The Lucifer Effect
v1.0.0Philip Zimbardo's The Lucifer Effect — a social psychology toolkit exploring how situational forces transform good people into evil actors, based on the Stanford Prison Experiment, Abu Ghraib, and the psychology of evil. Covers 6 use cases: ① Understanding the Stanford Prison Experiment — ("Stanford Prison Experiment" "SPE explained" "Zimbardo prison study" "what happened in the SPE") ② How good people turn evil — ("Lucifer effect" "why good people do bad things" "situational evil" "banality of evil") ③ The power of situations over character — ("situational vs dispositional" "fundamental attribution error" "Milgram experiment" "Stanford Prison") ④ Understanding Abu Ghraib — ("Abu Ghraib psychology" "prisoner abuse psychology" "how soldiers become torturers" "myth of a few bad apples") ⑤ Resisting situational pressure — ("how to resist evil" "heroic imagination" "moral courage" "staying good under pressure") ⑥ The system and the individual — ("institutional evil" "systemic corruption" "power of roles" "authority and obedience") Trigger when users say: "Lucifer effect" "Philip Zimbardo" "Stanford Prison Experiment" "Abu Ghraib" "why good people do bad things" "Milgram experiment" "situational evil" "how people become evil" "the banality of evil" "power of the situation" or mention: Philip Zimbardo / Stanford Prison Experiment / Lucifer Effect / Abu Ghraib / situational psychology / evil / Milgram / social roles / authority / obedience. Also triggers when the user says they just installed this skill or doesn't know how to start — the AI MUST proactively present the Quick Start guide below.