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Philip Zimbardo

Philip Zimbardo
www.lucifereffect.com

Philip Zimbardo

Philip Zimbardo, Ph.D., a professor emeritus at Stanford University and past president of the American Psychological Association, designed and narrated the award-winning PBS series Discovering Psychology. He has written more than fifty books, including the New York Times bestseller The Lucifer Effect, and lives in San Francisco.

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    1. Make Time Work For You with Philip Zimbardo
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The Time Paradox is now available in Trade Paperback
Jul 07, 2009
The Time Paradox will be released on July 07, 2009 in Trade Paperback
Jul 07, 2009
The Time Paradox is now available in Trade Paperback
Jul 07, 2009
Audio Excerpt:
The Time Paradox
Jan 16, 2009
The Time Paradox will be released on July 07, 2009 in Trade Paperback
Dec 19, 2008
The Time Paradox will be released on August 05, 2008 in Hardcover
Aug 05, 2008
The Time Paradox is now available in Hardcover
Aug 05, 2008
The Time Paradox will be released on August 05, 2008 in eBook
Aug 05, 2008
The Time Paradox is now available in eBook
Aug 05, 2008
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Aug 05, 2008
The Time Paradox will be released on August 05, 2008 in
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The Time Paradox is now available in
Aug 05, 2008
Excerpt:
Table of Contents from The Time Paradox
Prior to Dec 19, 2008

Authors on the Web

Boston Globe, February 2, 2012
...and, again, competence. The paper, by Gian Vittorio Caprara and Claudio Barbaranelli of the University of Rome, and Philip Zimbardo of Stanford University, won largely on the basis of its disarming title, "Politicians' Uniquely Simple Personalities"...
Scientific American, February 2, 2012
...a man with a heart condition—even after he had screamed in agony and then, gone silent altogether. Or Philip Zimbardo’s prison experiment, where a group of Stanford students quickly assumed the roles of cruel guards and suffering prisoners and saw...
Cleveland Live, January 16, 2012
...-- war cannot be blamed on them alone. Rather, as the notorious psychological experiments by Stanley Milgram and Philip Zimbardo have shown, cultural situations can impel people to become violent. An impulse to obey authority also comes into play. In...
Discover Magazine, September 24, 2011
...and tungsten. Science/news/writing “It’s not the bad apples, it’s the bad barrels that corrupt good people.” Philip Zimbardo on evil   Neuroscience of the intense Amazonian hallucinogen ayahuasca. Featuring a vomiting Vaughan Bell ...
Io9, September 15, 2011
...use Darwin's phrase, has not made it into the mainstream of intellectual life." Stanford social psychologist Philip Zimbardo, best-known for the infamous Stanford Prison Experiment and most recently a founder of the Heroic Imagination Project, drew on...
Prince George Citizen, July 21, 2011
...have behaved in a similar set of circumstances. This book describes the Stanford Prison Experiment and the conclusions Philip Zimbardo made as a result of the study. Throughout the book, he applies the insights gained from the study to explore recent bad...
New York Times, June 13, 2011
...Citing the philosopher Hannah Arendts term the banality of evil, and discussing the work of Stanley Milgram and Philip Zimbardo in which ordinary people exhibited cruel behavior, he acknowledges that in most of us empathy may be suspended temporarily,...
Not Exactly Rocket Science, September 24, 2011
...and tungsten. Science/news/writing “It’s not the bad apples, it’s the bad barrels that corrupt good people.” Philip Zimbardo on evil   Neuroscience of the intense Amazonian hallucinogen ayahuasca. Featuring a vomiting Vaughan Bell NASA...
Discover Blogs, September 24, 2011
...and tungsten. Science/news/writing “It’s not the bad apples, it’s the bad barrels that corrupt good people.” Philip Zimbardo on evil   Neuroscience of the intense Amazonian hallucinogen ayahuasca. Featuring a vomiting Vaughan Bell NASA...
io9, September 15, 2011
...to use Darwin's phrase, has not made it into the mainstream of intellectual life."Stanford social psychologist Philip Zimbardo, best-known for the infamous Stanford Prison Experiment and most recently a founder of the Heroic Imagination Project, drew on...
Brain Pickings, September 13, 2011
...to use Darwin’s phrase, has not made it into the mainstream of intellectual life.” Stanford social psychologist Philip Zimbardo , best-known for the infamous Stanford Prison Experiment and most recently a founder of the Heroic Imagination Project ,...
The Autism News, June 21, 2011
...the philosopher Hannah Arendt’s term “the banality of evil,” and discussing the work of Stanley Milgram and Philip Zimbardo in which ordinary people exhibited cruel behavior, he acknowledges that in most of us empathy may be suspended...
Skeptic.com, June 8, 2011
...would like to think that the work of researchers such as Stanley Milgram (of shock experiment fame) and Philip Zimbardo (of Stanford prison experiment fame) would have slammed the door on our superstitions and prejudices about lawless behavior—showing...
Why I Am Catholic, June 2, 2011
...and Hell, courtesy of an interview he was doing on his comedy show ( the Colbert Report )with Professor Philip Zimbardo of Stanford University. Dr. Zimbardo wrote a book called The Lucifer Effect about what happens when folks obey unjust authority...