Fr. 59.90

Evil in Mind - The Psychology of Harming Others

English · Hardback

New edition in preparation, currently unavailable

Description

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This book offers readers a digestible, social-scientific definition and analysis of evil in its various incarnations, including hate, sadism, and a range of harmful behaviors. By mapping out the psychological and environmental factors that amplify our propensity for hurting others, Evil in Mind offers a systematic, research-based understanding of the phenomenon of evil for an accessible and potentially transformative read.

List of contents










  • PREFACE

  • PART 1: CORE PRINCIPLES

  • Chapter 1 - What Is "Evil"

  • Chapter 2 - "Evildoers": Who (or What) Earns the Title?

  • Chapter 3 - The "Mark of Cain"

  • Chapter 4 - Becoming Evil

  • PART 2: A PANTHEON OF EVIL

  • Chapter 5 - Hate

  • Chapter 6 - Sadism

  • Chapter 7 - Serial Killers

  • Chapter 8 - Organized Evil

  • PART 3: EPILOGUE

  • Chapter 9 - "Evil" Spelled Backwards Is...?



About the author

Christopher T. Burris is a Professor of Psychology at St. Jerome's University, in the University of Waterloo, Canada. In addition to creating and teaching a course on the psychology of evil for over two decades, Dr. Burris contributes to courses in the psychologies of good, religion, and death and dying. His published research has spanned the breadth of human experience--from the self, consciousness, afterlife beliefs, atheism, and from sadism, hate, and evil to empathy. The sum of these efforts, he hopes, is to contribute to a greater understanding of some of life's big issues.

Summary

What is evil? Who does evil things? Who is evil? How do you know? Whether in response to witnessing mass suffering or feeling the sting of personal injustice, people confidently apply the "evil" label to perpetrators and the harm that they inflict, yet evil's essence remains mysterious to many.

This book offers readers an accessible, social-scientific definition and analysis of evil in its various incarnations to foster a sophisticated and self-reflective understanding of the phenomenon, departing from ghoulish or self-righteous generalizations. Part 1 explores why most of us want to be seen as good, when and why we deem something evil, and what psychological and environmental factors increase our propensity for harming others in spite of our drive for social acceptance. Part 2 presents illustrative examples of how Part 1's insights can be applied, specifically examining hate, sadism, serial killers, group-based atrocities, organizational offenses, and familial abuse. The concluding chapter amplifies and integrates the book's big themes to foster a more mindful, informed confrontation of the elusive problem we call evil.

Evil in Mind delivers a systematic, research-based psychological understanding of evil that is compact, digestible, and potentially transformative for academics, students, and educated lay readers.

Additional text

Burris presents an interesting and clearly written consideration of the concept of evil, accessible to scholars across disciplines, students, and others.

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