TY - JOUR
T1 - Bystander evil and upstander intervention: the stories of Job and Jesus
AU - Ki, Magdalen Wing-chi
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2025
PY - 2025/2/16
Y1 - 2025/2/16
N2 - Perpetrators are committed to wrongdoing due to four types of evils: individual, diabolical, superego, or institutional evil. Yet bystanders can be just as problematic. First, classic “bystander effect” is often linked to individual or ego-evil. Second, the dark side of human nature can advance bystander diabolism. Third, a law-abiding subject may be (mis)guided by their superego, taking comfort in inhuman bystander legalism. Fourth, institutional dynamics can spearhead bystander groupthink. The stories of Job and Jesus show that bystanders—whether active, passive, or interactive—often play an important role in human affairs. In the darkest hours, individuals can battle bystander evil due to their different attachment patterns and coping methods, championing upstander interventions at the individual or collective level.
AB - Perpetrators are committed to wrongdoing due to four types of evils: individual, diabolical, superego, or institutional evil. Yet bystanders can be just as problematic. First, classic “bystander effect” is often linked to individual or ego-evil. Second, the dark side of human nature can advance bystander diabolism. Third, a law-abiding subject may be (mis)guided by their superego, taking comfort in inhuman bystander legalism. Fourth, institutional dynamics can spearhead bystander groupthink. The stories of Job and Jesus show that bystanders—whether active, passive, or interactive—often play an important role in human affairs. In the darkest hours, individuals can battle bystander evil due to their different attachment patterns and coping methods, championing upstander interventions at the individual or collective level.
KW - attachment patterns
KW - bystander effect
KW - coping methods
KW - diabolism
KW - groupthink
KW - legalism
UR - https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/20503032251314468
U2 - 10.1177/20503032251314468
DO - 10.1177/20503032251314468
M3 - Journal article
SN - 2050-3032
JO - Critical Research on Religion
JF - Critical Research on Religion
ER -