Burnest Gemingway Profile picture
Feb 15 13 tweets 2 min read Read on X
In Crime and Punishment, Fyodor Dostoevsky was not writing a crime novel in the modern sense. He was staging a moral experiment, almost a trial, asking a single, dangerous question… What happens if a human being believes they stands beyond moral law?
Dostoevsky is attacking the 19th century faith that human reason, detached from conscience, can replace moral truth. Raskolnikov’s crime is not merely murder, it is the attempt to think himself above humanity. Above the people around him
For Dostoevsky, reason can justify almost anything, yet the soul will not believe it. Raskolnikov discovers that guilt is not a social construct and conscience is not learned behavior. You can deny them intellectually, but you cannot escape them existentially. They are fatal
Raskolnikov is considered the great sufferer. They point to the fevered nights, the delirium, the guilt that gnaws at him until even the air feels accusatory. They see a man writhing under the weight of conscience and assume this is the worst fate imaginable. It is not
Raskolnikov suffers because he is still alive. His soul resists his lies. Every step away from truth tears at him and the agony proves essential, there is still a center. His suffering is violent because it is productive. It is the pain of a man being pulled back toward himself.
Svidrigailov, by contrast, hardly seems to suffer at all. He moves through life with ease, charm, and a peculiar lightness, as if nothing can truly touch him. He commits horrible acts that should shatter a human being, yet carries them as one might carry loose change.
There is no collapse, no storm of guilt
People mistake this for strength or freedom. Dostoevsky knows better Svidrigailov is not free, he is empty. Where Raskolnikov burns, Svidrigailov is nothing
Where Raskolnikov is tormented by conscience, Svidrigailov is tormented by the abyss
Raskolnikov’s suffering has direction. It presses him downward, yes, but downward toward confession, humility, and the possibility of renewal. His pain mean the moral law is still alive within him, even if it screams instead of whispers. He can still find reclamation
The wound is proof that something vital has been struck. Suffering here is not the enemy, it is proof that redemption remains possible. Svidrigailov’s condition offer no such hope. He does not wrestle with good and evil because nothing within him resists evil
Desire flickers and fades. Pleasure exhausts itself. Even fear fails to deepen into repentance. He is haunted not by guilt but by meaninglessness, and meaninglessness cannot be confessed away. There is no fire left to cauterize or cleanse. He is truly empty
His life eventually drifts toward nothing. This why Dostoevsky’s verdict is so severe and so quiet. Raskolnikov’s path is brutal, but it leads to redemption. Svidrigailov’s path is smooth, easy and it leads nowhere at all. People think suffering is agony, but agony can teach.
Raskolnikov is dragged toward life by pain. Svidrigailov slips into death by indifference. And if one must ask which man is more lost, Dostoevsky’s answer is unmistakable, not the one who suffers too much, but the one who feels nothing at all. The one who is nothing at all
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More from @Burnest137

Feb 17
In Shakespeare’s Hamlet it questions whether the ghost is real, or if revenge is justified. We mush ask the dangerous question… why does everyone in this world suddenly want the same thing, and why does it turn them hollow?
Hamlet is not a story about a prince frozen by thought, but a man drowning in borrowed desire. It’s about a kingdom where no one wants anything on their own anymore. A court infected by imitation, where violence spreads not because men are evil, but because they are mirrors.
Claudius is not a monster. Claudius kills the king not because he is uniquely wicked, but because he desires what his brother is. Power. Authority. Being The crown is not an object, it’s a reflection. Claudius wants to be his brother, and so he removes him.
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Feb 16
In Crime and Punishment Dostoevsky’s Sonya is not merely a character, but the symbol of innocence in a world of blame. Human societies stabilize themselves through scapegoating, collective violence is justified by assigning guilt to a victim whose suffering restores order.
Modern societies, do not escape this, they refine it. Dostoevsky saw Sonya as his most radical answer to it. Raskolnikov’s crime is a scapegoat act. He murders a life in the name of progress & reason, repeating the ancient sacrificial logic while believing himself enlightened.
The city, the legal system, and even the reader are tempted to accept the logic, someone must suffer so others may live. Sonya exists to expose this logic as a lie. She stands outside the economy of justification altogether. A relic of transcendence
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Feb 15
Why the Greeks? The Egyptians built for eternity and the Mesopotamians built for order, and both succeeded so completely that they froze themselves in time, a time before civilization. Stone pyramids rose to outlast memory, and clay tablets hardened law into fate.
Truth descended from gods and kings, not from argument. To question was not courage but blasphemy. These societies learned how to remember, how to obey, how to survive. What they never learned was how to revise themselves. They achieved permanence at the cost of ascent.
The Greeks arrived late and unprotected, with no rivers to guarantee harvest and no priesthood strong enough to silence doubt. What they possessed instead was a dangerous openness, a willingness to let ideas walk unarmed into the street. To argue, was to improve
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Feb 12
Karl Popper, the man who made science falsifiable. And has been lauded as one of the smartest people ever to live. The creator metaphysics and epidemiology, believed he was rescuing the West from dogma, but in truth he rescued it only from conviction when he penned Open Societies.
He mistake the excesses of certainty for the sin of belief itself, and reducing a civilization born of moral courage into a machine for endless correction. He taught that truth must always kneel before procedure, that justice is forever provincial.
But Western liberalism was never an experiment in doubt, it was inheritance forged in blood, scripture, reason, and sacrifice, a fragile synthesis of Athens and Jerusalem that dared to claim that man possesses dignity not because it worked, but because it was true.
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Feb 9
Do not ask whether God exists. Ask whether you are willing to love without question and guarantee. The answer to that question will decide everything in your life
Dostoevsky taught me that in The Brothers Karamazov, perhaps the second most important book ever put to press. He finished it in November 1880.
He died on this day in 1881, never living to see its success. He intended to write a far more enlightening, far more dangerous sequal. But his work remained unfinished. However, the cannon completely has given humanity more than any other human, barring Christ
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Feb 6
Everyone knows the story of Washington, Jefferson, Adam’s, and other prominent founding fathers, but the American revolution did not begin with them. It began with one man, one pen, and no name. Just a pamphlet, 47 pages in total. A pamphlet, that by 1776 had out sold the Bible.
His name was Thomas Paine. He was not born of greatness nor by title or protected by power, he was a poor immigrant, a failed corset maker, a man who had already lost more than he’d won, and yet he carried within him a vision so clear it terrified empires
He wrote what others whispered: that America didn’t need England to be free, that a people did not need a king. With absolute courage, he wrote knowing that words could cost him his life & treason was the price of truth, and anonymity, the only shield a common man could afford.
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