I love this article. You have done good work. Thank you. However (there's always a "however", isn't there?), I want to throw in the caveat from my definition of Evil: an action taken based on an unquestioned belief.
As you noted, questioning beliefs points to parts of ourselves we might rather not see. Your article is informative in context of the more or less 'well' adjusted people of civil society, but when we look from the perspective of the fanatical believers, the ignorant (willful or not), and the marketing systems of advertising, religion and politics (making people ignorant believers), we need to carefully assess the belief systems that surround us and manipulate us and our children into believing certain behaviors are needs that really aren't.
Civilization itself has groomed people to believe they need to vote for bullies (or the wrong bully might get in!), automobiles, airplanes, competition and most of all, Belief Systems. We really need anti-belief systems (skepticism and cooperation), but that doesn't generate the profits (and prophets) of fanatically competitive belief systems (colonialism et al).
We evolved to believe there is a tiger hiding in the tall grass because not to believe is statistically fatal. Without grass and tigers, though, we need to be discerning about people who make profits by filling our cities with artificial grass and invisible predators(distracting us from the real ones) to get us to believe our problems can be solved in 30 seconds or less, or by consciously voting once every 4 years vs unconsciously voting billions of times every day for an Invisible Hand.