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Obedience• Obedience
– compliance of person is due to perceived authority of asker
– request is perceived as a command
• Milgram interested in unquestioning obedience to orders
1933-1984
Stanley Milgram’s Studies
Basic study procedure– teacher and learner
(learner always confederate)
– watch learner being strapped into chair
– learner expresses concern over his “heart condition”
Stanley Milgram’s Studies: Procedure Continued
• Teacher (S) goes to another room with experimenter• Shock generator panel – 15 to 450 volts, labels
“slight shock” to “XXX”• Teacher (S) asked by Experimenter (E) to give
higher shocks for every mistake Learner (A) makes
Stanley Milgram’s Studies• Learner protests more and
more as shock increases• Experimenter continues
to request obedience even if teacher balks saying,
• “The Experiment Requires that you continue.”
• “You have no other choice, you must continue.”
120
150
300
330
“Ugh! Hey this really hurts.”
“Ugh! Experimenter! That’s all. Get me out of here. I told you I had heart trouble. My heart’s starting to bother me now.”
(agonized scream) “I absolutelyrefuse to answer any more.Get me out of here. You can’t hold me here. Get me out.”
(intense & prolonged agonized scream) “Let me out of here. Let me out of here. My heart’s bothering me. Let me out, I tell you…”
Obedience
• How many people would go to the highest shock level?
• Two-Thirds (26 out of 40) of the subjects went to the end, even those that protested
• Those that did stop, not one stopped before the 300-volt level.
Milgram’s Obedience to Authority
(Data from Milgram, 1974)
Obedience to Authority
• Play “Obedience: The Milgram Study” (4:04) Segment #34 from Psychology: The Human Experience.
• Or Click HERE to view actual video from his original experiment. (5 minutes)
Explanations for Milgram’s Results
• Abnormal group of subjects?– Numerous replications with variety of groups
shows no support– Milgram’s study has been repeated
many times in the United States and other countries with identical results
• People in general are sadistic?– videotapes of Milgram’s subjects show extreme
distress
Explanations for Milgram’s Results
• A previously well-established framework to obey • The situation, or context, in which the obedience
occurred (Authority of Yale and value of science)• New situation and no model of how to behave• The gradual, repetitive escalation of the task • Experimenter self-assurance and acceptance of
responsibility• The physical and psychological separation from
the learner
Follow-Up Studies to Milgram
Conditions that Decrease the Likelihood of Destructive
Obedience • Willingness to obey diminishes sharply when the buffers
that separate the teacher from the learner are lessened or removed.
• Obedience decreased when the experimenter left the room and spoke to the subject over the telephone rather than in person.
• When teachers were allowed to act as their own authority and freely choose the shock level, 95 percent did not venture beyond 150 volts—the first point at which the learner protested
• People were more likely to defy an authority when they saw others do so
Critiques of Milgram
• Although 84% later said they were glad to have participated and fewer than 2% said they were sorry, there are still ethical issues
• Do these experiments really help us understand real-world atrocities?
Were Milgram’s Obedience Experiments Ethical?
• Attacked for the emotional stress, tension, and loss of dignity experienced by the subjects
• Milgram suggested that what was disturbing to people were not so much his methods but his results
• Follow-ups of Milgram’s subjects indicate that a large majority were glad to have taken part in the experiment and had no signs of harm or traumatic reaction
Does this Apply to Today?
Asch, Milgram, and the Real World
• Being at odds with the majority or with authority figures is very uncomfortable for most people—
• Enough so that our judgment and perceptions can be distorted and we may act in ways that violate our conscience
• Each of us does have the capacity to resist group or authority pressure but…
Will we do so?
Abu Ghraib Prison:“I was just following orders.”