A Discourse on the Ontology of Violence
Abstract
The sophistication and reoccurrence of violence has continued to gain increasing attention in contemporary discourse. Scholars that take interest in the study of violence have made efforts only in understanding and addressing the causes, forms, and the management mechanism. Such intellectual efforts have proved not to be sufficiently adequate as evident by the recurring decimal of violence in limitless proportion, even in places where it has been under-studied. This inadequacy has made the need for renewed interest in the study of the nature and dynamics of violence imperative. Concerned about the lack of consideration for the ontological root of violence in previous studies, this paper seeks to critically explore the ontology of violence. It aims at examining classical philosophical texts on human nature with a view to expose the ontological origin of violence and shows how such consideration is apt in the understanding, addressing, and management of violence; that is, this paper makes a case for the study of the ontology of violence as a way of addressing the lacuna currently existing in the studies on violence. Thus, it argues that this ontological study entails as a matter of necessity an understanding of human nature in relation to the subject-matter of violence. The methodology used in achieving the aim of this paper is the analytic and phenomenological approaches, that is, analysis and phenomenological examination of textual materials are employed by the study.
Keywords
References
- Addis L., (1975) The Logic of Society: A Philosophical Study. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
- Annas J. (2003) Plato: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Armstrong, J.A., (1997) “Religious Nationalism and Collective Violence” in Nations and Nationalism, 3 (4). ASEN. Pp. 597-606.
- Coffey P., (1914) Ontology or The Theory of Being: An Introduction to General Metaphysics. London: Longmans, Green and Co.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, (2016) http://www.cdc.gov/violenceprevention/youthviolence/ retrieved at 16:47 on the 18th of March.
- Dahlberg L.L, & Krug E.G. (200) “Violence: A Global Public Health Problem” in World Report on Violence and Health by Krug E.G, Dahlberg L.L, Mercy J.A, Zwi A.B, and Lozano R. (eds.). Geneva: World Health Organization. Pp. 1-21.
- Fox R. (2016) “The Human Nature of Violence”, retrieved from the website of Social Issues Research Centre http://www.sirc.org/publik/foxviolence5.html at 14:33 on the 24th of March.
- Friedman S.S (2001) “Feminism, State Fictions and Violence: Gender, Geopolitics and Trans-nationalism” in Communal/Plural, Vol. 9, No. 1. Pp. 111-129.
Details
Primary Language
Turkish
Subjects
-
Journal Section
Research Article
Authors
Olanrewaju Abdul Shıtta-bey
This is me
Lagos State University
Nigeria
Publication Date
October 30, 2016
Submission Date
July 3, 2016
Acceptance Date
-
Published in Issue
Year 2016 Number: 27
Cited By
Specific characteristics of digital violence and digital crime
Pravo - teorija i praksa
https://doi.org/10.5937/ptp2104016B