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  2. The Lucifer Effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Lucifer_Effect

    The Lucifer Effect: Understanding How Good People Turn Evil is a 2007 book which includes professor Philip Zimbardo's first detailed, written account of the events surrounding the 1971 Stanford prison experiment (SPE) – a prison simulation study which had to be discontinued after only six days due to several distressing outcomes and mental breaks of the participants.

  3. Is Stockholm Syndrome even real? The bizarre story behind a ...

    www.aol.com/stockholm-syndrome-got-name-why...

    Few realize that ‘Stockholm Syndrome’ is a term that was foisted on a woman by a male psychiatrist who had never met her after a Swedish bank heist worthy of a movie. Fifty years after the ...

  4. Capgras delusion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capgras_delusion

    The delusion most commonly occurs in individuals diagnosed with a psychotic disorder, usually schizophrenia, [4] but has also been seen in brain injury, [5] dementia with Lewy bodies, [6] (Such as a case of a 83 year-old woman who presented Capgras syndrome while experiencing dementia with Lewy bodies) [7] and other forms of dementia. [8]

  5. Sadistic personality disorder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sadistic_personality_disorder

    Sadistic personality disorder is an obsolete term for a proposed personality disorder defined by a pervasive pattern of sadistic and cruel behavior. People who fitted this diagnosis were thought to have a desire to control others and to have accomplished this through use of physical or emotional violence.

  6. Structural evil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structural_evil

    Structural evil or systemic evil is evil which arises from structures within human society, rather than from individual wickedness or religious conceptions such as original sin. One example of Structural evil within a society would be slavery. Structural evil arises within human societies because of the way humans act.

  7. Absence of good - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absence_of_good

    ʻAbdu'l-Bahá stated to a French Baháʼí woman: …it is possible that one thing in relation to another may be evil, and at the same time within the limits of its proper being it may not be evil. Then it is proved that there is no evil in existence; all that God created He created good. This evil is nothingness; so death is the absence of life.

  8. Stockholm syndrome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stockholm_syndrome

    Stockholm syndrome is a proposed condition or theory that tries to explain why hostages sometimes develop a psychological bond with their captors. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Stockholm syndrome is a "contested illness" due to doubts about the legitimacy of the condition.

  9. No one's sure exactly why this woman had a story to tell, because this woman lived as many as 6,000 years ago. We can still imagine her intoning scary scenes with foreign howls. A charming man's buttery voice might've won over a reluctant, longhaired princess; a beguiling forest creature's dry cackle a smoke signal for danger.