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tigtog (aka Viv) is the founder of this blog. She lives in Sydney, Australia: husband, 2 kids, cat, house, garden, just enough wine-racks and (sigh) far too few bookshelves.

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10 responses to “Torture was central to both the witch scares and the Inquisition”

  1. Louise

    Yes!

  2. Eden

    Truth.

  3. tekanji

    That comment reminds me of a head-bangingly bad comment thread on The Friendly Atheist post on Sam Harris.

    I can’t find a way to link the actual comment, but it starts with this response by Blacksheep to another commenter:

    You cannot simply reject it “on all grounds.” If you were the parent in the linked story “The beating” and chose not to use torture to save your child you would be partly responsible for his death. Life is not as simple as you would like it to be. 

    I honestly can’t fathom the mindset of a person who would honestly think something like that. Even if torture wasn’t all but proven to be completely ineffective, why would anyone–Sam Harris, Blacksheep, and the people who agree–think that it would be the best use of resources? PZ pointed out in his post what I thought was immediately obvious from the scenario: searching for the car would be faster and more effective than trying to beat a confession out of an unwilling person.

    It seems to me that people who see scenarios like “The Beating” and think it’s a fair justification for torture are just looking to rationalize turning off their brain and indulging in violent revenge fantasies. Maybe that’s too broad a brush, but isn’t the “it is to save the baaaby!” part of the scenario used explicitly to arouse our sympathies for the parents and dehumanize the torturee (after all, don’t our societies call people who hurt children “monsters”?), thereby making it “ok” to commit acts of violence against them that we would normally call criminal?

    The more I think about this, the angrier I get at the blatant manipulation behind using hypothetical situations like “The Beating”.

  4. lilacsigil

    The hypothetical situations always seem to involve a family member, rather than the governments (or criminal syndicates) who are most likely to actually use torture in an attempt to bypass moral thought and go straight for the emotions. Would I blame the family of a murder victim who called for torture or the death penalty? No, I wouldn’t. But it’s not their decision and nor should it be. It’s a form of terrorism and no more legitimate because a democratically elected government uses it.

  5. SunlessNick

    Life is not as simple as you would like it to be.

    I hear projection.

  6. Megpie71

    Social psychology provides a lot of useful references on torture – or at least the whole “how the hell does it happen” bit.

    First, look up the Milgram experiments on obedience to authority. Those demonstrated (in their first iteration, and in each subsequent iteration before ethics committees world wide basically ruled them out completely) that finding torturers is easy. All you need is someone in authority telling people they have permission or that it’s required, and ordinary humans will administer a lethal shock to another ordinary human (particularly if they can’t see the person they’re administering the shock to). The hard ones to find are the people who will say “no” to the direct order – the rebels and the heroes are in very short supply indeed, even in an experimental context where the only thing one risks by not performing the action is the short-term disapproval of the person in the lab coat in the room with you.

    (Worth noting: Milgram designed those experiments because he was trying to get to the bottom of the “why” of the Holocaust.)

    Next, to see part of why the Milgram experiments were so successful, have a look at the experiments of Asch in 1955 and 1956, investigating conformity. In these experiments, he brought single subjects into a room which contained a number of their peers (confederates in the study) and got each member of the group to stated which of a group of three lines matched a sample line on a different card. The confederates would generally give a consistent, incorrect answer. The subject, when finally chosen, would tend to agree with this answer (at least 36% of the time, with percentages increasing as the number of confederates increased, and decreasing if there was a single, incorrect, dissenting answer). If enough people say black is white, it can be very hard to go against the flow.

    Essentially, the core point here is that humans are social animals, not moral or ethical ones. We’d like to think of ourselves as moral or ethical, but when the chips are down, most of us go with our social programming, following along where the people in charge lead, and where our peers point.

  7. Feminist Avatar

    It’s interesting that we are debating the idea that it takes a ‘special’, ‘courageous’ type of person to torture v. people will do so when under the right types of authority/bureaucracy, given that: 1) we clearly have a whole bunch of people who think torture is necessary and are calling those who don’t ‘cowards’, so they presumably are not ‘cowards’ and so would torture people if necessary (bureacracy doesn’t even come it to here – this is literally people ‘volunteering’ of a sort), and 2) people commit violence on others ALL THE TIME. And in a nice reverse, we often say that if you torture women and/or children in your personal life that you are a ‘coward’ for ‘picking on someone smaller’. So, this then raises interesting questions about how people who believe in torture conceptualise violence in other contexts, like the home. It feeds back into the narrative that violence is necessary for social order and those that can’t ‘handle’ this are too weak to rule. And, the sad thing is that we don’t need special psychological conditions to create this; torture is just an extension of the everyday violence in our culture.

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