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Julia Shaw: Criminal Psychology of Murder, Serial Killers, Memory & Sex | Lex Fridman Podcast #483

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- We all have the capacity to kill people and murder people and do other terrible

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things. The question is why we don't do those things rather than why we

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do those things quite often. Most men have fantasized about killing someone, about

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70% in two studies, and most women as well.

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More than 50% of women have fantasized about killing somebody. So murder fantasies

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are incredibly common.

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- The following is a conversation with Julia Shaw, a criminal

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psychologist who has written extensively on a wide

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variety of topics that explore human nature, including

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psychopathy, violent crime, psychology of evil, police

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interrogation, false memory manipulation, deception detection,

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and human sexuality. Her books include

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Evil, about the psychology of murder and sadism, The

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Memory Illusion, about false memories, Bi, about

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bisexuality, and her new book that you should definitely go

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order now called Green Crime, which is a study

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of the dark underworld of poachers, illegal gold

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miners, corporate frauds, hitmen, and all kinds of

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other environmental criminals. Julia is a

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brilliant and kindhearted person with whom I got the chance to

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have many great conversations with on and off the mic. This was an honor and a

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pleasure. This is Lex Fridman Podcast. To support it, please

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check out our sponsors in the description where you can also find

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links to contact me, ask questions, give feedback, and so

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on. And now, dear friends, here's Julia Shaw. You wrote the book Evil: The Science

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Behind Humanity's Dark Side. So lots of interesting topics

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to cover here. Let's start with the continuum. You

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described that evil is a continuum. In other words, the dark

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tetrad: psychopathy, sadism, narcissism,

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Machiavellianism, are a continuum of traits, not a binary zero-one

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label of monster or non-monster. So, can you explain this continuum?

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- Yeah. So, each trait on the Dark Tetrad, as it's called, which is the

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four traits that are associated with dark personality traits. So, things that we

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often associate with the word "evil," like sadism, which is a pleasure in

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hurting other people. Machiavellianism, which is doing whatever it takes to get

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ahead. Narcissism, which is taking too much pleasure

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in yourself and seeing yourself as superior to

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others. And then there's psychopathy. Psychopathic

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personalities specifically often lack in empathy, and

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it's usually characterized by a number of different traits

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including a parasitic lifestyle, so mooching off of others. Deceptiveness,

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lying to people, and again, that empathy dimension where you

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are more comfortable hurting other people because you don't feel sad when other people feel

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sad. Now, all of those traits: psychopathy,

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sadism, Machiavellianism, and narcissism, all of them have a

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scale. And so you can be low on each of those traits or you can be high on

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each of those traits. And what the Dark Tetrad is, it's actually a way of classifying

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people into those who might be more likely to

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engage in risky behaviors or harmful behaviors and those who are not. And if you score

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high on all of them, you're most likely to harm other people. But

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each of us score somewhere. So, I might score low on sadism

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but higher on narcissism. And in all of them, I'm probably

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subclinical. And so this is the other thing we often talk about in

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psychology is that there's clinical traits and clinical diagnoses,

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like someone is diagnosed as having

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narcissism. Or they're subclinical, which is you don't quite

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meet the threshold, but you have traits that are related, and that are so important for us to

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understand in the same context.

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- So, early in the book, you raised the question that I think you highlight is a very

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important question: if you could go back in time, would you

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kill baby Hitler? This is somehow a defining question. Can you explain?

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- Well, it's about whether you think that people are born evil. So the

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question of "Would you kill baby Hitler?" is meant to be something that gets

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people chatting about whether or not they think that people are born with the traits

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that make them capable of extreme harm towards others. Or whether they think

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it's socialized, whether it's something that, maybe in how people are

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raised, sort of manifests over

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time. With Hitler, we know from certainly psychologists who have pored

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over his traits over time and looked at who he was over the

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course of his life, there's always this question of, "Was he mad or bad?"

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And the answer to "Was he mad?" Well, he certainly

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had some characteristics that people would associate with, for

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example, maybe sadism, with this idea that

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he was less high on empathy is probably also showcased

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in his work. But in terms of whether he was born that

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way, I think the answer usually would be no. And actually, in his early life, he

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didn't showcase quite a lot of the traits that later defined the horrors that he

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was capable of. So would I go back in time and kill baby Hitler? The answer is

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no because I don't think it's a straight line from baby to adult,

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and I don't think people are born evil.

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- So you think a large part of it is nurture versus nature,

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the environment shaping the person to become, to

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manifest the evil that they bring out to the world?

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- Well, and I'd be careful with using the word evil because I think we shouldn't use it to

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describe human beings because it most commonly "others" people. In

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fact, I think it makes us capable of perpetrating horrendous crimes

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against those we label evil. So for me, that word

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is the end of a conversation. It's when we call somebody evil,

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we say, "This person is so different from me that I don't even need

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to bother trying to understand why they are capable of doing terrible things

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because I would never do such things. I am good." And so that

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artificial differentiation between good and evil is something that,

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certainly with the book, I'm trying to dismantle. And that's why

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introducing continuums for different kinds of negative traits is really important,

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and introducing this idea that there's nothing fundamental to people

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that makes them capable of great harm. We all have the

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capacity to kill people and murder people and do other terrible things. The

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question is, why we don't do those things rather than why we do those things

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quite often. So I think humanizing and

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understanding that we all have these traits is the most important thing in my book,

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certainly.

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- Yeah, I think a prerequisite of doing

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evil, I see this in war a lot, is to dehumanize

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the other. In order to be able to murder them on scale, you have to

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reformulate the war as a fight between good and evil. And

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the interesting thing you see with war is both sides

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think that it's a battle of good versus evil. It almost

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always is like that, especially at large-scale wars.

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- That's right, and on top of dehumanization, there is also this other thing

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called de-individuation, which is where you see yourself as part of the

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group, and you no longer see yourself as an individual. And so, it's this

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fight of us versus them. And so you need both of those things. You need that

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sort of collapse of empathy for other people, the people who are on the

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other side. And you need this idea that you can be swallowed by the

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group, and that gives you a sense of

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also the cloak of justice, the cloak of morality, even

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when, you know, maybe you're on the wrong side. And that's where, I mean,

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getting into sort of who's on the right side of each war is always a more complicated issue.

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But certainly calling other people evil and calling the other side evil

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and dehumanizing them is crucial to most of these kinds of fights.

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- Yeah, you promote empathy as an important thing to do when we're trying

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to understand each other, and then a lot of people are uncomfortable

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with empathy when it comes to folks that we

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traditionally label as evil. Hitler's an example. To have

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empathy means that you're somehow dirtying yourself by

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the evil. What's your case for empathy, even when we're talking

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about some of the darker humans in human history?

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- My case for empathy, or evil empathy, as I sometimes call it, so empathy for people who we

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often call evil... Also, the title of my book is Evil, or in

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the UK market, it's Making Evil, which is a reference to a Nietzsche quote, which is, "Thinking evil

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is making evil." The idea being that evil is a label we place onto

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others. There's nothing inherent to anything that makes it

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evil. And so, I also think that we need to dismantle that and

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empathize with people we call evil because if we're saying that this is the

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worst kind of act or worst kind of manifestation of what somebody can be, so if

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someone can destroy others, torture others, hurt

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others... I work as a criminal psychologist, so I work a lot on

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sexual abuse cases, on rape cases, on murder trials. And so,

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in those contexts, that word evil is used all the time. So,

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this person is evil. And if we're doing that, then we need to go, okay,

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but what we actually want is, we don't really just want to label people. We want to

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stop that behavior from happening, and the only way we're going to do that is if

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we understand what led that person to come to that

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situation and to engage in that behavior. And so, that's why evil empathy, I think, is

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crucial, because ultimately what we want is to make society safer. And the

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only way we can do that is to understand the psychological and social levers that

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led them to engage in this behavior in the first place.

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- On a small tangent, I get to interview a bunch of folks

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that a large number of people consider evil. So, how would you

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give advice about how to conduct such interviews when you're sitting in front of a world

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leader that some millions of people consider

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evil? Or if you're sitting in front of people that are actual,

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like convicted criminals, what's the way to conduct that interview? Because to

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me, I want to understand that human being. They also have their

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own narrative about why they're good and why they're

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misunderstood, and they have a story in which they're not evil and they're going to try

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to tell that story. And some of them are exceptionally good at telling that

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story. So, if it's for public consumption, how would you do that interview?

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- I think it's important to speak with people whom we or who a lot of

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people dehumanize, including myself. I mean, I also speak with people who I think

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are or have... I know have committed terrible crimes, and I've

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spoken to these people because, as a criminal psychologist, that's often part of my job.

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So, what's interesting, I think, when you're speaking to people who have

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committed really terrible crimes, or certainly who've been convicted of

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terrible crimes, is that not only is it potentially

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insightful because they might give you a real answer and not just a controlled

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narrative about why they committed these crimes. If they

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are either maintaining their innocence or they're more reluctant to do that, I think

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even the narrative that they are controlling, that they're

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being very careful with, still tells us a lot about them. So, I

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think, certainly in my research on environmental crime as well,

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what we see is that people use a lot of rationalization. They say things like, "Well,

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everybody's doing it," and, "If I hadn't done this first, somebody else would have done

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this waste crime or this other kind of crime." So there's this

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rationalization. There's this normalization. There's this

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diminishing of your own role and agency, and

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that still tells us a lot about the psychology of people who commit crimes,

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because most of us are very bad at

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saying sorry and saying, "I messed this up, and I shouldn't have done

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that." And instead, what our brains do is they try to make us feel better, and they

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go, "No, you're still a good person despite this one thing." And so,

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we try to rationalize it, we try to excuse it, we try to explain it. And there is some truth to it

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as well, because we know the reasons why we engage in that behavior and other people

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don't have the whole context. So, we also do have more of the whole

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story. But on the other hand, we need to also face the fact that sometimes we

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do terrible things, and we need to stop doing those terrible things and prevent

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other people from doing the same.

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- I find these pictures of World War II leaders as children

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kind of fascinating, because it grounds you. It makes you realize

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that there is a whole story there of environment, of development through their

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childhood, through their teenage years. You just remember they're all kids.

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Except Stalin. He was looking evil already when young.

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- Well, people used to not smile in photos as well. So looking at historical photos of children,

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or sometimes even kids in other cultures, it's like, "Oh, why are they all so serious?"

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But our creepiness radars are also way off. This is something that I've been interested in for a long time as

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well, is that we have this intuitive perception of whether or

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not somebody is trustworthy. And that intuitive perception, according to

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ample studies at this point, is not to be trusted. And one thing in

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particular is whether or not we think someone is creepy, including children, but

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usually the research is done, of course, on adult faces and with adults.

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