On a British crime drama I was watching, a detective asked a serial killer, “Don’t you have shame for what you are, and guilt for what you’ve done?” While no TV cop is expected to approach issues of shame and guilt with the sophistication of a Heidegger or Kant, his phrasing posited a shorthand distinction that doesn’t hold up.
Share this post
Shame, Guilt, and Fund Management
Share this post
On a British crime drama I was watching, a detective asked a serial killer, “Don’t you have shame for what you are, and guilt for what you’ve done?” While no TV cop is expected to approach issues of shame and guilt with the sophistication of a Heidegger or Kant, his phrasing posited a shorthand distinction that doesn’t hold up.