Eichmann
English
    
    Etymology
    
After Otto Adolf Eichmann (1906–1962), "the architect of the Holocaust".
Noun
    
Eichmann (plural Eichmanns)
- One who willingly participates in immoral or destructive actions without ethical qualms because the actions are acceptable to society.
-  1968, William Phillips, A sense of the present:- Hence, no special moral or political perversion is required to produce an Eichmann; it might be said that there are thousands of potential Eichmanns.
 
-  1992, Ian Shapiro, Political Criticism:- Their arguments usually involve holding variants of the claim that the life of an Eichmann or a Stalin could not have been an integrated one...
 
-  1996, Lenore Langsdorf; Stephen H Watson; E Marya Bower, Phenomenology, interpretation, and community:- One can imagine an Eichmann who was capable of questioning the meaning of this or that defense for his actions that he might give...
 
-  2004, Alan P. Lightman; Daniel R Sarewitz; Christina Desser, Living with the Genie: essays on technology and the quest for human mastery:- Does the notion of a scientific gaze and the impersonality of method allow for an Eichmann in the scientist in all of us?
 
-  2005, Sharon Ghamari-Tabrizi, The worlds of Herman Kahn: the intuitive science of thermonuclear war:- "I've been accused of playing an Eichmann-like role in supporting an evil policy."
 
 
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See also
    
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