Thank you. Now, this is an interesting context. So, what you are saying is that the Stanford Prison Experiment cannot be used for anything other than entertainment, role-playing game that is not the same as most humans being evil IRL?Lacewing wrote: ↑Sun Sep 02, 2018 6:21 pmIn the Stanford Prison Experiment, the conclusion was that it demonstrated that the simulated-prison situation, rather than individual personality traits, caused the participants' behavior. People were told what to do, and how to act-out. The participants played their roles to varying degrees.
The Milgram Experiment measured the willingness of male study participants to obey an authority figure who instructed them to perform acts conflicting with their personal conscience. The experiment found that a very high proportion of men would fully obey the instructions, albeit reluctantly.
Neither of these experiments point to your claim that: "humans are fundamentally evil. There are only few good people amongst the entire human race. It is less than 1 %."
And this is likely why you'll see "clear and total evidence" wherever you choose, so that you can maintain that what you think is "right". Yes? Maybe it has been your own experience that people seem mostly evil, but that is far different from it being an ultimate/supreme truth about humankind. If you want the truth, you have to be willing to truly understand and question what's currently going on in your own head. No one's perception/reality is the reality of and for all. Makes sense, doesn't it?
Have you ever pondered divine nature in all?
Seems like I made a fallacy in the OP... sorry.