In our brains, there exist two modes of emotional management: reason and emotion. During childhood, the emotion-driven primitive, dressed like a caveman, holds absolute dominance—crying when hungry, wailing when hurt, acting solely on the most basic desires and needs. However, as we grow older, the reason-driven figure, resembling an office worker, gradually takes over control of the brain. Like a seasoned driver, he refuses to allow any deviation in human behavior. At this point, the primitive can only sit in the back, bored and idle. Of course, from time to time, the primitive still attempts to seize power, though usually within the bounds of socially permissible indulgence or without causing any significant impact on the world. However, there is one exception: Adolf Hitler, the Führer of Nazi Germany. In his case, the emotional side seemed to take absolute control, while the minds of ordinary people fell into disarray, plunging the world into chaos...
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