One of the Most Terrifying Experiments in Science History

Featured Image -- 65868

4c6d907a80572047b4e8074028cf0fbfMy Featured Blogger this week is Muurian of UptownNerd, a Nigerian Legal Practitioner and novelist with an insatiable hunger for knowledge. Muurian writes on a wide range of topics, here a notorious lab experiment with frightening implications about human society. Read on.

About mitchteemley

Writer, Filmmaker, Humorist, Thinker-about-stuffer
This entry was posted in Quips and Quotes, Writing and tagged , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

19 Responses to One of the Most Terrifying Experiments in Science History

  1. I just read the article. It sure feels like we’re all going to hell in a handbasket. Ugh.

  2. oishmortal says:

    Wow this was an amazing read 🌸

  3. It’s astounding that he had the same results 25 times. An unusual and interesting article.

  4. leendadll says:

    Additional info from The Smithsonian (there’s also a link to video from the experiment but I didn’t watch it):

    But we can take comfort in the face that humans are not mice. The NIH Record spoke to medical historian Edmund Ramsden about Calhoun’s work:

    Ultimately, “[r]ats may suffer from crowding; human beings can cope,” Ramdsen says. “Calhoun’s research was seen not only as questionable, but also as dangerous.” Another researcher, Jonathan Freedman, turned to studying actual people — they were just high school and university students, but definitely human. His work suggested a different interpretation. Moral decay could arise “not from density, but from excessive social interaction,” Ramsden says. “Not all of Calhoun’s rats had gone berserk. Those who managed to control space led relatively normal lives.”

  5. leendadll says:

    Also, per The Smithsonian article, the study was the basis for the NIMH book and movie.

  6. Hello Muurian. Kudos to you for choosing a blog topic that’s guaranteed to generate reader interest / get a conversation going.

    John Calhoun’s study certainly raises a few key questions. And I’ll probably think of plenty more after I post this comment, too. But, for starters…

    If an “abundance of everything isn’t going to make anyone satisfied with it”, even lead to extinction, is that supposed to somehow justify every sadistic sovereign who, from time immemorial, has done his damnedest to ensure his subjects live in squalor?

    And, how are the subjugated masses supposed to react? Pin a medal on their oppressor’s chest for “saving” humanity?

  7. Rocky says:

    I have read about Universe 25 before. It is now playing out in society, and didn’t take 25 generations.

  8. I loved this story. A friend and I were talking about the human condition being so much like that this morning so it was amazing when I read the story of the mice. Fascinating!

  9. A fascinating experiment with terrifying results. Thanks for sharing.

  10. Interesting and terrifying at the same time.. much love to you Mitch, Fiona 😊

  11. SelmaMartin says:

    Jeez. They’re talking about the ugly in us. Terrifying. Thanks for posting. xo

  12. Half a Soul says:

    Thanks for posting! I commented on his site: “”He who loves money will not be satisfied with money, nor he who loves wealth with his income; this also is vanity.” – Ecclesiastes 5:10 There is never “enough” when the problem is a heart set on greed and/or envy. Yes, truly frightening, but only if this world is all there is.”

  13. KT Workman says:

    Thanks for the share. It was an absorbing, disturbing read.

  14. usfman says:

    I’ve always wondered whether the use of mice or rate for experiments provides a valid setting to predict human behavior.

Leave a Reply