Another limitation is that they cannot account for all situations where individuals resist authority.
For example, Rank and Jacobson found that nurses often refused a doctor's orders to administer an excessive drug dose, despite the doctor being an authority figure.
This suggests that the agentic shift is not always applicable, and that moral conscience can override destructive authority when ethical concerns are clear.
This highlights the influence of individual differences which situational explanations may not fully address, challenging their universality.