The search string opens a window into how readers engage with controversial psychological texts. Whether driven by academic need, personal trauma, or intellectual curiosity, someone is looking for a precise moment in Grossman’s argument—likely the early evidence against killing or the visceral physical costs later in the book.
Lt. Col. Dave Grossman’s "On Killing" (1995) explores the psychological aversion to killing in war, arguing that modern training conditioning overcomes this resistance while creating significant psychological costs. Though influential in military training, the book faces heavy criticism from academics for relying on flawed data and for linking media violence to human behavior. For an in-depth summary of the book’s key arguments, visit SuperSummary O-Zabijaniu-Dave-Grossman-Pdf-19.pdf
Thus, page 19 (in some editions) might cover Grossman’s famous opening data about WWII firing rates, or his interpretation of animal behavior and human aversion to intraspecific killing. The search string opens a window into how