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2007-04-30 10:38:43 · 36 answers · asked by Banshee 7 in Arts & Humanities Philosophy

36 answers

Yes, unconditional hate is hate taken to the extreme. It is the kind of hostility that we see in crimes based on race, religion, sexual orientation, disability, ethnicity, or national origin. Thus, the term hate crimes. I believe unconditional hate, for most of us, defies logic. That's why I still have hope that unconditional love will triumph over evildoers.

2007-04-30 10:55:53 · answer #1 · answered by Beach Saint 7 · 1 0

I am not sure if you can have unconditional hate. Unconditional love is where you love someone regardless of their behaviour. Can you really hate someone even if they have done you something really good ? I would think part of you would start to like or at least tolerate that person.

Hate is generally a learnt feeling, either from parents , society or by the way a person treats you.

2007-05-01 09:04:48 · answer #2 · answered by bluegirl 3 · 1 0

Hate. Such a strong word. I suppose if you hate something then it's already unconditional.

2007-05-01 10:06:19 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Probably is such a thing as unconditional hate. But, I don't know because I don't hate anything or anyone. " JESUS CHRIST " has taught me to love everyone and everything he creatured.

2007-05-08 06:43:59 · answer #4 · answered by TAMPABAYLADY 4 · 0 0

Everybody loves, hates, likes and dislikes. It is what we are taught by generations before us and will be taught by generations that come after us. These emotions are part of our makeup, our every being, like sadness and happiness. I believe however that hate is a very strong word, i can honestly say i don't hate anyone i may dislike what they do or say. I have lived a life where people have been so spiteful towards me and mine but have always managed to rise above their imperfections and not bear a grudge. Hate is a very strong and harsh word. Take a minute and think of how many people you can say you actually hate, i can say now there is probably no-one. You just dislike what they do or say.

2007-05-07 07:58:06 · answer #5 · answered by maria g 2 · 0 0

I think there'll be if we choose to. But if we choose to forgive, there will be no such thing as unconditional hate. After all, to be forgiven by our Father, we must forgive too.

2007-05-07 01:29:18 · answer #6 · answered by Rhabdite 3 · 0 0

If love is the opposite of hatred, or to hate is to find an alternative to loving where love have gone wrong or missing into labyrinths of the mind, then what are the conditions that can be applied to love? The common thought is that love is pure and therefore is non-conditional in all its forms. If hatred is understood as an opposite to love then, unlike love, it must be conditional in all its shapes and forms.

In my personal understanding the main condition for hatred is something happening that is against a certain love in someone’s life. And that something need not be only from someone one loves but can also be from a person completely alien to the entire affair of life. For example, if someone causes hurt to someone else’s loved one, hatred would flow towards that person; but if, on the other hand, a person is betrayed by the one he or she loves than the object of love will also be the target for hatred at the same time. This is most painful experience. People often get caught up in ambivalent relationships; unable to decide whether to love or to hate they stay hanging between heaven and hell. Most often people love to hate, but very seldom will one find someone who would hate to love, but there could be few most unfortunate ones around who fall into this category.

Loving, however, is most natural to man. And love is the most expressive in its various forms in the creation of general nature. Love is the most enduring principle in human nature too, where it is from a human perspective most prominently expressive.

Few years ago I read a novel Enduring Love by Ian McEwen, where themes of similar nature have been explored. Check the following link: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0375735/

And yes, there is a thing called 'unconditional hate', as hatred is a condition on its own.

2007-05-01 05:54:06 · answer #7 · answered by Shahid 7 · 0 0

Love may be unconditional. yet whilst it relies upon on being enjoyed in return - nicely, that's a condition, somewhat? I completely love my kin, scholars, the hills and valleys the place we live and our human beings. this is my international - my life - my coronary heart - my clarification for being - this is many individual aspects making up the entire. Is that unconditional love? of direction, i will nevertheless be indignant ( my rages are in call for) or upset - it somewhat is purely on a daily basis residing. besides the indisputable fact that, in besides they do, say, experience or choose, i'm going to in no way end loving all of them. I even have in no way abandoned a single one, nor ever will. it somewhat is impossible. The poem that starts "How do i admire thee, permit me count variety the techniques" purely somewhat starts to describes my thoughts. Why else would I spend my nights with 24 finished lunatics (my kin), surrounded via a team of weirdos who manage "our foreigner" like some style of circus entertainment (my associates), and then experience a Ming dynasty motorbike contained in the bloody freezing rain 5 Km down a "highway" no longer in assessment to the Somme battlefield to preside over a herd of filthy, grimy, impolite, naughty, noisy, snotty, grasping, conniving, often times disgusting, little monsters cunningly disguised as babies ? it could no longer ALL be simply by fact of Jamesons Whiskey and Guinness ! So, logically, unconditional love isn't purely a possibility, yet is additionally certainly one of those insanity!

2016-10-04 03:58:21 · answer #8 · answered by philibert 4 · 0 0

Unfortunately I believe there is. Normally I think it's hate we inherit from those who should know better - our parents and community and it's directed at those who are different . How else could Srebenica, Darfur, Cambodia, Rwanda and even Northern Ireland hhave witnessed what they have witnessed without unconditional hate

2007-05-01 02:38:18 · answer #9 · answered by dave w 5 · 0 0

yes... when someone pushes u to the limit evil thoughts seem to appear.... unconditional hate means that when it comes to someone u despise,,,u want to see them hurt or dead by any means necessary.. this is rare,,people might dislike each other but some take it to a whole nother level..... i am a nice person.... never have i intentionally harmed anyone physically, but after i came across my old boss and the way he made me suffer, mentally, physically and emotionally, i would take a blow torch to his face any time,,,, if i heard he died today i would have no remorse of my thoughts towards him... that is unconditional hate...that i would never change my mind about him even if i was offered billions

2007-05-07 09:32:45 · answer #10 · answered by karen g 3 · 0 0

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