Simple. Evil is not an opposite of Good. Evil is an absence of being. Evil is a corruption of the good.
No thing is completely evil, for if it was, it would not exist at all.
That's a highly simplified assessment of good/evil. Like I said, guys like Aristotle, Plato, Thomas Aquinas, Bernard Lonergan, etc. go into much greater depth.
I really don’t see how I twisted your words. Attempting to use a foreign model to interpret Tolkien’s cosmology risks misconstruing his cosmology. It would be far better to use the models that Tolkien, himself, utilized, namely the Christian, Norse, Finnish, Anglo/Saxon, and Teutonic mythologies.
__________________
I prefer Gillaume d’Férny, connoisseur of fine fruit.
|