Feral Jundi

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Books: The Lucifer Effect, By Philip Zimbardo

Filed under: Books,Industry Talk,Publications — Tags: , , — Matt @ 10:36 PM

So I guess you are wondering what this might have to do with Feral Jundi?  This book is a fascinating look, at what makes good people go bad.  I was also interested in the author’s solution to protect people from going bad.  But what was most important to me, is how I could possibly use this knowledge, as it applies to the security industry and the war effort.

     I think it has everything to do with our industry, because knowing the signs and knowing the sources of what make people ‘snap’, will only help you to manage your team and your mission.  It will also help you to understand your enemy.

     Check it out, and let me know what you think.  By the way, what image did you see first in the Escher picture below?  -Head Jundi 

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Lucifer Effect

 The Lucifer Effect

By Philip Zimbardo

The Lucifer Effect raises a fundamental question about the nature of human nature: How is it possible for ordinary, average, even good people to become perpetrators of evil? In trying to understand unusual, or aberrant behavior, we often err in focusing exclusively on the inner determinants of genes, personality, and character, as we also tend to ignore what may be the critical catalyst for behavior change in the external Situation or in the System that creates and maintains such situations. I challenge readers to reflect on how well they really know themselves, and how much confidence they have in what they would or would not ever do when put into new behavioral settings.

This book is unique in many ways. It provides for the first time a detailed chronology of the transformations in human character that took place during the experiment I created that randomly assigned healthy, normal intelligent college students to play the roles of prison or guard in a projected 2 week-long study. I was forced to terminate the study after only 6 days because it went out of control, pacifists were becoming sadistic guards, and normal kids were breaking down emotionally. By telling that story in a new way, as my personal, first-person observation in the present tense, it is presented almost as a screen play filled with ever more amazing twists and turns as the situational forces are pitted against individual will to resist and the collective will to rebel against oppressive authority. In a sense, this study and how I am reporting its narrative, is a forerunner of reality TV, as we see ordinary people up close and personal day in and night out, becoming transformed into something truly disturbing. (more…)

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