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This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedanta. The biblical king Solomon is said to have constructed a religious edifice nearly 3,000 years ago. Accounts of the Temple of Solomon, largely drawn from the Hebrew Bible, say that Solomon placed an object of incalculable value within a windowless room of the temple. It was the Ark of the Covenant. A wooden chest decorated with gold.
inside it were tablets given to Moses by God inscribed with the Ten Commandments. Remnants or artifacts from the temple have never been found.
About 300 years ago, the Temple of Solomon became a subject of intense interest to a gifted mathematician in England. Isaac Newton came to believe that biblical accounts of the temple contain messages and clues that could be mathematically decoded. He also felt the temple's architecture contained geometrical secrets and a blueprint of human history.
Based on his calculations and deductions, he predicted a major event in the 21st century, one that some people took to mean the end of the world as we know it.
Even as he dabbled in what would now be considered the occult, Isaac Newton also famously revolutionized our understanding of the physical world. He came up with laws of physics that are still taught in high schools today. His contributions to mathematics, especially the science of calculus, are used on a daily basis in fields as diverse as space travel and epidemiology.
How did the scientists to help us understand the law of gravity come to believe he had special powers to decode scripture? Why did one of the most influential mathematicians in history spend so many years trying to turn base metals into gold? It's easy to say Isaac Newton was being brilliant when he was inventing calculus and foolish when he dabbled in the occult. The truth was that Isaac Newton saw both of these as forms of exploration.
It's just that we know that one turned out to be right and the other turned out to be wrong. Today, we're going to tell you the story of another explorer. He was a psychologist who wanted to answer big questions. But in trying to do so, he dreamed up one of the most notorious experiments of the 20th century and inadvertently became the poster child for the human weaknesses he was trying to study. What I try to do is create evil. It's really studying evil from the inside out.
the risks of exploration and the lessons of hindsight this week on Hidden Brain.
In February 1933, shortly after Adolf Hitler was appointed Chancellor of Germany, a fire broke out in the Reichstag building, home to the German parliament. The Nazis cited the fire as proof that communists were planning a violent takeover of the country. The solution they proposed was to suspend the constitution, declare emergency rule, and bring an end to civil rights. It paved the way for Adolf Hitler to become the dictator of Germany.
A month after the Reichstag fire, a baby boy was born in the South Bronx to a family of Italian origin. My parents were second-generation Sicilian. My family background was my grandfather was a barber. My other grandfather was a shoemaker. So it was really, you know, tradespeople.
This is Philip Zimbardo. In time, he was to become one of the most influential psychologists of the 20th century, and much of his life's work would attempt to understand how Adolf Hitler and the Nazis came to transform the minds of ordinary Germans.
But in 1933, Philip's family was not thinking about Nazi Germany. It was the height of the Great Depression. In the United States, nearly a quarter of all workers were unemployed. Some people were living in shanty towns, while others were on the move desperate to find work. In addition to coming from a poor family, Philip was prone to deadly illnesses.
When I was a child, I was very sickly. In fact, I almost died from pneumonia and hooking cough at a time when there was no penicillin or sulphur drugs for contagious diseases. So I was hospitalized for six months and kids around me all died and I survived somehow. Resilience or hardiness, I'm not sure what.
Young Philip wasn't seen as resilient or hardy by the other kids in his neighborhood. They looked at this kid who had escaped a brush with death and saw a weakling, someone who could be pushed around. When I came out of the hospital because I was really sick, I used to get beaten up all the time, also because I looked Jewish.
And then I realized that the world is made up of leaders and followers, and followers are going to get beaten up. So I really, as a six, seven, 10-year-old kid, started trying to understand what was it about some kids who got to be leaders? And I think I figured out a kind of recipe. They were bigger. They were the first ones to talk up. They usually had a joke. They usually had a big, stronger guy backing them up. And they always gave the group some interesting activities.
Philip was not yet a psychologist, but already he was coming up with psychological theories about the world. In what was to become a hallmark of his future career, he came up with bold, intuitive leaps to explain the world he saw. And even as he engaged in the rights and rituals of childhood, there was always a part of his mind that played the observer, that watched himself engage in those rights and rituals.
Philip noticed there were things you had to do to become accepted into a group. In order to get into the gang, and the gang was the kids on the blog, the newest kid had to physically fight the most recent kid who was in the gang until one of you got a bloody nose. And I hated violence. I could see it's a stupidness of these kind of rituals. Philip also noticed how hierarchy worked in groups.
Some kids give orders, some kids follow orders. And I thought, you know, typically orders they follow are stupid. But once you get used to that, it becomes a habit.
If some kids were going to give stupid orders and some kids were going to follow them, Philip realized he much preferred to be in the first group. He decided he would study the tricks and techniques leaders used to get to the top. He said to work, developing those habits. But it was really structuring situations. Being the one that came up with a new idea to say, hey, marble season should be always boring. Why don't we do stick ball? So essentially, it's coming up with the idea of what to do
that other kids would say, yeah, that's interesting, let's do it. It worked. Philip shed his image as a sickly kid. He became an athlete, excelling in track, softball, and baseball. He was voted the most popular kid in his high school class.
But there was another realm where Philip realized he could not outshine the competition. That's because the competition, when it came to being the smartest kid in class, was no competition at all. A kid named Stanley had run off with those honors, and there was absolutely no catching him. He won all the medals at graduation, so obviously nobody liked him because we were all envious of him, but he was super smart and super serious.
That Stanley was Stanley Milgram, who just happened to be another famous psychologist of the 20th century. What were the odds that Stanley Milgram and Philip Zimbardo would be classmates at the same high school in the Bronx? World War II had just ended a few years earlier, and the conflict was still fresh in everyone's minds. Philip and Stanley were fascinated and horrified by the Nazi regime's ability to mobilize the German people.
Howard Adolf Hitler managed to get ordinary Germans to join in the mass extermination of millions of people.
Stanley Milgram found it unsettling how easily the Nazis managed to associate large groups of people with being inherently different and inferior. He was worried that the Holocaust could happen again in America. And everybody said, Stanley, that was Nazi Germany, that was then not that kind of people. And he would say, I'll bet they thought the same thing. And the bottom line, he says, how do you know how you would act unless you're in this situation? Because we all think we're good people.
We all think we're good people. And yet, our circumstances can prompt us to do things we might never anticipate. Philip felt that good kids were not always good, and bad kids were not always bad.
It was a situation that made them what they were. If you're middle class, you don't do things for money because your parents give you the money. And if you poor, nobody's going to give you the thing. So if you want to buy sneakers, then somebody comes on the corner and says, hey, carry this package down the other and give it to some guy named Charlie. Well, you knew it had to be something illegal because they're going to give you $10 to carrying a package on the street.
But you also knew that if you got caught, there would be consequences. And I was tempted. I could use $10. I used to work in a laundry truck delivering laundry in Harlem. I think we got $2 a day or something. So the temptation was always there.
This, of course, is the central claim of the field of social psychology. Our behavior is not just about who we are as people. It's a product of who we are as individuals and the situations in which we find ourselves. Stanley Milgram went on to become a psychologist at Yale. Philip Zimbardo became a psychologist at Stanford.
As they began their research careers, both men continued to circle the same questions they had asked one another as teenagers. Can you get good people to do terrible things? Are all humans pliable under the right conditions? Do we all have inner monsters just waiting for the right circumstances to be unleashed? Under what conditions would a person obey authority who commanded actions that went against conscience? These are exactly the questions that I wanted to investigate at Yale University.
This is Stanley Milgram in a documentary he later produced about his work. In 1961, he began a series of experiments on obedience. The experiments were set up as a way for one volunteer to help improve the memory of another volunteer. A person in the role of a learner was given a list of items they had to remember. They would then recite the list to a volunteer who was asked to play the role of teacher.
The person running the study told the teacher that every time the learner got an answer wrong, the teacher had to punish the learner by administering an electric shock.
The brilliance of the experiment is that the teacher is sitting in front of a shock box with 30 switches. The first switch is only 15 volts. When you press a button, the learner, who's in another room, experiences some minimal level of shock. And then of these 30 switches, the increment is 15 volts, 15, 30, 45%. And the person doesn't respond until it gets up to nearly 100.
But the problem is that you are now in the slippery slope down. So each increment is not noticeable from the previous. And so now when you hit 100, and the guy starts saying, hey, that really hurts, you're only slightly different from where you were. And at some point, you realize you should have stopped soon at.
We talked about this experiment at length in an episode of Hidden Brain titled, The Influence You Have. No one was actually being shocked in the experiment. The learner was actually an actor working with Stanley Milgram. But the experiment unsettled people.
That's because large numbers of volunteers who are playing the role of the teacher seem perfectly willing to administer electric shocks that were ostensibly lethal enough to kill the learner. When the psychologist later debriefed some of the volunteers, they explained why they had followed orders. Why didn't you stop anyway? I did stop, but he kept going, keep going. But why didn't you just disregard what he said? He says it's got to go on in the experiment.
Stanley Milgram's obedient studies made him famous well beyond the bounds of psychology classrooms and academic conferences. Across the country at Stanford, Philip Zimbardo was also developing the idea for a psychology experiment. It would be so audacious, so controversial, that it would generate even more shockwaves than the work of his former classmate. Business must report oral violations to the guards. Business must report oral violations to the guards.
Coming up, how Philip Zimbardo came to create the infamous Stanford Prison Experiment. You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta. It was the summer of 1971. The Vietnam War was grinding on, as were increasingly large protests against it. The New York Times had begun publishing excerpts from the Pentagon Papers. The cult leader Charles Manson was behind bars, recently convicted of first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit murder.
It was a time of disruption and unrest, a time when Americans were feeling uneasy about their leaders and their nation's role in the world. Many young people in particular had the sense that the United States had gone astray and lost its moral compass.
It was against this backdrop that Philip Simbardo put an ad in newspapers in Palo Alto, California. He was looking for male college students to volunteer for a study. It was designed to understand how the roles we play shape how we behave.
who we are is really shaped, not so much by somebody telling you what to do and not to do. It's really that we play roles. We're a student, we're a teacher, we're a worker. And those roles are always in some setting. And within those, you belong to some subgroups, you know. Initially, you're with the new workers, you're with the freshmen and so forth. And I said, so that's where we really want to study how power operates.
He started to think about various scenarios where people play highly specific roles and have varying degrees of power. I said, well, what kind of setting could we use to illustrate that? Now, you could have done a summer camp. In fact, since I did my experiment, many people written to me say, oh, my God, I was in a summer camp where the counselors were brutal guards. But I saw a prison because prisons are all about power.
Prison. What Phil had in mind was not to study how prisons operate in a state like California, but something much more audacious. He wanted to build his own prison. In the basement of Stanford University's psychology department, Phil and his colleagues created prison cells, complete with bars, each designed to hold three people. A corridor, served as the prison yard. A closet was set aside for prisoners who were to be confined to solitary confinement.
For two weeks, Phil announced, they would simulate a prison that would run 24 hours a day. Half the volunteers would play the role of prisoners, and half would play the role of prison guards.
They shifted through about 75 applications they'd received from young men who were interested in the study. It wasn't difficult to pick volunteers except for one problem. No one wanted to play the role of a prison guard. In 1971, these anti-war activists, these are civil rights activists. Everybody's got hair down to here, not only going here and nobody wanted to be a guard. Guards are pigs. I didn't go to college to become a prison guard.
Phil says the research team ended up flipping a coin to determine who would be gods and who would be prisoners. The day before the experiment began, he gathered the volunteers who had been chosen as gods for an orientation. Phil had decided that he himself would play the role of prison superintendent. An undergraduate research assistant would be the warden. Phil told the gods that they weren't allowed to physically harm the prisoners.
but they were given broad latitude to maintain order. We want them to own the prison, okay? And so what it means is we go with them to buy uniforms at Army Navy stores. They have military kind of uniforms. We give them symbols of power, handcuffs, billy clubs, whistles. And then I impose an interesting subtle piece from the movie Cool Hand Luke, namely everybody when they were in contact with the prisoners had to wear silver reflecting sunglasses.
which means that nobody can see your eyes.
I want to stop here for a moment to note how unusual all of this was, and how unthinkable it would be to run an experiment like this today. Phil did not have a host of administrators looking over his shoulder, making sure he didn't cross the line. From a scientific standpoint, he was simultaneously playing both researcher and participant. He was the prison superintendent, and also the person who was supposed to be dispassionately studying how the prison operated.
The theatricality of the experiment was no accident. Phil was an impresario, and he loved being the center of attention. One student who took an introductory psychology class at Stanford in the 1970s told me that Phil showed up on the first day wearing a long black cape. The professor stood before the slack jawed students, swept his cape 360 degrees around him like a magician, and entoned, Welcome to Psychology.
Others remembered Phil would wear that cloak on his travels, including when he went through airports. With his piercing eyes and flamboyant style, I bet he looked every part the wizard. To make the drama really pop for his prison experiment, Phil even involved the Palo Alto Police Department. Again, zero chance this happens today.
I recruited the Palo Alto police department, the real police department, to make simulated arrests, to go to each kid's place, ask for the name of the kid, and then give them their Miranda rights. You have a right to remain silent, right for Loya, and then bring them down to where the squad cars with lights flashing, lean them against the car, handcuff them, give them the rights again, and get neighbors and everybody's looking around.
The police then took the students to the real police station to be fingerprinted and have their mugshots taken. They then put a blindfold on them and had them wait in a cell.
If all of this wasn't bad enough, what happened next was truly shocking. Then my graduate students came, took the prison, put them in their car, took them down to our prison, and they stripped them naked. And when they take off the blindfold, the kid is standing naked, and all the guards are around, laughing, mocking him, and say, welcome to the Stanford jail.
The prisoners were given smocks and flip-flops. They were each assigned numbers that were sewn onto their clothing. And they all had an iron chain and a lock on one ankle that was there all the time. And instead of cutting their hair, they wore women's nylon stocking caps. So it's really de-individuation, de-humanization.
By the end of the first day, the experiment wasn't going as Phil thought it would. He briefly considered shutting it down, not because he had qualms about what he had put his volunteers through, but because the young men playing the role of guards refused to embrace their roles.
The kids playing the role of guards just felt awkward. In fact, you can hear. We videotaped a lot of it. And they say, come on, you guys, stop laughing. This is serious business. Everybody can take it seriously. So let's hear everyone say, Mr. Correctional Officer, I feel fine. Mr. Correctional Officer, I feel fine.
Phil decided to keep the experiment going. Early in the morning on day two, the prisoners revolted after being woken by guards blasting whistles and ordering them out of their cells for drugs.
They ripped off the stocking caps. They ripped off the numbers. They barricaded themselves in this cell. And then they made a huge mistake. They started ridiculing the guards. Like, you little punk when I got, I'm going to kick your butt. And suddenly, the guards come to me and say, what are we going to do? I said, it's your prison. What do you want to do? They said, we need reinforcements. So it means there are three guards in the morning strip. They call in all the other guards. The guards meet. They have a meeting. They say, OK, we've got to treat force with force. So they break down the doors. They drag the prisoners out. They strip them all naked.
They put the ring leaders of the rebellion in solitary confinement. Suddenly, they say, these are dangerous prisoners. These are dangerous prisoners.
That's the switch. They're no longer college students like you. And everyone knows they're college students. So now they are dangerous prisoners. And what do you do with dangerous prisoners? You have to teach them that they have no power. They have minus power. Because the potential for rebellion is always there. And this is true of real guards and real prisons.
How do you convey to prisoners that you hold all the power and they hold none? So in every way and every day you have to suppress their freedom, suppress their likelihood to rebel. And you had to demonstrate mostly by doing arbitrary, stupid things that you had power. So you tell a joke and they laugh, you punish them. They tell a joke and they don't laugh, you punish them. So you create a totally arbitrary environment where prisoners have no idea what to do.
Years later, Phil would be called in to help understand the behavior of U.S. guards at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. Young American service members sadistically humiliated Iraqi prisoners and pretended they were going to electrocute them. They stripped prisoners naked, threatened them with snarling dogs, and laughed and took photos as prisoners screamed in terror.
At the Stanford prison, some prisoners were denied bathroom breaks and were forced to use buckets as toilets. And then punishment is usually just pushups, jumping jacks, but then it escalates and it always escalates as we saw in our grave toward the sexual. So the guards say, you're Frankenstein, you're Mrs. Frankenstein, walk like Frankenstein, I can hug them, say I love you.
And then little things like this, or your female camels, your male camels, bend over, now hump them. So it's a play on words. And it's simulating sodomy and an experiment with college students. Now some of this I didn't see because the experiment's going on 24 hours a day. And most of the things, the worst things happen at night. The guards separated their captives into good prisoners and bad prisoners. Those who were compliant and those who rebelled.
Presidents must report all rule violations to the guards. Presidents must report all rule violations to the guard. Presidents must report all rule violations to the guard. If you obey any of the above rules may result in punishment.
As the days passed, a few prisoners requested to be released from the experiment and were allowed to leave. On the third day of the experiment, those who remained were allowed short visits from parents and friends. Two days later, in the evening, another visitor came to the jail, a graduate student named Christina Maslak.
She was also a failed girlfriend. What she saw appalled her. She sees something which from her point of view is unimaginable that should happen anywhere. Unimaginable should happen in an experiment. Namely, guards are cursing and screaming and pushing prisoners. Prisoners have bags over their head that are shuffling their legs at chains, like a chain gang. It's like you see in pictures of the South in Louisiana prisons.
And I'm looking at this and literally I have 8 o'clock breakfast, 10 o'clock parole board hearing, 12 o'clock and it's 10 o'clock and it simply says, toilet run.
What Christina saw as a dehumanizing abuse of power fell in his role as prison superintendent saw as a toilet run. In other words, it was simply time to check off an item on his bureaucratic to-do list. I look up and I put a check mark. So what I'm saying is nothing more than an administrative check mark. So I am now in the mentality
of a prison superintendent, which is the mentality of an administrator. And she's looking at this as a person with feelings. She had been a student. She's about to be a professor. And she sees this as horrific.
Kristina started to cry and fled outside with Phil at her heels. Now we're standing outside in the fresh air. It's now 11 o'clock at night or 10.30 at night in front of the psychology building. And she's saying, how could you see what I see and not get upset? And I'm saying, what do you see? It's the dynamics of human nature.
It's the power of the situation. I'm giving all the psychological jargon, and she's giving me the humanity of the situation. Boys are suffering. They're not prisoners. That's what she's saying. They're not prisoners. They're guards. They're boys. And you are responsible. How could you allow this to happen?
They stood there in the California night and a gulf grew between them. She says, I don't understand. I know you from an other situation. You're a caring, loving professor. You love students, students love you. How could you see this?
There's this chasm between us. I'm over here in Norway and we're looking at the same thing and we see two totally different worlds. And then she says, I'm not sure I want to continue my relationship with you. If this is the real you, I thought you was someone else when I started dating you and I don't know who this is. So that's the ultimate power of a situation to transform. She's looking at me and she knew me for a number of years as a professor there. And she's looking at me, I don't know who you are.
And really what she's saying, do you know who you are? And the answer is no. That this is what I had become is abhorrent. I mean, I fight authoritarianism. I fight, you know, I'm as liberal as most people get. I'm anti-authoritarian, anti-control, anti-structural, all these things. And that's where I became. I mean, I became my worst inner enemy. And at that point, I just stopped. I mean, I think it's when she said, I'm not sure when I continue my relationship. It was like a double slap in the face.
I said, oh my God, what's happened to me? It was really like, she should have just shook me and said, wake up. He had the dreamers over, the game is over. In a theatrical irony, even he could not have devised, Phil had demonstrated in his own behavior what he hoped his experiment would demonstrate to others.
He had become so caught up in the roles he was playing, the swashbuckling scientist, the prison superintendent, the high wizard of psychology that he had lost track of his own values. Six days after it started, the Stanford prison experiment was over.
But before the volunteers could leave, Phil interviewed them.
What do we learn from this? We learn about the power of the situation. We learn to be aware of how easy each of us he gets seduced into a role. He followed up again weeks later with the volunteers and asked the prisoners if they thought they would have behaved like the guards, if the roles had been reversed.
They said, I know, I probably would have played by the rules, but I would not have been as creative. That the worst guards were the ones who clearly went beyond the rules. That is, it was clear what you had to do to be a guard. And it was going beyond the boundary of your role.
that in every role is a moral latitude. And clearly, some guards went beyond it. You could say, do 10 push-ups, do 10 more. But then they tell somebody to sit on your back when you're doing push. That's going beyond the thing. To tell somebody to kiss the other guy as the bride of Frankenstein. That's being creatively evil. So again, most of the prisoners said, I'm either. I'm not sure what I would do. But I would be a guard who played by the rules and not develop new rules.
Phil's study sparked intense public interest and criticism, both of which have continued to this day. For starters, there was the inhumane treatment of the volunteers playing the role of prisoners, the decision to strip them naked, the physical punishments and verbal abuse, the restricted access to toilet facilities. Both the Stanford Prison Experiment and Stanley Milgram's obedient studies prompted universities to create more rigorous review processes before green-lighting experiments,
I think it's impossible any review board at any major university today would green light a study like the Stanford Prison Experiment.
In addition to the ethical concerns, scholars have also criticized the experiment as bad science or not really science at all. Some have argued that the gods were essentially primed to be abusive. As Phil noted earlier, the gods were given to understand the prison was theirs and that they should do what was needed to maintain order. They were arguably being nudged to amp up their behavior to please the researchers. Remember how Phil almost shut the experiment down the first day because nothing much was happening?
The guards may well have picked up on that. A possibility confirmed recently by volunteer Dave Eshelman, who played a guard known for being particularly aggressive to the prisoners. He was interviewed for a documentary film titled The Stanford Prison Experiment, Unlocking the Truth.
Dave says he thought the experiment was designed to show that prisons were terrible. He believed his role was to provide proof. Proof that prisons are an evil environment. Given the times and given the fact we were students and very anti-establishment, we would have done anything to prove that this prison system was an evil institution. We were happy to play that role.
For his part, Phil Zimbardo continued to defend the Stanford Prison Experiment for the rest of his very long career. He felt the question he was trying to answer was a vital one, and the best way to do so was to see how people responded to a situation in the real world, in real time, rather than creating an abstract scenario in which they imagined how they might respond.
All of that research in a way really is trying to answer the question from childhood, what makes good people do bad things. And my focus has always been on trying to understand how situations shape us, mold us, and corrupt us. So starting with an evil orientation, what I try to do is create evil.
It's really studying evil from the inside out. Theologians, poets, dramatists, sociologists, criminologists have studied evil. But they've studied evil in place. So what I try to do this unique is create it. You see the process of transformation. You see people who start off on day one, normal, healthy. You put them in, and then you see the divergent. The role becomes the person. And you play a character, and then it becomes your identity.
Over the years, Phil went on to work on other topics. For a time, he was president of the American Psychological Association. Around 2010, I remember attending a talk he gave at a psychology conference. The line of young scholars who waited to shake his hand afterwards stretched the length of a very long ballroom. Phil Zimbardo died in October 2024. He was 91 years old.
When we come back, the larger lessons of the Stanford Prison Experiment. You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta. This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
In 2004, after the horrific abuses that Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison came to light, American leaders like President George W. Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Richard Myers said that the servicemen and women who had perpetrated the abuses were just bad apples.
The lawyer for one of the servicemen got in touch with Phil Zimbardo.
And I was the first to say, I want to believe our American soldiers are good. They're not bad apples, as Cheney and Rumsfeld and Bush and General Myers say, I believe they were good apples when they got there. And somebody put them in a very bad barrel. And that barrel looks exactly like the prison study. So I got to know really everything there is to know that I'm a great.
The more Phil read about the abuses in the prison, the greater the parallels he saw with a Stanford prison experiment. It told him, notwithstanding all his errors and misjudgments, the study had been on to something really important. The only abuses happened in that prison on the night shift. None happened on a day shift.
And it turns out, in Abu Ghraib, part of the unit was the center of interrogation. So you have military intelligence with its set of interrogators interrogating. Now, they're not getting any information. For the millionaires called actionable intelligence, because what happened was when the insurgency broke out, the military was caught blind. They had no idea that was going to happen.
So they started resting all men and boys around explosion. So they had no information. But now they're interrogating them and they're getting nothing. So military intelligence goes to the head of military police and says, we need your guys to help us. They got to prepare the prisons for interrogation, break them, take the gloves out, all these euphemism. And so when we interrogate them, they're going to spill the beans.
Much like in the Stanford Prison Experiment, the young guards in Abu Ghraib received the message that their prisoners needed to be humiliated and brought to heel. At Stanford, those messages implicitly came from Phil himself. In Iraq, they came from senior officers and in the name of national security and patriotism.
And then in three months, no senior officer ever goes down to the dungeon to see what's happening. So this gives them complete liberty to reproduce the Stanford Prison Study in spades, namely to do whatever you want. The guards were not part of the interrogation team. They were simply humiliating, tormenting the prisoners to break their will. So this is the clearest situational variable. They give guards total power with no oversight, recipe for abuse.
And in fact, what they said was, every time an explosion goes off and one of your buddies dies, his blood is on your hands explicitly. So it's not like these guys, not like these guys were getting off on a torture. Essentially, it's you are part of our national security realm. And if you remember, you know, in the war, it was everybody is for us or against us. So really, if you don't do this, you know, your suspect.
Once the sides were clearly drawn and marked, once the stakes of doing their jobs were laid out, Phil says the situation came to shape the behavior of Chip Frederick and the other young guards. So the guards got sucked in, but then as we said earlier, it's now the night shift. So the big, the biggest contributor evil is boredom. And so you're bored, you have 12 hours to kill and places fill with stress and danger. And the only play things are prisoners.
And most of prison is already naked, and it's never been the case we have female guards with naked prisoners. Again, for Muslims, you never show yourself naked in front of a woman. And so the sexual agenda is there. I mean, it's just boiling over. And it only goes down. It gets worse and worse and worse. So the images, the dozen images that were shown on television are almost the least objectionable. The others are even worse.
When I interviewed Phil in April 2013, he told me he continued to be fascinated by the idea that ordinary people could turn into monsters. He had published a book called The Lucifer Effect, Understanding How Good People Turn Evil.
Sitting across from me at a studio at NPR, Phil cited the words of the historian and philosopher, Hannah Arendt, about the Nazi leader Adolf Eichmann. Hannah Arendt, and trying to understand Eichmann, this brutal killer, coined the term the banality of evil, meaning this guy looks like your uncle Charlie. I mean, the phrase is he was terrifyingly normal.
Phil told me he had started to ask himself a new question. If circumstances and situations could turn people bad, couldn't different circumstances and situations turn people good? And I said, well, isn't that true? If we flip it, isn't there the banality of heroes? That most heroes are ordinary people, everyday people. They do little things each day that we never know about unless they live in a major media city and somebody has to make a videotape. Then I started thinking of heroic things that I knew people did.
And then I said, gee, now we should celebrate heroism more than we do. Well, the problem is with a lot of the stuff on heroes, it really made them seem extra special. These are male warriors, Agamemnon, Achilles, Samurai. And there's almost no research on heroism.
Phil started working in high schools, helping students understand the steps that lead people to betray their values and how they could stand up to injustice. We started developing classroom modules, which first started off by saying, be aware of the power of the dark side. So we teach you about the prison study, the messages of a Milgram study. We show videos of a woman lying on a subway station and Liverpool station in London.
In five minutes, the little clock is going, 35 people pass right by or nobody stops. Questions, what's wrong? Are these bad people? And so the kids say we would help. Well, what's the difference between you sitting here and people there? And they come up with situational differences. And then we teach them these lessons, the bison effect, prejudice, discrimination. We get the college kids that teach high school kids, high school kids that teach middle school kids.
It offsets all the evil I've done. It's been really enriching.
In 1492, Christopher Columbus set sail from Spain in search of the great continent of Asia. He figured he needed to go west. Some of his misjudgment was based on erroneous maps and miscalculations about the size of the earth, and some of it was simple overconfidence. Convinced he was on the right track, Christopher Columbus sailed across the Atlantic Ocean. When he landed in the Bahamas, he believed he had found Asia.
He labeled the people of the region, Indians. He kept going, believing he would soon stumble on China and Japan. In the centuries that followed his voyage, hundreds of cartographers and historians corrected his numerous mistakes. They mapped the Americas, documenting the lives of the indigenous people who had lived there for centuries, and the many harms that European visitors had done to these native groups.
Where the Italian explorer was all swashbuckling daring do, they were careful and prized accuracy. In every era, there are people like Christopher Columbus. They are the heroes and villains of our history books, the bulls in our China shops. They leap before they look. They take a grand or outlandish idea and run with it. They go out on limbs in pursuit of their ambitions. Sometimes they change the world for the better.
Sometimes, they're a disaster, a cautionary tale for the rest of us. Cartographers, by contrast, are careful, detail-oriented. They are the ones who pressure test the claims of the explorers, the ones who develop the detailed maps of the new worlds the explorers have haphazardly sketched for us. Cartographers often roll their eyes at the antics of explorers.
Phil Zimbardo was an explorer. He wanted to answer a big question and make a splash while doing it. The pull of big, provocative ideas was irresistible to him and his work continues to provoke conversations about the nature of good and evil.
But in his zeal to explore these big ideas, he was also reckless. He overlooked details and cut corners in the way he constructed his most famous experiment. He wrote roughshod over the safety and concerns of the young volunteers who were ostensibly in his care. And yet, it is also true that he generated enormous public interest in psychology.
In the late 1990s, when the internet was still in its infancy, I remember running a Google search for Stanford. I wanted to look up the university directory for an expert I needed to interview. But the first result that popped up on my screen was not for the university. It was a link to the Stanford prison experiment. Phil helped his colleagues see that questions of morality were not merely philosophical questions, but scientific questions.
The field of moral psychology is an extraordinarily robust area of study today. Phil also helped the gender public recognize the value of psychology in answering some of the most pressing questions of our time. When we see genocides and mass murder around the world today, when we see human beings dehumanize one another, many of us no longer look for religious or theological explanations.
We too ask ourselves the question that a boy once asked himself at a high school in the Bronx. What is it that prompts good people to do evil things?
Hidden Brain is produced by Hidden Brain Media. Our audio production team includes Annie Murphy-Paul, Kristen Wong, Laura Quirrell, Ryan Katz, Autumn Barnes, Andrew Chadwick, and Nick Woodbury. Tara Boyle is our executive producer. I'm Hidden Brain's executive editor. If you love our show, please help to support it. Join our podcast subscription, Hidden Brain Plus, for ideas and interviews you won't hear anywhere else.
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