The Necessary Devil
There is a tension running through civilization that never disappears.
On one side stands order: limits, continuity, obedience, moral restraint, the attempt to stabilize life against chaos and excess.
On the other side stands something more dangerous: ambition, restlessness, curiosity, creative aggression, the refusal to remain within inherited boundaries.
Civilization itself seems to emerge from the unstable interaction between these forces.
Without order, societies disintegrate. Without transgression, they stagnate.
This tension appears repeatedly in Western mythology. Prometheus steals fire from the gods. Lucifer rebels against heaven. Faust reaches beyond permitted knowledge. Icarus flies too close to the sun.
These are not merely stories about evil. They are recognitions that the same force capable of elevating humanity is also capable of destroying it.
The fire-bringer is always dangerous.
And yet without such figures, civilization itself would likely never have advanced beyond survival.