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My father was murdered by his own serfs. And my first feeling wasn't grief. It was something dark I couldn't name for years. Because part of me understood why they did it. This understanding terrified me. Because it meant evil wasn't something monsters had and good people lacked. It was in all of us. Four years in Siberian prison proved it. I met Orlov—a man who murdered an entire family. I expected a monster. Instead I found an ordinary man. Cheerful. Helpful. Liked by other prisoners. And this disturbed me more than any monster could. Because if evil wore an ordinary face, then evil wasn't a category of person. It was a capacity. Waiting in ordinary people. For ordinary circumstances to release it. The man who doesn't know this about himself is the most dangerous man alive. What you'll discover: Why Dostoevsky's father was murdered by his own serfs Orlov: The family murderer who seemed completely ordinary Why evil feels like justice from the inside What Raskolnikov reveals about ordinary human evil The quiet evil of the literary critic who destroyed careers Why "I'm fundamentally good" is the most dangerous belief What Dostoevsky learned about his own darkness in Siberia Alyosha's real goodness vs. Ivan's self-deception How to map your own darkness before it maps you Why knowing your evil makes you safer Based on Crime and Punishment (Raskolnikov's rational evil), The Brothers Karamazov (Ivan's self-deception, Alyosha's honest goodness), and Dostoevsky's 4 years in Siberian prison watching ordinary men who had done extraordinary evil. Chapters: 0:00 - My Father's Murder (And My Dark Reaction) 3:20 - Orlov: Ordinary Man, Extraordinary Evil 7:40 - Why Evil Feels Like Justice From Inside 12:10 - Raskolnikov and You 17:30 - The Quiet Evil of Educated Men 22:50 - Do You Know Where Your Evil Lives? 28:20 - Alyosha vs. Ivan: Self-Knowledge vs. Self-Deception 33:40 - Map Your Darkness Before It Maps You The evil we acknowledge we can resist. The evil we deny will eventually speak for itself. Subscribe for Dostoevsky's philosophy on evil, conscience, self-knowledge, darkness, and the uncomfortable truth about human nature. --- ⚠️ DISCLAIMER: AI-generated voice for educational purposes. Content based on Fyodor Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment, The Brothers Karamazov, and Siberian prison experiences (1850-1854). This channel is not affiliated with any Dostoevsky estate. --- #Dostoevsky #Evil #HumanNature #DarkPsychology #Conscience #SelfKnowledge