
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
The episode reviews Emil Ahangarzadeh's article "Thou Shalt Not Care" from The Dottore Chronicles. He satirically examines the historical manipulation of Christian doctrine, specifically the concept of empathy as a sin. The article argues that medieval clergy strategically framed feeling compassion during violence, such as the Crusades, as a transgression to circumvent guilt and ensure compliance in acts of war. This theological maneuver provided a "holy loophole" that contradicted core Christian teachings of love and kindness. Ahangarzadeh suggests this manufactured "sin of empathy" was a tool for control, enabling mass violence by suppressing natural human conscience.
https://dottore.substack.com/p/thou-shalt-not-care
The episode reviews Emil Ahangarzadeh's article "Thou Shalt Not Care" from The Dottore Chronicles. He satirically examines the historical manipulation of Christian doctrine, specifically the concept of empathy as a sin. The article argues that medieval clergy strategically framed feeling compassion during violence, such as the Crusades, as a transgression to circumvent guilt and ensure compliance in acts of war. This theological maneuver provided a "holy loophole" that contradicted core Christian teachings of love and kindness. Ahangarzadeh suggests this manufactured "sin of empathy" was a tool for control, enabling mass violence by suppressing natural human conscience.
https://dottore.substack.com/p/thou-shalt-not-care