Todos temos isso dentro de nós? Análise de Nuremberg

Nuremberg: Unveiling the Minds of the Nazis | Fact vs. Fiction and the Psychology of Evil Did Nazi leaders suffer from any specific mental pathology, or is evil something frighteningly common? In this video, we conduct a detailed psychological analysis of the Nuremberg trials, exploring the historical and scientific clash between psychiatrist Douglas Kelley and psychologist Gustave Gilbert as they assessed the main war criminals of the Nazi regime. In this video, I analyze what is fact and what is fiction in historical and cinematic representations, we discuss the controversial application of the Rorschach test in Nuremberg, and how modern science views these profiles through the theory of the Dark Triad of Personality (Machiavellianism, narcissism, and psychopathy). More than understanding the past, we discuss the psychological and social mechanisms supported by classic experiments and contemporary revisions that explain how ordinary people were able to actively participate in the Holocaust. An indispensable lesson in social, clinical, and historical psychology for students, professionals, and enthusiasts of the human mind. Become a member of this channel and get benefits:    / @pedropsi   ⏱️ Video Sections: 00:00 Introduction 02:20 Who was Douglas Kelley? 04:37 What is fact and what is fiction? 08:21 Main differences between Kelley and Gilbert 12:25 The Dark Triad of Personality theory 15:03 How ordinary people participated in the Holocaust 18:25 The central lesson of the film 📚 Suggested sources for further study: • Kelley, D. M. "22 Cells in Nuremberg: A Psychiatrist Examines the Nazi Criminals." • El-Hai, J. "The Nazi and the Psychiatrist." • Dimsdale, J. "Anatomy of Malice." • Gilbert, G. M. “Nuremberg Diary.” • Browning, C. R. “Ordinary Men: Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland.” • Bandura, A. "Moral Disengagement in the Perpetration of Inhumanities" (1999). • Paulhus, D. L., & Williams, K. M. “The Dark Triad of Personality” (2002). • Burger, J. M. “Replicating Milgram” (2009). • Le Texier, T. “Debunking the Stanford Prison Experiment” (2019). • Reicher, S., & Haslam, S. “Rethinking the Psychology of Tyranny: The BBC Prison Study” (2006). • Harrower, M. "Rorschach Records of the Nazi War Criminals: An Experimental Study After Thirty Years" (1976). • Miale, F. R., & Selzer, M. "The Nuremberg Mind: The Psychology of the Nazi Leaders" (1975). • Zillmer, E. A., Archer, R. P., & Castino, R. "Rorschach Records of Nazi War Criminals: A Reanalysis Using Current Scoring and Interpretation Practices" (1989). #Nuremberg #DouglasKelley #Hermanngoering #Psicologiaecinema