1. EachPod
EachPod

An Analysis of Philip Zimbardo's The Lucifer Effect: Understanding How Good People Turn Evil by Alexander J. O'Connor | Audiobook

Author
hotaudiobook.com/free
Published
Tue 19 Jul 2016
Episode Link
https://mixaudio.space/tone/free/pd/Classics/An-Analysis-of-Philip-Zimbardos-The-Lucifer-Effect-Understanding-How-Good-People-Turn-Evil-Audiobook/B01INZX65Y

Listen to full audiobooks for free on :
https://hotaudiobook.com/free

Title: An Analysis of Philip Zimbardo's The Lucifer Effect: Understanding How Good People Turn Evil
Author: Alexander J. O'Connor
Narrator: Macat.com
Format: Unabridged
Length: 1 hr and 54 mins
Language: English
Release date: 07-19-16
Publisher: Macat International Limited.
Genres: Classics, Nonfiction

Summary:
Born in 1933, Philip Zimbardo is a renowned and controversial American social psychologist who is fascinated by why people can sometimes behave in awful ways. Some psychologists believe people who commit cruelty are innately evil. Zimbardo disagrees. In his 2007 book, The Lucifer Effect, he argued that it is the power of situations around us that can cause otherwise good people to commit "evil", citing many historical examples to illustrate his point.
Despite being published more than 35 years after the event, The Lucifer Effect details Zimbardo's own 1971 Stanford Prison Experiment (SPE), where ordinary volunteers playing guards in a mock prison rapidly became abusive. But he also describes the tortures committed by US Army personnel in Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison in 2003 - and how he himself testified in defense of one guard. The text has gained a lot of attention but has also caused much controversy over the ethics and methodology of the SPE as well as the truth or otherwise of Zimbardo's claims.

Contact: [email protected]

Share to: