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Genocide and ‘Thoughtless’ Behaviour Genocide and ‘Thoughtless’ Behaviour
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Inducing ‘Thoughtless Behaviour’ and Creating Perpetrators Inducing ‘Thoughtless Behaviour’ and Creating Perpetrators
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‘Thoughtlessness’ in (Further) Theoretical Perspective ‘Thoughtlessness’ in (Further) Theoretical Perspective
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Acknowledgements Acknowledgements
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Select Bibliography Select Bibliography
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10 Social Psychology and Genocide
Get accessPaul A. Roth is Professor of Philosophy at the University of California‐Santa Cruz. His publications include Meaning and Method in the Social Sciences (1987) as well as numerous articles on topics ranging from naturalism in epistemology to explanation in history. He is a member of the editorial board of the Journal of the Philosophy of History.
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Published:18 September 2012
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Abstract
This article examines what purports to be a core standing problem in the explanation of genocide — how to account for the large number of people willing to participate in mass murders. It contends that research in social psychology has already answered the question of ‘perpetrator production’. Recruiting people to be perpetrators proves to be alarmingly easy. In addition, the application of social psychology to genocide has also become entangled in an ongoing moral debate, a debate that focuses on whether an emphasis on the extrinsic predictors of behaviour fits with a sense that people should be held morally and legally responsible for the choices they make. The discussion also argues that social psychology neither casts a pall of inevitability over such events nor provides moral exculpation for those involved.
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