El Nephilimuna genealogía filosófica de los actos de genocidio

  1. Giraldo Sánchez, William Alberto
Supervised by:
  1. Armando Segura Naya Director

Defence university: Universidad de Granada

Fecha de defensa: 26 April 2019

Committee:
  1. Juan-Antonio Nicolás Marín Chair
  2. Pedro Francés Gómez Secretary
  3. Juan Agustín García González Committee member
  4. Urbano Ferrer Santos Committee member
  5. Jennifer Hincapié Sánchez Committee member

Type: Thesis

Abstract

ABSTRACT The genocide which throughout the twentieth century has made its appearance on repeated occasions and which has lacerated the social fabric of humanity constitutes, in every possible perspective the crime of crimes, not only because of the number of victims that this entails, but for the deep wound it produces in the collective consciousness of all those who suffer it. Understanding this phenomenon from its essence and not only from its multiple manifestations will contribute, to some extent, to its possible eradication, an eradication that in the light of our days is far from being achieved due to the lack of true political will of those who lead the institutions created to avoid it and punish it. The deep abyss into which life can fall because of the intense feeling of hatred and the excessive desire for revenge, can only be corrected on the day that each human being sees in his neighbor an end in itself and not a simple means for their egocentric aspiratons. Otherwise, we will be faced with the possibility of a Nephilim, that genocidal State that not only devours human beings but ends up devouring itself due to the effects of fear and mistrust. The understanding of the Nephilim or genocidal state -part by part as it is intended in this work- will try aims to contribute from the perspectives Hobbesian philosophy of the seventeenth century and the Freudian Psychoanalysis of the 20th century, to a consistent and structured knowledge of both its particular manifestations and of that dynamic that gives it life. Keywords: Nephilim, State, Genocide, Fear, Hate, Revenge.