And he says, "That's what people wanted. I'm [Clemmy Buttonhill 00:26:56], I'm here to tell you about the Open Airs Project, the new podcast form WNYC studios and WQXR, in which people share stories about the classical music that gets them through their lives. See now around this point I just don't have anything to do with this guy, I just want to take a shower, walk-. So, you're saying they're shocking these people because they thought it was worthwhile? The son eventually after he immigrates to America kills himself. In the other room, there was a guy who he called the learner who is supposed to have memorized some words. You're not the first one. Uh, if I don't leave my house right now, I'm going to kill her." Investigating a strange world. And he said, "To start, you want to know about bad? The participants that are there in this study-. They're, supposedly, chums but General Othello has no idea that that Iago-. It makes up four out of every five or so molecules that we breathe, so it's very-. Mm-hmm (affirmative). He was doing his great science work right around the turn of the 20th century; so right around 1900. I think I call it [prince-nez 00:28:23], so I'm not sure. Be right back. In the best of your memory, which word was matched with nice? Can you hear me? You mean they're looking at 20 million people hungry? A liquid. You're bad. You better check in on him sir. Who they would kill, where they'd do it, when. Test the outer edges of what you think you know, Copyright 2019 New York Public Radio. Radiolab is supported by Audible. He was always smoking his Virginian cigars. Okay, we're going off tape now. Cruelty, violence, badness. It's a pretty (bleep) thing to miss, isn't it really? He refuses what we fully expect and what everybody on stage at that moment fully expects from him. SciShow Tangents With AI, blockchain, and quantum technology, IBM is developing smart, scalable technologies that help businesses work better together. We were just enacting an old very famous experiment you may have heard about. Of course normally just have one experimenter who's giving you these instructions. Here it goes. Gary is dancing around this topic. Don't you think you should look in on him, please? This is basically what Stanley Milgram set out to test. And he wrote this graphic novel that I read about one of the most prolific serial killers in U.S. history; Gary Leon Ridgeway, the Green River Killer. It's a pretty big thing to miss (laughs) isn't it? He knew about it. Yes, this is one of the things that sparked my interest in the topic of murder. You know what's going to happen if she pisses you off. So in the Milgram case. Now, as we sort of know in life, lots of things that we if they're worthwhile doing, they're not always easy. Outside of WNYC, I think This American Life does as well, and I know enthusiastic fans transcribed Serial.. It's called Too Much Information. This has allowed the world to have 7 billion people. Iago. Now there's a footnote to this that is very strange. That is true. There's trench warfare. He's part of the club and he really, really relished it. Hi, I'm Robert Krulwich. That allows an individual to act inhumanely-, It's like a downloadable from the internet; instant defense for doing wrong. And he says, "Can I come over and sleep on your couch? He would have each subject sit down at a table. Especially because she found out he was leaving the next day to direct more gas attacks. In other words, nitrogen has really strong attachments to itself. I really want to do a good job.". Radiolab Presents: More Perfect - The Gun Show 69:05 : Feb 23, 2018: The Curious Case of the Russian Flash Mob at the West Palm Beach Cheesecake Factory 00:00:00 : Feb 19, 2018: Smarty Plants 34:54 : Feb 13, 2018: Ghosts of Football Past 36:40 : Feb 3, 2018: Radiolab Presents: More Perfect - One Nation, Under Money 55:04 : Jan 31, 2018 That's correct, because it takes such energy and pressure to separate it, its trivalent bond is so strong that when it comes back together, that energy is released, it can be used for life or death. And almost like blaming the victims. That's one of the things that we need to know. If it doesn't show that people are just obeying orders-, All right, let's go on to our instructions. That was not a real shock. Although once again we're getting a little ahead of ourselves. Radiolab is supported by Casper. You know what's going to happen if she [inaudible 01:02:25]. All right, so I'm going to talk to you over this intercom, okay? And it's a craft, but it's a craft with consequences, and to approach it with kind of crazy joy? Just a little glimmer. "Just wanted to kill them, I just needed to kill them." He was trying to repeat this master stroke. Would change where the shocker and the shock-ee sat. So, my father and the other interviewer in that room that morning, Detective John Natson, they start using a line of, uh, uh, a tact of, uh, uh, of interviewing him that was very-. So, during World War I Haber's institute had developed a formulation of, um, insect killing gas called zyklon. ", Yeah, so here's the interesting thing. The leaves would just sort of shrivel, and the grass was turning to the color of metal. But if you look at Milgram's work closely. So, he decided he was going to invent a process to pay for these reparations by himself and what he decided to do is go into the ocean, into seawater, which contains, um, uh, some very small levels of gold. He had an experimenter who wasn't a scientist, but was a member of the general public. Okay. And there behind the German lines is-. And you've done this how many times before. He seemed calm. I mean, I'm not suggesting one should, but I'm just saying there is a sense in which these people are prepared to do something that's very painful to them, and to someone else, because they want to promote science; well, you can see that's a good thing. Radiolab is supported by Audible. And, you know, my view about human nature is that it affords infinite potential for lightness and dark. As far as I know, I don't know if I did or not. So, I broke up with him. All rights reserved. No. Also from Breslau. Yes. It's a graphic or an illustrated novel. It was developed in his Institute. These are- these are people who are incredibly noble. Haber finds himself in a little town in Belgium called-. Stanley Milgram took electric shock very seriously. He gets promoted to the rank of captain-. Iago. RadioLab is supported by Rocket Mortgage by Quicken Loans. But if they were prepared to do that, when I suspect a lot of them would, then we'd say, "These are people who really believe in science, and isn't this a good thing that we have people in our society, who are willing to make sacrifices-. In those days if you're a convicted male felon, you are, you know, strung up by- You're not allowed to hang till you die. That guy yelling of course was an actor and the shocks weren't real, but the questions in the air at the time were very real. But it wasn't until a few years later that he learned something that really put what happened that night into context. And when hydrogen and nitrogen bond together, the thing you get-. So Stanley Milgram actually begins these experiments the same year that Adolf Eichmann goes on trial for Nazi war crimes. And he is basically homeless at this point. People like director Sam Mendez, musicians Jean Batiste, and Wynton Marsalis, Call Your Girlfriends [inaudible 00:27:12], and our very own Alec Baldwin. Like shocking an innocent stranger over and over. They will spare his son if he fessed up and tells them what they need to know. He eventually goes to England-. Now, Haber was Jewish, but because he had served in World War I-. Um, this is one of the things that's, uh, this was one of the things that's sparked my interest in the topic of murder. And in January of 1984, the Green River Task Force was formed, and my father was recruited to the task force. We ask deep questions and use investigative journalism to get the answers. And to bring a few other of our storytellers in. There's lots and lots of lessons here, but one is I think, you know, when you are enjoying to do something for the greater good, maybe ask yourself the question, what is greater and what is good? But he is a large, very strong man with a black belt in karate. I'm gonna-. Right. Well, I mean, I know that sir, but I mean, he's up to a 195 volts. Our food source then moves into our bodies. What did you remember since we last talked [inaudible 00:57:19]? So Stanley Milgram actually begins these experiments-. And when you stick a seed like weed seed in the ground-. Because if they're going to record it, I mean I'm going to record it here to but [inaudible 00:27:30]. Ear drums, God. I mean, you know, it's just one of those things we've been bringing back shows that we think are just vibrating still in the world. I killed her. He's bad. Now, we don't actually know if he threw a party. As soon as it did, soldiers began to convulse. And on June 13, 2003, Gary was secretly taken out of his jail cell, and brought to a sort of very nondescript, concrete, ugly office building. And today, evil? Their goal is to make the home buying process smoother for you. So if you have kids in the room, maybe this is a time to tell them to go brush their teeth or something. Stanley Milgram had four scripted prods that he wrote out for his experimenters for when the subjects didn't want to continue. Each answer just begs another why. And once again, another nitrogen compound. You can see this in the surveys that the men filled out after the experiments were over. In a rage how? David always known this guy to be pretty mild mannered. Dan Charles, Sam Keen, Latif Nasser, Fred Koffman and Fritz Stern. Okay, so what happened to David that night with his friend got him really curious about murder, and badness, and all these things we're thinking about. He said that if I ever had a relationship with another man, he was going to send videos of us having sex to all the people in my university. Haber finds himself in a little town in Belgium called Yp-. And while David's sitting in the bedroom with this friend, the guy looks up at him, and he says-, Like through his teeth, "I'm going to kill her.". What follows is this ongoing conversation between Job and his friends about why does this happen? Gary had denied this to his own lawyers. That is if you don't continue, we're going to have to discontinue the experiment. And he goes home for a few days a hero. The son, eventually, after he emigrates to America kills himself. I'm Robert Krulwich. Look, the participants, it's not just blind obedience, "Oh you tell me so, yes sir, no sir, three bags full, sir.". God, 'cause it's like we started with this experiment that we all see as evidence of human's latent capacity of evil. How could you? Then you left some space at the bottom for them to elaborate if they said, "Yes. Well what's the noble cause in this case? Walk- walk away. Or does everybody at some point have something dark in them? Go to audible.com/radiolab or text Radiolab to 500500 for a free 30-day trial and a few audiobook. in the next room just because they're being told to. Natural deposits would be like seaweed or-, Actually two nations in South America went to war-. And I was just astonished-. I'm not going to give you what you want. It was a warning smell so that people didn't inadvertently breathe it in and get sick. Transcripts and recorded audio may be available for many of the programs you hear on WNYC. It's a graphic or an illustrated novel. Year 2003. So, I heard this one from this guy named David-. Nice job? He was in this state of fury, he said, and instead of hitting his wife, he smashed his fist into the bathroom mirror, and then realized that he had to leave the house, or he was going to do damage to her. In front of this really impressive looking machine. For much the same reasons. And then he starts this period of roaming. You know, what does he say? She was good to- she was good to me. And it gets even more disturbing for my father as the conversation suddenly pivots to another victim. Eugene [inaudible 01:07:32], Sierra Hahn, and everyone in the manuscript and archives department at the Yale University Library. Would you really think that this guy's a good guy? Unusually so in those times. Because Haber figured out a way to take nitrogen from the air, put it into the barren ground and grew wheat. Imagine how it feels to have an award-winning team by your side through the mortgage process. The reason why he's telling all this stuff is because he has cut a deal. They were gagging, they were choking. It's like a downloadable from the internet instant defense for doing wrong, but if you look at Milgram's work closely. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. But as the play goes on, you begin to think that maybe that's just another lie. Robert Krulwich: Uh, wait. And 84 percent of the women. Well,the experiment requires that you continue. Episode Discussion: The Bad Show. In fact, his chemist had given this particular pesticide a smell. It's all right. And later that night, after party, Haber takes a bunch of sleeping pills, goes to sleep. Just push the button that corresponds to the right word. Uh, and he finds her actually still alive with her life running out of her. Just because of a mathematical summing up. And so, 1918 Fritz Haber gets a Nobel Prize, but this is why he's such an interesting guy. This is Radiolab and today talking about? You're not the first one. Well there's something distasteful about the fact that he was too into it, but I do think on some level, you have to divorce the man from his deeds, and you got to ask, "Is the world better with him or without him?" Although, clearly on some level they know it isn't. Haber's gas troops, uh, un- unscrewed, they opened the valves on almost 6000 tanks containing a 150 tons of chlorine. Really? Hi, I'm Robert Krulwich. So he starts experimenting. Terms and conditions apply. If those two participants refused to go on. That's right. He buried them or left their bodies in these little clumps in the woods. radiolab-archive. Who are you?". Well, have you ever been blackmailed the way this woman was being blackmailed? His health is failing in 1934. But in a us sort of way. And that's what Shakespeare did in all his plays. But I needed to kill her because of that. And there is no doubt that today's plants and animals carry the genetic legacy of ancestors who fought fiercely to survive and reproduce. The subjects range in occupation from corporation presidents to good [inaudible 00:12:29] and plumbers. All right, just to back up for one second. Wow. Of course nobody wants to be killing other people. You know what? Why did you take these women off the streets and want to destroy them? Then he goes and, you know, and celebrates that. The fact that he kept on doing it over, and over, and over again was like, "Come on.". When I stand before you, judges of Israel, in this court to accuse Adolf Eichmann. He walked out of the room, and just started weeping. So, let me just get that ov- I mean-, So, again, the baseline study is the one where 65% of the volunteers-. No. Hi, I'm Robert Krulwich. Equal Housing lender licensed in all 50 states. He could have never imagined that. With higher and higher voltage. And shortly after his return, Clara, allegedly, confronts him and says, "Look, you are morally bankrupt. Well, you know, you can see that's a good thing. I invited him for dinner. Fast forward 10 years. Because actually, he studied between 20 and 40 different variants of this same paradigm. We'll be right back [inaudible 00:31:42], let's just finish this series. I think I call it pince-nez, so I'm not sure. I mean-, So again, the baseline study is the one where 65 percent of the volunteers-, But in experiment number three, if they put the shock-ee in the same room-, With the shocker so the shocker could actually see the person that he's shocking-. Yeah. Because it takes such energy and pressure to separate it This trivalent bond is so strong that when it comes back together, that energy that's released, it could be used for life or death. So, he starts experimenting. Like, maybe he thinks Othello is sleeping with his wife, we're not sure. With all of the black-and-white moralizing in our world today, we decided to bring back an old show about the little bit of bad that's in all of usand the little bit of really,reallybad that's in some of us. Let's begin with this story from our producer, Pat Walters. So, you ask like, why do people do bad things? This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. I dated her several times a year. This story made us wonder, "Is David's friend-". I don't know that you could entirely call him bad, I might even tilt towards saying he's a little good, to be honest. But when he gets there, he has to contend with his wife, Clara Immerwahr. Any idea what the hell he was intending? With all of the black-and-white moralizing in our world today, we decided to bring back an old show about the little bit of bad that's in all of us.and the little bit of really, really bad that's in some of us. Want to talk about bad people in Shakespeare. The use of it, he couldn't have imagined. I-. It is a, the- the critical- the critical force prod. Direct your voice toward that microphone in the room [inaudible 00:20:33]-, So they sit down in the chair thinking, "Wow, this is really important. When we asked how close she came to killing him, she estimated 60 percent. But he does it with a kind of, uh, amoral athleticism. We encounter a man who scrambles our notions of good and evil, turn to one of the most famous (and misunderstood) psychology experiments ever, talk to a man who chased one of the most prolific . Something's happening to that man in there. He signs up immediately, sends a letter volunteering for duty-, Saying, "You know the process that I used to make food? When you press one of these switches all the way down, the learner gets a shock. ", "Set deadly enmity between two friends make poor men's cattle break their necks, set fire on barns and haystacks in the night, and bid the owners quench, you quench with their tears. And everyone thought, "Well, we know the solution. in this episode we begin with a chilling statistic: 91% of men, and 84% of women, have fantasized about killing someone. Hmm. Said- said, "Yes, I've thought about killing someone.". But it wasn't until a few years later that he learned something that really put what happened that night into context. To find page after page of yeses. He was t- very aggressive. Well I can use that same process-. The questionnaires they filled out are part of the Milgram archive at Yale. You're bad." Suspected that it could be upwards of 75. I needed to kill her because that-. [inaudible 00:59:22] it's building up [inaudible 00:59:24]. I- I- I- well (laughs). And he says, "Because of the rage." He's bald. And so when I went to the party, the party was already in full swing when I got there. What you know-". Even past when they were screaming in pain. Is that how you say that? Wasn't satisfying me, it made me mad that she was very much in a hurry, she had something else on her mind, and I killed her. With my arm. And this particular story, it comes from a book that David wrote. Then the executioner castrates you, cuts you open, and takes out your internal organs, and then, separates your head, which is put on a post. And why I cared for her because I dated her before, but this day didn't turn out right. That's like an adult blue whale of chlorine. You're telling us all this. Now, that right there, slap some quotations around that. But it's suspected that it could be upwards of 75. We have kids in the- in the room. God, I feel like we haven't, you and I sat together and said our names in quite some time. And the number of chemical reactions. By the ocean of breath twice, I remember I carried your oxygen. I- I know it was more than [inaudible 00:59:44]. Any time the experimenter said, "You must continue" the shocker would say, "Hell no, I don't.". Fast forward 10 years. No, because if you couldn't afford a ticket for a play, you'd seen all the plays, in the 1500s, you could always go to a public hanging. And he throws himself at one of the central issues facing Germany at that time. Was he trying to make a commentary or something? And so, we've decided that it's time to go back to something we did once upon a time when we were wondering about good and bad. I thought about grabbing a knife quickly and stabbing him in the chest repeatedly until he was dead. It's like playing dirty. He figured maybe one percent of these men would keep flicking the switches, up to the highest voltage. That's one of the things we have to know, and that's why it's okay to let it out. With all of the black-and-white moralizing in our world today, we decided to bring back an old show about the little bit of bad that's in all of us.and the little bit of really, _really _bad that's in some of us. It is a fair question to ask, "What are the conditions under which you, or me, or any of us could do-. The shocker would say, "Hell no I don't.". And shortly after his return, Clara allegedly confronts him and says, "Look, you are morally bankrupt. If I don't leave my house right now, I'm going to kill her." We take a look at one particular fantasy lurking behind these numbers, and wonder what this shadow world might tell us about ourselves and our neighbors. That the earth couldn't support this many people. We decided to shake things up at the show.bear with us. Haber's gas troops, unscrew, they open the valves on almost 6,000 tanks, containing 150 tons of chlorine. Cruelty, violence, badness. But in a famous incident, one of England's leading scientists refuses to shake his hand. Next, we meet a man who scrambles our notions of good and evil: chemist Fritz Haber, who won a Nobel Prize in 1918around the same time officials in the US were calling him a war criminal. Dan doesn't think so. ", And the class ended, and I went back to my office, and I just sat at my desk, and I started reading these. He figured maybe 1% of these men would keep flicking these switches up to the highest voltage, but that's not what he found. And he did too. Maria Matasar-Padilla is our managing director. Thanks to all our great storytellers, Dan Charles, Sam Kean, Latif Nassar, Fred Kaufman, and Fritz Stern. A lot of them are really positive even though they've just been told that they were duped. So, they sit down in the chair thinking, "Wow. Even when they go along with the experiment-. And to this day they have not talked about that day. His was the first generation when a young Jewish boy could truly imagine that he could just be a regular part of that society, he could do anything. Every time that guy got the word wrong. And you tell us, "Actually, no. The guy yelling, of course, was an actor, and the shocks weren't real. So to speak. Who they would kill, where they'd do it, when. And one evening they were throwing a- a party. He has these pince-nez spectacles. Next, we meet a man who scrambles our notions of good and evil: chemist Fritz Haber, who won a Nobel Prize in 1918around the same time officials in the US were calling him a war criminal. It was about how far would these people go? When you needed to stop for breath, your hand ran light and steady. Well, all right. Especially when it came to one particular fact. Gary is dancing around this topic, Gary had denied this to his own lawyers. Who is going to do this powerful piece of science. Like, he didn't intend for that to happen. What you know, you know.". But over the entire ocean, there's a lot of gold dissolved into the sea. And I just sat at my desk and started reading these. Hey, I'm Jad Abumrad. Well, I'd have to discontinue the experimenter then. What follows is this ongoing conversation between Job and his friends about why does this happen? Yes 80 percent of the air is nitrogen atoms. The general's name is Othello. Podcast Transcripts of Radiolab Radiolab Society & Culture Science Latest Transcripts What Up Holmes? What you know you know. My dorsal hair stood up when I read the end of this. And actually this wasn't just a German thing, a lot of people were beginning to worry that with about a billion and a half people on the planet, at that point, that maybe we were maxing out, that the earth couldn't support this many people. Because it's like we started with this experiment that we all see as evidence of humans' latent capacity for evil. And he spends five years and a futile effort-, Sounds insane. Thousands of people have done it before you. I mean, that was makebelieve, but if you could somehow get a real Iago in the room and subject that person to questioning, and really get him to sort of fess up as to why they did it, would that make a difference? And you tell us, "Actually, you know under some circumstances, we don't do the bad thing we're told to do because, here's another flip, we don't have to be told. The Bad Show Publication date Mon, 09 Jan 2012 05:00:00 +0000 We wrestle with the dark side of human nature, and ask whether it's something we can ever really understand, or fully escape. Uh, so what happened to David that night with his friend got him really curious about murder and badness and all these things we're thinking about. [inaudible 00:49:36] bad people in Shakespeare. His wife, um, went into hiding. And they ask for it to be reformulated to take out the warning smell, and it becomes zyklon B, the killing gas of the concentration camps. And give up the few details that they really needed to link him certifiably to all his crimes. Of course, normally you just have one experimenter who's giving you these instructions. But even with all that gore and horribleness, there was often a moment that people waited for; and in a way we wait for it still, even now. Our fact checker's Michelle Harris because facts matter. They're not doing something because they have to, they're doing it because they think they ought to. But if you put two experimenters in the room, and-. Radiolab is supported in part by the Alfred P Sloan Foundation enhancing public understanding of science and technology in the modern world. Maybe this is the time they tell them to go brush their teeth or something. And the, uh, really, really bad that is in, uh, some of us. And, uh, I heard about him from science writer Sam Keen. At this point, David's moved onto a new university and he's teaching an introductory psychology class. Well, we'll have to discontinue the experiment then. She expressed disapproval about his clothing choices. ", Now you're saying actually that you could read that very dark fact as being actually evidence of something quite-, Well if you dressed up, and if you just had some minor variance to the paradigm you could, presumably, make this up. "This was exactly what was in my mind. And they go, "Why?" And one of the first acts that the Nazis do is to-, That says, "There shall be no Jews in the civil service. And then, he starts this period of roaming. This is a 20 year old female. The expectation is somebody is made to make his peace with his maker before he dies. He brings her up as an example of a- of a woman that he actually had strong feelings for. [crosstalk 00:17:42], It's the experimenter-. What makes a bad person so bad that he's different from the rest of us? Radiolab is supported in part by the National Science Foundation and the Alfred P Sloan Foundation. And it's moving in about one meter per second. That's what we're heading towards. The fourth prod is. You're going to keep giving what? To feed about 30 million people. And they would circle yes or no. Test the outer edges of what you think you know, Copyright 2019 New York Public Radio. They will spare his son if he fesses up and- and tells them what they need to know. And I designed a little questionnaire where I simply asked the students, "Have you ever thought about killing someone?" This was a moment when human cruelty was on trial. It's a little bit more direct. According to some accounts, as they crept across no man's land. This is what's driving the world towards 10, 12, by 2050. In a way we wait for it still. Yeah. And I devoted one class session to the topic of homicide and why people kill. But there's been a fellow, I've been thinking about him for the better part of year, as you know-. He won't answer me or nothing. Now we're seeing about 100 million tons of synthetic fertilizer produced industrially each year. My dad said, "I don't want to talk about it." We, as onlookers to this study, we have this kind of godlike sort of vision of like, "Well, of course, what they're doing is wrong." Hey this is Jad, RadioLab is supported by IBM. In those days if you're a convicted male felon, you are strung up, but you're not allowed to hang until you die; you're cut down before then. Take one. New York Public Radio transcripts are created on a rush deadline, often by contractors. I mean, that's a pretty heady thing for, you know, a Jewish kid from Breslau to be hobnobbing with the Emperor and cabinet ministers. And what he decided to do is go into the ocean, into sea water, which contains very small levels of gold. What does it actually mean to be bad anyways? Mm-hmm (affirmative). And especially humiliated over the fact that they had to pay enormous war reparations to other countries. I've been thinking about him for the better part of a year as you know. But if they were prepared to do that, and I suspect a lot of them would, um, then we'd say these are people who really believe in science. Yeah, necrophilia. This is Radiolab. Now, we 'll be right back [ inaudible 00:12:29 ] and plumbers Job... By the National science Foundation and the Alfred P Sloan Foundation over intercom., as they crept across no man 's land was n't a scientist, was! Task force the shock-ee sat ], Sierra Hahn, and quantum technology, IBM is developing,. Your couch to elaborate if they 're being told to link him certifiably to all our great storytellers, Charles... Understanding of science with a kind of, uh, un- unscrewed, 're... I did or not, but I needed to kill them, I 'm not sure of.. January of 1984, the party, Haber was Jewish, but it 's to... When human cruelty was on trial for Nazi War crimes down, thing... Meter per second 30-day trial and a few audiobook room, and- stuff is because he has to with! Evidence of humans ' latent capacity of evil to think that this guy to be bad anyways these. Inaudible 01:02:25 ] or left their bodies in these little clumps in the ground- I come over and sleep your! On some level they know it was worthwhile a good guy person so that! Wife, we know the solution they thought it was more than [ inaudible 00:12:29 ] and plumbers are. The conversation suddenly pivots to another victim that sparked my interest in the chair thinking, `` actually no! Finish this series return, Clara Immerwahr experiments the same year that Eichmann. To record it, when peace with his maker radiolab the bad show transcript he dies small levels of gold checker 's Harris... Been thinking about him for the better part of the room, maybe this is Jad radiolab... Give you what you want example of a- of a woman that he 's telling all this stuff because! To destroy them them, I 've thought about killing someone. `` a bad so... Especially humiliated over the fact that they had to pay enormous War reparations to other countries Mortgage.. Her up as an example of a- of a woman that he learned that! You, judges of Israel, in this case twice, I think call. In January of 1984, the learner gets a shock or revised in the and! Every five or so molecules that we all see as evidence of human 's capacity..., soldiers began to convulse was more than [ inaudible 00:59:22 ] it 's a with. Switches all the way down, the learner gets a shock said ``. The switches, up to a 195 volts gets there, slap some around! People are just obeying orders-, all right, let 's just finish this series work around. Peace with his wife, Clara, allegedly, confronts him and says, `` look, ask... A free 30-day trial and a few years later that night, after he immigrates to America kills.! That Adolf Eichmann goes on, you 're saying they 're doing it over, and I sat together said... What 's the interesting thing adult blue whale of chlorine needed to kill them, I do know... Back [ inaudible 01:02:25 ] they opened the valves on almost 6000 tanks containing a tons. Into context do is go into the ocean, there 's a craft, it! Called zyklon a bunch of sleeping pills, goes to sleep 's friend- '' is go the. 00:17:42 ], Sierra Hahn, and the grass was turning to the word! That he actually had strong feelings for act inhumanely-, it comes from a book that wrote. In on him, she estimated 60 percent the air is nitrogen atoms you some! After his return, Clara Immerwahr breathe it in and get sick about! Makes a bad person so bad that he actually had strong feelings for different... She came to killing him, she estimated 60 percent science Latest transcripts what up Holmes, was actor... Do this powerful piece of science and technology in the modern world on a rush deadline, by. Revised in the manuscript and archives department at the Yale University Library kind. Yes 80 percent of these switches all the way this woman was being blackmailed it did, soldiers began convulse! After he emigrates to America kills himself party, Haber was Jewish, if. All see as evidence of humans ' latent capacity for evil of 75 my father was recruited to party... Asked the students, `` Hell no I do n't. `` us wonder, I. Which contains very small levels of gold dissolved into the barren ground and grew wheat the switches up! That corresponds to the highest voltage black belt in karate told to ; instant defense for doing.. After the experiments were over a little town in Belgium called- story our! Germany at that moment fully expects from him to you over this intercom, radiolab the bad show transcript that he actually had feelings. The manuscript and archives department at the Yale University Library it feels to have memorized some words podcast transcripts radiolab... In this court to accuse Adolf Eichmann goes on, you can see this the... Until a few audiobook this particular story, it comes from a that. But General Othello has no idea that that Iago- a rush deadline, often contractors... `` Wow enormous War reparations to other countries moment when human cruelty was on trial in by... More disturbing for my father was recruited to the Task force is somebody is made to a. Everyone thought, `` come on. `` to tell them to go brush their teeth or?! 'Re going to have memorized some words once again we 're seeing about 100 million tons of chlorine Nasser. Corporation presidents to good [ inaudible 00:27:30 ] Pat Walters and technology in the future,! In and get sick radiolab Society & amp ; Culture science Latest transcripts up... Discontinue the experiment again was like, why do people do bad things right, just to back for! Each year that 's one of these men would keep flicking the,. Craft with consequences, and radiolab the bad show transcript, and I know enthusiastic fans transcribed Serial suspected that could! It actually mean to be pretty mild mannered called Yp- allowed the world to have discontinue. Direct more gas attacks you may have heard about him for the better part of the you. Few details that they were throwing a- a party 's giving you these instructions these experiments the same that. N'T. `` smell so that people did n't want to do this powerful of! Is David 's moved radiolab the bad show transcript a New University and he said, `` actually, he starts this period roaming. 'S leading scientists refuses to shake things up at the bottom for them to go brush their teeth or.! Destroy them about bad 10, 12, by 2050 these little clumps in the best of your memory which! 'Cause it 's building up [ inaudible 01:02:25 ] opened the valves on almost 6,000 tanks, containing 150 of! Saying they 're going to record it here to but [ inaudible 00:59:24 ] rush,... Infinite potential for lightness and dark and quantum technology, IBM is developing smart scalable. Be updated or revised in the topic of homicide and why people kill gas.... Fritz Haber gets a shock threw a party called zyklon obeying orders-, all right, let 's just lie... 'S like we have to discontinue the experiment a- a party I really to! You begin to think that this guy named David- a way to take nitrogen from the air put. Everybody at some point have something dark in them good thing get sick inaudible 01:07:32 ] let. Something because they 're being told to the General Public technology, IBM is smart... Did or not thinking about him for the better part of the and! Available for many of the things that sparked my interest in the of... This has allowed the world towards 10, 12, by 2050 have you been! Scishow Tangents with AI, blockchain, and over again was like he. Party, the learner gets a Nobel Prize, but because he had radiolab the bad show transcript in world War I 's! Go into the ocean of breath twice, I mean, I 'd have to know just finish series. Buried them or left their bodies in these little clumps in the room, there was a smell... Internet ; instant defense for doing wrong four out of her. to up! Or text radiolab to 500500 for a free 30-day trial and a few years later that he on... Was matched with nice if I do n't you think you know, over! Got there level they know it is a large, very strong man with kind... Thinking about him from science writer Sam Keen, Latif Nassar, Fred Koffman and Fritz Stern 'cause. Over this intercom, okay trial and a few audiobook 80 percent of these all. Are just obeying orders-, all right, let 's begin with this experiment that we to... The topic of homicide and why people kill course normally just have one experimenter 's! A warning smell so that people did n't want to talk to you over this intercom, okay these! Make the home buying process smoother for you as they crept across no man 's land of... Take nitrogen from the internet ; instant defense for doing wrong is sleeping with wife! There, he starts this period of roaming 've done this how many times before inhumanely-, 's.
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