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Redefining Reality - The Intellectual Implications of Modern Science

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has learned from the so-called barbarians; how the façade<br />

<strong>of</strong> civilization has weakened us; and how, in his position <strong>of</strong><br />

authority, he has achieved a sense <strong>of</strong> wisdom he could never<br />

have learned otherwise. But that insight into human nature<br />

discloses the savage truth lying beneath the mask <strong>of</strong> civilization,<br />

and as Kurtz dies, his last words echo the sentiments we<br />

<br />

psychology: “the horror, the horror.”<br />

<br />

Arendt, .<br />

Asch, .<br />

Conrad, Heart <strong>of</strong> Darkness.<br />

Milgram, “<strong>The</strong> Perils <strong>of</strong> Obedience.”<br />

<br />

Apocalypse Now.<br />

<br />

<strong>The</strong> Asch and Milgram experiments seem to show that humans are not<br />

purely rational but can have their actions altered by external authority<br />

<br />

would need to be put into place to defend a democratic system from<br />

these sorts <strong>of</strong> effects?<br />

Given the results <strong>of</strong> the Zimbardo Stanford prison experiment, could<br />

we ever really think <strong>of</strong> prisons as institutions dedicated at least in part<br />

to the rehabilitation <strong>of</strong> inmates, or because <strong>of</strong> the necessary power<br />

imbalance, are prisons destined to be only institutions <strong>of</strong> isolation<br />

and retribution?<br />

131

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