Philip Zimbardo PhD is one of the most distinguished living psychologists, having served as President of the American Psychological Association, designed and narrated the award winning 26-part PBS series, Discovering Psychology, and has published more than 50 books and 400 professional and popular articles and chapters, among them, Shyness, The Lucifer Effect, The Time Cure and The Time Paradox.
A professor emeritus at Stanford University, Dr. Zimbardo has spent 57 years teaching and studying psychology. He received his Ph.D. in psychology from Yale University, and his areas of focus include time perspective, shyness, terrorism, madness, and evil. Best-known for his controversial Stanford Prison Experiment that highlighted the ease with which ordinary intelligent college students could cross the line between good and evil when caught up in the matrix of situational and systemic forces.
Dr. Zimbardo is currently teaching in the PsyD consortium program at Palo Alto University and lecturing worldwide. His current research looks at the psychology of heroism. He asks: “What pushes some people to become perpetrators of evil, while others act heroically on behalf of those in need?”
David Van Nuys, PhD
Creator/Host of Shrink Rap Radio
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"It's a poor sort of memory that only works backwards", says the White Queen to Alice.
www.hark.com/clips/ltbvmpfsyq-shawn-smith-the-white-queen I find this song meaningful on many levels. It's personal and I am not going to explicitly say what levels. It's kind of obvious.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anticipation