Neuroscience and Beyond

The Neuroscience of Revenge & Forgiveness | James Kimmel Jr. on Addiction, Justice, and Healing

Neuroscience and Beyond

What happens in our brain when we crave revenge - and how can forgiveness set us free?

In this powerful conversation, we speak with James Kimmel Jr., a former lawyer, and currently an assistant clinical professor at the Yale School of Medicine, and author of The Science of Revenge, about the psychology and neuroscience behind revenge, addiction, and forgiveness.

Drawing from his own story of childhood bullying and near-violence, Kimmel explains how these experiences led him from a 20-year legal career into neuroscience research and the creation of the Yale Collaborative for Motive Control.

In this episode, you’ll learn:
- Why revenge feels so satisfying - and why it’s addictive
- What happens in your brain when you crave revenge?
- Why does your self-control system shut down when anger takes over?
- The surprising difference between men and women when it comes to - empathy during acts of retaliation.
- How to turn revenge into healing through the “Courtroom of the Mind,” an evidence-based mental exercise that helps release anger safely.
- The transformative power of forgiveness and empathy

Timestamps
00:00:00 In this episode of Neuroscience and Beyond
00:00:29 Introduction and opening thoughts on revenge
00:01:30 Bullying, Anger, and the Moment That Changed Everything
00:11:00 From Lawyer to Yale Collaborative for Motive Control Studies 
00:17:20 Revenge in the courtroom & Discovering the neuroscience of revenge
00:23:40 Studying the neuroscience of revenge and addiction
00:28:40 How the brain processes revenge and addiction
00:30:00 Dopamine, craving, and the “go” vs. “stop” systems
00:33:20 Developmental neuroscience and revenge in youth
00:38:00 When does revenge become addictive?
00:40:10 Healthy vs. harmful punishment and the role of dopamine
00:44:00 Pain, pleasure, and the biology of retaliation
00:50:00 Male vs. female revenge seeking
00:56:00 The myth of “good vs. evil” and real-world violence
00:59:00 How society fails to prevent revenge-driven violence
01:04:40 The “Courtroom of the Mind”: healing through inner justice
01:13:30 How forgiveness changes the brain
01:18:20 Treating revenge like an addiction
01:22:00 Education, prevention, and hope for future generations
01:25:00 Closing reflections on forgiveness and self-healing

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Supported by the International Max Planck Research School for Neurosciences in #Göttingen, the European Neuroscience Institute, Cluster of Excellence Multiscale Bioimaging, as well as SFB1286

Neuroscience and Beyond team:
Svilen Georgiev
Kristina Jevdokimenko
Ahsen Konaç Sayıcı
Laura van Agen