scientificamerican | Justice Antonin Scalia and Keyser Soze
agree: the greatest trick the devil could ever pull is convincing the
world he didn’t exist. Fortunately for them, the devil does not seem to
be effectively executing this plan. Some 70 percent of Americans,
according to a 2007 Gallup Poll,
believe in his existence. This personification of evil has implications
beyond the supernatural, influencing how we think about what it means
for people to be “pure evil.” And as we prepare to playfully
celebrate the wicked and depraved on Halloween night, it’s worth pausing
to reflect on some of the psychological and behavioral consequences of
these beliefs.
Evil has been defined
as taking pleasure in the intentional inflicting of harm on innocent
others, and ever since World War II social psychologists have been
fascinated by the topic. Many of the formative thinkers in the field —
Kurt Lewin, Stanley Milgram , Solomon Asch — were inspired by their
experiences with, and observations of, what appeared to most people at
the time to be the indisputable incarnation of pure evil. But what many
saw as a clear demonstration of unredeemable and deep-seated malice,
these researchers interpreted as more, in the words of Hannah Arendt, banal. From Milgram’s famous studies of obedience to Zimbardo’s prison study,
psychologists have argued for the roots of evil actions in quite
ordinary psychological causes. This grounding of evil in ordinary, as
opposed to extraordinary, phenomena have led some to describe the notion
of “pure evil” as a myth.
A misguided understanding of human nature deriving both from specific
socio-cultural traditions as well as a general tendency to understand
others’ behavior as a product solely of their essence, their soul, as
opposed to a more complicated combination of environmental and
individual forces.
The issue of whether “pure evil” exists, however, is separate from what happens to our judgments and our behavior when we believe in
its existence. It is this question to which several researchers have
recently begun to turn. How can we measure people’s belief in pure evil
(BPE) and what consequences does such a belief have on our responses to
wrong-doers?
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