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Nature of Obedience. What is obedience?. Social Influence – following direct instructions from a figure perceived to be in authority – comply or defy. Who do you consider to be authority figures?. Key Study – Milgram’s Shocking Study.
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What is obedience? • Social Influence – following direct instructions from a figure perceived to be in authority – comply or defy. • Who do you consider to be authority figures?
Key Study – Milgram’s Shocking Study • Aims – Will people obey to a perceived authority figure even when the instructions are unreasonable? • Ppts – 40 males – paid whether they completed the exp or not. 2 confederates an ‘experimenter’ and a ‘learner’.
Conclusions and Evaluation • That ‘ordinary’ people are astonishingly willing to obey to authority, no matter the instruction. • Don’t make independent decisions when authority figure is involved. • Ecological Validity • Individual differences • Psychological harm/ethics
Milgram’sVariations (1974) • Carried out 18 variations to discover why obedience was so high. This also tested for the affect of situational factors. • Obedient peers – 92.5% • Proximity – 42% (when the ‘teacher’ could neither see nor hear the ‘learner’ it rose to 100%) • Touch – 32% • Authority proximity – 23% • Presence of allies – 12% • Given no instructions – 2.5%
Real life studies • Hofling et al, 1966, Nurse study. (Rank and Jacobson, 1977) • Bickman (1974), Parking meter study. • Why does perception of authority (uniform, surroundings, etc) evoke unquestioning obedience? • People obey orders without thinking of a) what they are being asked to do and b) the consequences for other living things.
Why do people obey? Psychological processes • Socialisation • Gradual Commitment • Agentic and Autonomous behaviour • The role of buffers
Is all obedience bad? • What would happen in an ER if everyone stopped to question every order? • What would happen in a war situation? • What would happen in a fire?
Private Milkin • Ordered to set booby traps in a nearby playground. When he looks around he sees that others have already started. • What is he likely to do? • How will he feel about it? • What factors might make him likely to disobey?