information Superhighway is the road to
knowledge. If one clue to psychopathy is a trivial mind expressing itself in
high-sounding phrases, then an education emphasizing facts rather than
thinking, and patriotic, politically or religiously correct ‘values’ rather
than critical judgment may produce a nation of achieving high school graduates
who are also psychopaths.
“The daimon’s transcendence places it outside time, which it
enters only by growing down. Hitler felt himself trapped by time. He ignored
the day’s division into light and darkness, drawing shades in daytime and
burning lights all night. The kingdom he was erecting on earth would last a
thousand years, he said and the figures with whom he identified were of another
era: Frederick the Great, Bismarck, Christ. Insomnia was one of his major
symptoms. This timelessness of the acorn and its push to make everything happen
at once indicates possession by the daimon, daimon becoming demonic. The
appreciation of everything having its season, of giving time and having time
and taking time, does not apply to the Bad Seed, which promulgates manic
inflation that brooks no interruptions (Hitler’s invention of blitzkrieg and
his fury at anything blocking his way), and that demands impulsiveness and
hurry.
“Finally, this evidence of direct demonic intrusion, perhaps
the devil himself: ‘A man in the closest daily association with Hitler gave me
this account: Hitler wakes at night with convulsive shrieks. He stood swaying
in this room, looking wildly about him. It
was he! It was he! He’s been here! he gasped. His lips were blue. Sweat
streamed down his face. Suddenly he began to reel off figures, and odd words
and broken phrases, entirely devoid of sense. It sounded horrible.’
“In the last scene of the tragedy Othello, when Iago is
revealed to be the malicious cause of murders and the destruction of Othello’s
noble and gullible character, Othello asks him: ‘Why he hath thus ensnar’d my
soul and body?’ Shakespeare has Iago reply: ‘Demand me nothing: what you know,
you know.’ These are Iago’s final words, and they leave interpreters guessing
about his motives. But this statement by one of Shakespeare’s arch villains is
not enigmatic at all. Iago says, in essence: ‘You already know, Othello. In the
lines just preceding you have already twice named me a devil.’ Iago made
tragedy out of nothing—as if sport, a game. The Bad Seed takes pleasure in
malice, enjoying destruction.
“Without a profound sense of psychopathy and a strong
conviction that the demonic is always among us—and not only in its extreme
criminal forms—we hide in denial and wide-eyed innocence, that openness which
also opens wide the gate to the worst. Again: Note how political tyranny lives
on a gullible populace, and how a gullible populace falls for tyranny.
Innocence seems to ask for evil.
“Thwarting the Bad Seed begins with a theory that gives it
full recognition. So long as our theories deny the daimon as instigator of
human personality, and instead insist upon brain construction, societal
conditions, behavioral mechanisms, genetic endowment, the daimon will not go
gently into obscurity. It drives toward the light; it will be seen; it asks for
its place in the sun.
“Above the world is where M. Scott Peck places some of his
patients who have in common a condition Peck calls ‘evil.’ He uses the term as
a diagnosis: evil basically consists in arrogant, selfish narcissism or supreme
willfulness. The rigid frame enclosing his vision does not allow Peck to see
the daimon in the demonic. A deep-seated Manichaeism divides Peck’s world into
saints and sinners, saved and damned, healthy and sick. ‘Evil is the ultimate
disease . . . the evil are the most insane of all.’ By means of a psychiatric
diagnosis the moralist can place a patient among the damned.
“A logic that so radically divides good and bad can offer
only the same old standardized recommendation we’ve heard for centuries in the
Christianized West: Fight the good fight. Peck calls it ‘combat.’ Therapists
will be in the front lines of this fight because of their capacity for and
training in love. ‘I think,” Peck asserts, ‘we can safely study and treat evil
only through the methods of love.’
Hillman responds: ‘Love’ is surely the most omnipotent word
in current usage, since the Christian God himself is defined as love. It can do
all things. I would insist, however, that it can do very little with ‘evil’
unless this ‘love’ first recognizes the soul’s call within the bad seed. Love
may be less an exercise of the will in an act of combat and more an exercise of
intellectual comprehension of that daimonic necessity that calls above and
beyond the world to the sinner as to the saint. I am claiming that the acorn
theory allows a wider comprehension of the Bad Seed than the diagnosis of evil
does.
“Prevention, as I understand it,” Hillman writes,” may
neither restrict nor admonish. It has to address the same seed, the same call, and
invoke the same invisibles that are claiming the price of life itself. The most
immediately dangerous of all invisibles is the explosive charge in the seed,
its obsessive, compelling potency, like Hitler’s raging obstinacy. Before
dismantling the bomb or isolating it in solitary confinement, we may need to
lengthen its fuse.
“Effective rituals begin as downers, with mourning. Even if
there is no remorse about vicious acts, there can be increased awareness about
the demon that prompted them. Hitler only followed the demon, never questioned
it, his mind enslaved by its imagination rather than applied to its
investigation. After the downers comes not repressions disguised as conversion
and born-again reform but that turn toward community service we can witness
every day when ex-cons take to the schools and grow down into the kids’ worlds,
explaining how the Bad Seed works, what it wants, what it costs, and how to be
smart. Mentoring juveniles as a regular repetitive service of dedication is
also a kind of ritual.
“Finally, prevention of the demonic must be based in the
invisible ground ‘above the world,’ transcending the very idea of prevention
itself. Prevention requires not combat but seduction, inviting the daimon in
the acorn to move out from the hard-shell confines of an only-bad seed, so as
to recover a fuller image of glory. For what makes the seed demonic is its
single-track obsession, its monotheistic literalism that follows one prospect
only, perverting the larger imagination of the seed toward serial reenactments
of the same act.
“My notions of ritual suggest ways of respecting the power
of the call. They suggest disciplines imbued with more-than-human values, whose
rituals will be touched by beauty, transcendence, adventure, and death. Society
must have rituals of exorcism for protecting itself from the Bad Seed. Yet we
must also have rituals of recognition that give the demonic a place—other than
prisons—as Athena found an honored place for the destructive, blood-angered
Furies in the midst of civilized Athens.
“These rituals of societal protection take the demons in.
They see the daimon in the demon. And these rituals sharply contrast with
current ideas of prevention, which, following Hitler’s own preferred methods
for purifying society, would eradicate the Bad Seed.
“Public programs are being proposed to test schoolchildren
for their ‘genetic predispositions,’ to uncover potentials for crime and
violence in terms of character traits and personality, ‘weeding out’ those who
show such factors as ‘early irritability and uncooperativeness.’ These traits
indicate not mainly crime, but that genial exceptionality on which a whole
society depends for leadership, invention, and culture. Besides, once sorted
out, on what compost heap would the weeds be thrown? Or would they merely be
‘improved” and rendered compliant by drugs to which you may not say no, or kept
in privately owned, for-profit penitentiaries exempt from labor laws and
minimum-wage scales?
“For adequate rituals we substitute rigidities and formulaic
fixes like ‘three strikes and you’re out.’ Without exorcisms that attempt to
separate the Devil and the daimon, we have only eradications that get rid of
both. Rituals not only protect society from the demonic; they also protect it
from its own paranoia, from falling prey to its own obsessive and vicious
measures of purification, that ever-present American myth: the return to
innocence in a Puritan paradise.
“Innocence is America’s mystical cloud of unknowing. We are
forgiven simply by virtue of not knowing what we do. To wrap ourselves round in
the Good—that is the American dream, leaving place for the evil nightmare only
in the ‘other,’ where it can be diagnosed, treated, prevented, and sermonized
about.”1
“A society that willfully insists upon innocence as the
noblest of virtues and worships innocence at its altars in Orlando and Anaheim
and on Sesame Street, will be unable to see any seed of any kind unless it be
sugar-coated. Like Forrest Gump eating chocolates and offering sweets to
strangers before he ever looks into their eyes, stupid is indeed as stupid
does. The idea of the Bad Seed, the idea that there is a demonic call, should
startle our native intelligence, awakening it from the innocence of our
American theories so that as a nation we can see that evil is attracted,
belongs with, innocence. Then we might finally recognize that in America,
Natural Born Killers are the secret companions of, are even prompted by,
Forrest Gumps.
“The capacity to
deny, to remain innocent, to use belief as a protection against sophistications
of every sort—intellectual, aesthetic, moral, psychological—keeps the American
character from awakening. The American character remains blind to the fact that
the virtues of mediocrity—those pieties of disciplined energy, order,
self-control, probity, and faith—are themselves messengers of the devil they
would overcome.”2
1 “A history
of this habit of the heart has been exposed by Elaine Pagels (in her important
study The Origin of Satan) as a
disastrous, perhaps ‘evil’ essential, an inherent bad seed, in Western
religious denominations, making obligatory as countermeasure their relentless
insistence on ‘love.” James Hillman, The
Soul’s Code, 247.
2 Ibid.,
214-270.