Evil: Inside Human Violence And Cruelty · Extended

This is "evil" as a means to an end. It isn’t about hate; it’s about utility. If someone stands between a perpetrator and a desired resource (money, power, territory), violence is used as a tool to remove the obstacle.

If the potential for violence is baked into human nature, why isn't the world in constant chaos? The answer lies in . Most humans have aggressive impulses, but we have developed internal and social brakes to hold them back. Cruelty often erupts not because a person suddenly "becomes evil," but because their self-control is exhausted, bypassed by ideology, or dissolved by the anonymity of a crowd. Conclusion Evil: Inside Human Violence and Cruelty

Most people view evil through a stereotypical lens: the perpetrator is a sadistic monster who enjoys inflicting pain on innocent victims for no reason. Baumeister argues this myth is a dangerous comfort. By labeling others as "monsters," we distance ourselves from the capacity for harm. In reality, most perpetrators do not see themselves as villains; they see themselves as victims, heroes, or practical actors solving a problem. The Four Roots of Evil This is "evil" as a means to an end