Stanley Milgram: Obedience to Authority Or Just Conformity?
What psychological experiment
could be so powerful that simply taking part might change your view of yourself
and human nature?
What experimental procedure
could provoke some people to profuse sweating and trembling, leaving 10%
extremely upset, while others broke into unexplained hysterical laughter? What
finding could be so powerful that it sent many psychologists into frenzied
rebuttals?
Welcome to the sixth
nomination for the top ten psychology studies and as you’ll have guessed it’s a
big one. Hold on for controversy though, as this study has come in for
considerable criticism with some saying its claims are wildly overblown.
Explaining human cruelty
“Many wondered after the
horrors of WWII, and not for the first time, how people could be motivated to
commit acts of such brutality towards each other.”Stanley Milgram’s now famous
experiments were designed to test obedience to authority (Milgram, 1963). What
Milgram wanted to know was how far humans will go when an authority figure
orders them to hurt another human being. Many wondered after the horrors of
WWII, and not for the first time, how people could be motivated to commit acts
of such brutality towards each other. Not just those in the armed forces, but
ordinary people were coerced into carrying out the most cruel and gruesome
acts.
But Milgram didn’t investigate
the extreme situation of war, he wanted to see how people would react under
relatively ‘ordinary’ conditions in the lab. How would people behave when told
to give an electrical shock to another person? To what extent would people obey
the dictates of the situation and ignore their own misgivings about what they
were doing?
The experimental situation
into which people were put was initially straightforward. Participants were
told they were involved in a learning experiment, that they were to administer
electrical shocks and that they should continue to the end of the experiment.
Told they would be the ‘teacher and another person the ‘learner’, they sat in
front of a machine with a number of dials labelled with steadily increasing
voltages. This was the ‘shock machine’. The third switch from the top was labelled:
“Danger: Severe Shock”, the last two simply: “XXX”.
During the course of the
experiment, each time the ‘learner’ made a mistake the participant was ordered
to administer ever-increasing electrical shocks. Of course the learner kept
making mistakes so the teacher (the poor participant) had to keep giving higher
and higher electrical shocks, and hearing the resultant screams of pain until
finally the learner went quiet.
“When the participant baulked
at giving the electrical shocks, the experimenter – an authority figure dressed
in a white lab coat – ordered them to continue.”Participants were not in fact
delivering electrical shocks, the learner in the experiment was actually an
actor following a rehearsed script. The learner was kept out of sight of the
participants so they came to their own assumptions about the pain they were
causing. They were, however, left in little doubt that towards the end of the
experiment the shocks were extremely painful and the learner might well have
been rendered unconscious. When the participant baulked at giving the
electrical shocks, the experimenter – an authority figure dressed in a white
lab coat – ordered them to continue.
Results
Before I explain the results, try to imagine yourself as the participant in this experiment. How far would you go giving what you thought were electrical shocks to another human being simply for a study about memory? What would you think when the learner went quiet after you apparently administered a shock labelled on the board “Danger: Severe Shock”? Honestly. How far would you go?
How ever far you think, you’re
probably underestimating as that’s what most people do. Like the experiment,
the results shocked. Milgram’s study discovered people are much more obedient
than you might imagine. 63% of the participants continued right until the end –
they administered all the shocks even with the learner screaming in agony,
begging to stop and eventually falling silent. These weren’t specially selected
sadists, these were ordinary people like you and me who had volunteered for a
psychology study.
How can these results be
explained?
At the time Milgram’s study was big news. Milgram explained his results by the power of the situation. This was a social psychology experiment which appeared to show, beautifully in fact, how much social situations can influence people’s behaviour.
The experiment set off a small
industry of follow-up studies carried out in labs all around the world. Were
the findings still true in different cultures, in slightly varying situations
and in different genders (only men were in the original study)? By and large
the answers were that even when manipulating many different experimental
variables, people were still remarkably obedient. One exception was that one
study found Australian women were much less obedient. Make of that what you
will.
Fundamentally flawed?
Now think again. Sure, the experiment relies on the situation to influence people’s behaviour, but how real is the situation? If it was you, surely you would understand on some level that this wasn’t real, that you weren’t really electrocuting someone, that knocking someone unconscious would not be allowed in a university study?
“How good would the actors
have to be in order to avoid giving away the fact they were actors?”Also,
people pick up considerable nonverbal cues from each other. How good would the
actors have to be in order to avoid giving away the fact they were actors?
People are adept at playing along even with those situations they know in their
heart-of-hearts to be fake. The more we find out about human psychology, the
more we discover about the power of unconscious processes, both emotional and
cognitive. These can have massive influences on our behaviour without our
awareness.
Assuming people were not utterly
convinced on an unconscious level that the experiment was for real, an
alternative explanation is in order. Perhaps Milgram’s work really demonstrates
the power of conformity. The pull we all feel to please the experimenter, to
fit in with the situation, to do what is expected of us. While this is still a
powerful interpretation from a brilliant experiment, it isn’t what Milgram was
really looking for.
Whether you believe the
experiment shows what it purports to or not, there is no doubting that Milgram’s
work was some of the most influential and impressive carried out in psychology.
It is also an experiment very unlikely to be repeated nowadays (outside of
virtual reality) because of modern ethical standards. Certainly when I first
came across it, my view of human nature was changed irrevocably. Now, thinking
critically, I’m not so sure.
About the author
Psychologist, Jeremy Dean, PhD is the founder and author of PsyBlog. He holds a doctorate in psychology from University College London and two other advanced degrees in psychology.
He has been writing about
scientific research on PsyBlog since 2004. He is also the author of the book
“Making Habits, Breaking Habits” (Da Capo, 2003) and several ebooks.
SOURCE: PSYBLOG
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