
Political Or Social Groups Wanting To Commit Mass Murder On The Basis Of Racial, Ethnic Or Religious Differences Are Never Hindered By A Lack Of Willing Executioners. In Becoming Evil, Social Psychologist James Waller Uncovers The Internal And External Factors That Can Lead Ordinary People To Commit Extraordinary Acts Of Evil. Waller Debunks The Common Explanations For Genocide- Group Think, Psychopathology, Unique Cultures- And Offers A More Sophisticated And Comprehensive Psychological View Of How Anyone Can Potentially Participate In Heinous Crimes Against Humanity. He Outlines The Evolutionary Forces That Shape Human Nature, The Individual Dispositions That Are More Likely To Engage In Acts Of Evil, And The Context Of Cruelty In Which These Extraordinary Acts Can Emerge. Illustrative Eyewitness Accounts Are Presented At The End Of Each Chapter. An Important New Look At How Evil Develops, Becoming Evil Will Help Us Understand Such Tragedies As The Holocaust And Recent Terrorist Events. Waller Argues That By Becoming More Aware Of The Things That Lead To Extraordinary Evil, We Will Be Less Likely To Be Surprised By It And Less Likely To Be Unwitting Accomplices Through Our Passivity.
This book investigates the psychological and social mechanisms that enable ordinary individuals to participate in acts of mass violence and genocide. James E. Waller, a social psychologist, synthesizes research from evolutionary biology, personality psychology, and sociology to challenge simplistic explanations for human cruelty. He argues that genocide is not the result of psychopathology or unique cultural defects, but rather a potentiality inherent in human nature when specific individual dispositions intersect with extreme situational contexts.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts in the field of genocide studies and social psychology frequently cite this work as a foundational text for understanding the behavioral precursors to mass violence. Readers often note that while the subject matter is dense and challenging, the author's clinical approach provides a clear and accessible framework for analyzing complex human behaviors.
Page Count:
336
Publication Date:
2002-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190287527
ISBN-13:
9780190287528
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