Explanations for Obedience

    Cards (19)

    • Who is one of the most well-known psychology researchers due to his study of obedience?
      Stanley Milgram
    • What is the concept of destructive obedience as described by Milgram?
      It is when people obey an authority figure to the point of harming a stranger who has done them no wrong.
    • What was the procedure of Milgram's obedience study?
      • Sample of American males recruited, unaware of the study's true aim
      • Participants acted as 'Teacher' administering fake electric shocks to 'Learner'
      • Experimenter provided prompts to encourage continuation
      • 65% of participants administered shocks up to 450 volts
    • What theory is Milgram's study based on?
      Agency theory
    • What does it mean for an individual to be in an agentic state?
      They feel removed from their actions and can claim they were just obeying orders.
    • Provide examples of the agentic state.
      • Opening fire on unarmed civilians due to orders
      • My Lai massacre during the Vietnam War
      • Reporting a colleague for personal calls as per workplace directive
      • Ignoring a friend due to a powerful group member's instruction
    • How does the agentic state affect personal responsibility?
      It allows individuals to minimize responsibility and guilt for their actions.
    • What is required for the agentic state to occur?
      The presence of a legitimate authority figure.
    • How do social hierarchies influence obedience?
      The further up the hierarchy someone is, the more they expect obedience from those lower down.
    • What moral strain did Milgram's study impose on participants?
      Participants felt a burden of guilt/shame, which they could ease by shifting responsibility to the experimenter.
    • What defines an authority figure?
      An authority figure is anyone who has a legitimate status to issue orders.
    • How does the perception of authority affect obedience?
      If an individual perceives someone as an authority figure, they are more likely to obey their orders.
    • What did Bickman's (1974) research demonstrate about obedience?

      • People obeyed a confederate dressed as a security guard more than one dressed as a milkman or in plain clothes.
      • The plain clothes condition resulted in the lowest levels of obedience.
      • Uniforms confer authority, even if not police uniforms.
    • What are the consequences of lack of obedience in a hierarchical structure?
      Lack of obedience may result in punishment or withdrawal of social approval.
    • Why might people prefer to obey rather than question authority?

      It is often easier to obey than to question the motivation behind the order.
    • What are the strengths of agency theory in explaining obedience?
      • Strong external validity with historical examples of atrocities.
      • Supported by research evidence showing legitimacy of authority.
      • Examples include the Holocaust and Rwandan genocide.
    • What did Blass & Schmitt (2001) find regarding responsibility in Milgram's study?

      Students blamed the experimenter for the harm to the learner, viewing him as the legitimate authority.
    • What are the limitations of agency theory?
      • Cannot explain why some people do not obey.
      • Offers only a situational explanation, not a dispositional one.
      • Suggests a deterministic view of obedience, negating free will.
    • What is a criticism of the deterministic nature of obedience explanations?
      They imply that individuals have no control over their actions.