'The Science of Revenge' Review: Vengeance Isn't Benign
A book review, but these paragraphs are important:
Disillusioned, Kimmel left his law practice and spent years researching the roots of revenge. Our compulsion to hurt those who have hurt us, Mr. Kimmel learned, lies deep in our brain chemistry. When we believe that someone has wronged us, our brains pain network in the anterior insula is activated. Getting revengeor merely thinking about itthen releases dopamine and activates the brains pleasure circuitry in the nucleus accumbens and dorsal striatum.
Revenge, in other words, delivers a chemical high. So much so, Mr. Kimmel says, that we all regularly self-stage, self-create, and self-imagine grievances all the time to get delicious hits of revenge. Like drug-taking and other activities that release dopamine, revenge can even become a matter of addiction. If we are mentally wired to feel good when those who have caused us pain are made to suffer, then we will want to keep those hits coming. Maybe thats why there are four John Wick films.
https://www.wsj.com/arts-culture/books/the-science-of-revenge-review-vengeance-isnt-benign-bfc810cf?st=65P6km&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink
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