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A selection of papers and articles for your heroic imagination

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Why the World Needs Heroes
by Philip Zimbardo

Europe’s Journal of Psychology, 7(3)

Can thoughts ignite revolutions? How can one person’s imagination empower millions to challenge tyranny and injustice in the name of freedom and democracy?

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Impact of HIP Programs (Fall 2011 REVISED)
Impact of the Heroic Imagination Project Education Programs

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Heroism: A Conceptual Analysis and Differentiation Between Heroic Action and Altruism
by Zeno Franco, Kathy Blau, and Philip Zimbardo

Review of General Psychology, Vol 15(2), Jun 2011

Heroism represents the ideal of citizens transforming civic virtue into the highest form of civic action, accepting either physical peril or social sacrifice. While implicit theories of heroism abound, surprisingly little theoretical or empirical work has been done to better understand the phenomenon. Toward this goal, we summarize our efforts to systematically develop a taxonomy of heroic subtypes as a starting point for theory building. Next we explore three apparent paradoxes that surround heroism—the dueling impulses to elevate and negate heroic actors; the contrast between the public ascription of heroic status versus the interior decision to act heroically; and apparent similarities between altruism, bystander intervention and heroism that mask important differences between these phenomena. We assert that these seeming contradictions point to an unrecognized relationship between insufficient justification and the ascription of heroic status, providing more explanatory power than risk-type alone. The results of an empirical study are briefly presented to provide preliminary support to these arguments. Finally, several areas for future research and theoretical activity are briefly considered. These include the possibility that extension neglect may play a central role in public’s view of nonprototypical heroes; a critique of the positive psychology view that heroism is always a virtuous, prosocial activity; problems associated with retrospective study of heroes; the suggestion that injury or death (particularly in social sacrifice heroes) serves to resolve dissonance in favor of the heroic actor; and a consideration of how to foster heroic imagination.

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The Banality of Heroism
by Zeno Franco and Philip Zimbardo
Originally published in Greater Good

Circumstances can force almost anyone to be a bystander to evil, but they can also bring out our own inner hero. Zeno Franco and Philip Zimbardo show how we’re all capable of everyday heroism.

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Fostering the Heroic Imagination
An Ancient Ideal and a Modern Vision
by Zeno Franco, Kathy Blau, and Philip Zimbardo
Originally published in Eye on PSI CHI, Spring 2009

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The Dark Side of Social Encounters: Prospects for a Neuroscience of Human Evil
by Martin Reimann and Philip Zimbardo

Journal of Neuroscience, Psychology, and Economics, Vol. 4, No. 3, pp. 174-180, 2011 

This article discusses how findings from social, cognitive, and affective neuroscience might contribute to our understanding of human evil. Integrating theories of personality and social psychology as well as the notions of deindividuation and dehumanization with recent neuroscientific insight, the authors elaborate on the nature of human evil and its potential roots in brain systems associated with affective processing and cognitive control.

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Stanford Prison Experiment 40-Year Anniversary
A Personal Retrospective by Dr. Philip Zimbardo

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Other related articles you may enjoy:

All hands on deck: How can we make more heroes?

The Impact of Leader Behavior on Employee Health: Lessons for Leadership Development

Phil Zimbardo and the Heroic Imagination Project

Bad Seeds and Everyday Gluttony

Zimbardo begins Heroic Imagination Project

Zimbardo donates papers to Stanford University archives

Dr. Evil: Stanford psychology professor Philip Zimbardo on why good people do bad things.

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Recommended audio:

Can Heroes Be Made?

The Heroic Imagination Project

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More coming soon!