The Price of Revenge

复仇的代价

Hidden Brain

社会科学

2025-06-03

1 小时 6 分钟
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Revenge often feels sweet, but what price do we pay for seeking it out? Researcher James Kimmel, Jr. proposes a radical theory: our desire for vengeance operates like an addiction in the brain. This week, how “revenge addiction” plays out in our everyday lives — and on a global scale.  Hidden Brain is about to go on tour! Join us as Shankar shares seven key insights he's learned from the show over the past decade. To see if we're coming to your city, and to purchase tickets, go to hiddenbrain.org/tour.
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  • This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam.

  • In February 1945, as World War II was nearing its end in Europe,

  • the leaders of the three major Allied powers,

  • the United States, Britain, and the Soviet Union,

  • met at the Yalta Conference in Crimea to discuss the terms of Germany's surrender.

  • The Soviet premier, Joseph Stalin, wanted Germany to pay $20 billion in reparations.

  • the equivalent of $333 billion in today's money.

  • Such a demand would almost certainly have caused economic collapse in Germany.

  • This seemed to be Joseph Stalin's goal.

  • Destroy Germany to ensure it could never rise again as a threat.

  • In his eyes, Nazi Germany had more than earned such punishment.

  • The Western allies were against this approach.

  • They were not interested in punishing Germany.

  • The war was almost over.

  • They saw how the punitive terms imposed on Germany after World War I had backfired,

  • leading to the rise of Adolf Hitler and the Nazis.

  • The United States and Britain wanted to focus on Europe's long-term stability,

  • rather than look backwards at the death and destruction that Germany had caused.

  • Today on the show, we examine these conflicting impulses.

  • We've all heard the phrase, an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth.