mathewgsmith wrote: ↑Thu Aug 01, 2019 8:09 pm
Jonathan101 wrote: ↑Wed Jul 31, 2019 11:06 pm
Chuck used the example of innocent people being thrown in prison because nobody wanted to admit at any level that some sort of mistake had been made, but the Cube would be an example where the people who designed the prison must have been crazy or evil, and the people putting in the death traps at least would have to be exceptionally dumb to not wonder "hey, wait a minute- are we the bad guys?"
Honestly I think that was an intentional part of the horror in the movie. Sort of a "banality of evil" thing. As Pratchett put it in Small Gods:
"There are hardly any excesses of the most crazed psychopath that cannot easily be duplicated by a normal, kindly family man who just comes in to work every day and has a job to do."
They may have been going for that, but that doesn't mean it is true or makes sense.
The term "banality of evil" was coined by journalist and philosopher Hannah Ardent, and it is frequently misunderstood. Ardent didn't argue that normal people are as capable of great evil as any psychopath, rather she argued that psychopaths have as much chance of being otherwise ordinary people on the surface as they have to be crazed lunatics; if only one in a hundred office drones is an amoral jerk who would casually consign innocent people to the grave because that was their job and nothing else, that is often all that is needed to make death machines like the Holocaust run, but that doesn't mean that every other office drone is equally capable of murder.
Basically she would argue that the guys who built the Cube were indeed mostly psychopaths or at least unusually "morally flexible" even if they saw themselves otherwise, and they were likely selected for the job precisely because they would go along with it without kicking up a fuss, not because any random Bob the Builder would have built it all the same. That "normal, kind family man" might actually
be a crazy psychopath; they just hide it better than most.
The other issue is that she used the Nazi Adolf Eichmann as her prime example of "banality of evil" because that's how he presented himself in court- as a cog in the machine who was just doing his job. Except...he really wasn't, and the historical record and other testimonies at court proved it, not to mention he let the mask slip occasionally and the
real Adolf Eichmann came out- the narcissistic, psychopathic, smug racist asshole who greatly enjoyed his work, took a great deal of pride I his contribution of the Nazi cause (he loved telling stories about his misdeeds to fellow Nazi's in Argentina for instance), actually
ignored orders to cut back on the mass killings at one point, and in the later stages of the war requested- and got- a transfer to a commando unit because al this bureaucratic mass murder stuff was getting rather
boring and he wanted some more excitement in his life. The guy she thought epitomised the concept of ordinary, regular evil was actually a cartoonishly evil bastard playing at normalcy.
So, the "banality of evil" is a falsehood more often than not, particularly in the way it is commonly understood. Office drones also have the advantage of not having to deal with much more than paperwork, while the people who built the Cube must have noticed that they just built a room full of spikes that shoot out the moment someone so much as whispers.