I always find books by psychologists and psychiatrists difficult to read.I admit to having had a less-than-ideal childhood, and although self-healing is possible such books make me think I should spend my free time in therapy rather than writing.In any case, People of the Lie is difficult in another respect as well—the labeling of evil.Peck advocated for the scientific study of evil.Good and evil, however, have generally been considered values rather than facts.Science studies the latter while religion and philosophy deal with the former.Not that lines in the sand are intended to be permanent.Still, what one person calls evil may not be what others call evil.Peck focuses primarily on narcissism and laziness as sources of evil.He may very well be right, especially with the narcissism aspect, but some of the patients he described certainly didn’t seem evil to me.
Many aspects of this book could be discussed on a blog like this.No doubt many of them will be, in sublimated form, in future posts.Books, however, are part of the context in which they’re read.In Peck’s day, the great political evil still fresh in many minds was the Vietnam War.Today’s world, however, is one where Vietnam, Watergate, and even to a great extent the tragi-comedy of the W administration have all been eclipsed.The cult of personality headed by one of the most obviously narcissistic individuals this nation has produced makes what Peck labeled “evil” seem perfectly normal.And those who have the authority to do something about it either sit idly by, or worse, use it for their own means.Roads less traveled indeed.