Analysis Of Obedience To Authority By Stanley Milgram

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The book Obedience to authority by Stanley Milgram is about a series of experiments performed by Milgram himself, on unsuspecting participants. The experiments were performed to answer the question if people had a tendency to comply with authority figures. Milgram drew inspiration from Adolf Eichmann’s trial, to create a study to explain the actions of the Nazis. As quoted “The point of the experiment is to see how far a person will proceed in a concrete and measurable situation in which he is ordered to inflict increasing pain on a protesting victim.” (pg. 5) The experiment involved a learner, whom was strapped to a chair and connected with electrodes, an experimenter who lead and gave instructions about the experiment and a teacher whom asked In reality the shocks were fake and the experimenter and learner where actors and in on the experiment. Milgram manipulates the experiment several times and adds different factors to see if it will receive different results. Such as, he manipulates the experimenters distance with the teacher, he manipulates the person giving the instructions and receiving the shocks, and the settings. But the results for the majority of the experiments were depressing as Milgram says, “With numbing regularity good people were seen to knuckle under to the demands of authority and perform actions that were callous and severe.” (pg. 78) As the experiments showed how regular people caved to authority and did what, they were told with little protests. Milgram’s model was later used to explain the My Lai massacre and other atrocities that happened under democracy. "I am forever astonished when lecturing on the obedience experiments in colleges... I faced young men who were aghast at the behavior of experimental subjects and proclaimed that they would never behave in such a way, but who, in a matter of months, were brought into the military and performed without compunction actions that made shocking the victim seem With the authority figure pressuring the participants to keep going with the shocks, they felt the participants felt they had to obey. Milgram found, “Many subjects will obey the experimenter no matter how vehement the pleading of the person being shocked, no matter how painful the shocks seem to be, and no matter how much the victim pleads to be let out.” (Pg. 4-5). Binding factors lock the subject into the situation and lead normal individuals to become agents. In addition a variety of inhibitions against disobeying authority come into play and successfully keep the person in his place. (pg. 7) The experiments led to a little bit of moral conflict within the participants as understood, “Subjects were frequently in an agitated state. Sometimes, verbal protest was at a minimum…” (pg.21) Milgram’s experiments showed that many simply handled their guilt by using defense mechanisms, such as transferring the responsibility to the experiment leader, or getting absorbed in the technical side of the experiment. An example would be The Professor whom taught Old Testament liturgy whom, even though refused to give the 420 volts, didn’t disobey but merely shifted to take orders from someone else. This is corroborated when Milgram states “voices of morality were raised against the action in question but the typical response of the common man was to obey orders,” (pg.

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