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Does hate come from grief of the too much death/abandonment experience, in as much as there is that element of unknown and fear of that unknown? Does our reasoning process involving cooperation amongst others have limits when we become time constrainted and or up against something we cannot resolve in our lives? Do we then seek to even the playing field desparately seeking our own survival when we think we have a chance and fall then, prey to finger pointing for all of our human problems as a way of feeling short temporary bursts of energy from that?

2006-08-15 03:24:45 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous in Social Science Psychology

3 answers

Hate or hatred is an emotion of intense revulsion, distaste, enmity, or antipathy for a person, thing, or phenomenon. It is generally attributed to cause a desire to avoid, restrict, remove, or destroy the hated object.

Hatred can be based on fear of an object, or past negative consequences of dealing with that object. Hatred is often described as the opposite of love or friendship; others, such as Elie Wiesel, consider the opposite of love to be indifference. People may feel conflicting and complicated emotions or thoughts involving hate, such as love-hate relationship.

Often "hate" is used casually to describe things one merely dislikes, such as a particular style of architecture, a certain climate, one's job, or some particular food.

"Hate" or "hatred" is also used to describe feelings of prejudice, bigotry or condemnation (see shunning) against a person, or a group of people, such as racism, and intense religious or political prejudice. The term hate crime is used to designate crimes committed out of hatred in this sense.

Hate is often a precursor to violence. A populace is sometimes trained via political propaganda to hate some nation, faith, or political regime. Hatred remains a major motive behind armed conflicts such as war and terrorism.
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Check the wikipedia link below

2006-08-15 03:32:02 · answer #1 · answered by Starreply 6 · 2 0

Hate and abandonment are both ego issues. We are all connected, so hating another is hating yourself and feeling abandoned is a disconnection from the Source. Both feelings can also result from having unmet expectations.

Why fear the unknown? Control is only an illusion, anyhow. Are you positive the sun will rise tomorrow, and is there anything you can do about it?

Time is also an illusion formed to "order" our lives -- like that works!

As far as the finger-pointing .. who cares? If they're snarking about me, they're leaving somebody else alone!

Watch "What the Bleep do we Know" and "Down the Rabbit Hole" for a complete answer to your question.

2006-08-15 06:35:20 · answer #2 · answered by ohio healer 5 · 0 0

Hate and abandonment are two totally separate things. One can lead to the other, however, one does not have to be a part of the other. As to your Q; they arise from the human experience.

2006-08-15 03:34:50 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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