Obedience To Authority Essay

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    destructive process.” Obedience is like a narcotic; under its influence, even a strong willed person can do horrible things to others without a second thought. The only way a member of society submitting to powerful authority can escape being obedient is to live completely isolated. Subjects usually follow the orders given by a leader without a second thought, with many going the extra mile despite the mental and physical harm they could cause others. In order to satisfy an authority figure, people are

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    Max Weber presents an ideal type of authority which is the foundation of our modern civilization. He believes this is a legal-rational authority and is based on a belief in the legitimacy of the pattern of normative rules and the rights of those elevated to authority under such rules to issue commands (Stillman, 2010). Obedience is owed to a legally established set of rules rather than a person. His vision sets the power in the office rather than the person who occupies the office. In addition

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    Experiment If you were told by an authority figure to administer a high voltage shock to a possibly innocent person simply because it is “necessary,” and because the figure is intimidating and part of the authority above you, would you follow the order? Stanley Milgram, who was a psychologist from Yale University, set out to experiment on this idea beginning in the year 1961, to gain data to try and figure out the correlation between obedience to an authority and personal and ethical conscience

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    need a motive, and what is needed is a situation that facilitates through the lines between good and evil (Dittmann, 2004). This study was an extension of Stanley Milgram’s experiment of obedience to authority, known as the shock experiment. This study presented that when giving an order by someone who has authority, people would deliver what they would have assumed to be extreme levels of electrical shock to other participants who responded incorrectly to a question. Zimbardo describes how this

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    so. The trials questioned the motives behind instances of mass human torment which have led many scientists and psychologists to strive to understand the rationality behind human obedience. Two of these psychologists, Theodore Dalrymple and Erich Fromm explored the instances in which disobedience and obedience to authority should be applied. Fromm wrote his article

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    This essay is evaluating theory and research on factors that affect rates of obedience. Understanding why people feel and act the way they do support social psychologist to study the social influence on obedience, conformity, behaviour and decision making. Social psychology is the study of how people think, feel, influence, behave and relate to each other, as well as the social environment in which people live. As no two individuals or relationships are exactly the same, people’s thoughts, feelings

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    In human behavior, obedience is a type of social influence where a person submits to explicit directions or commands from an authoritative figure, assuming that the person would not have acted in such a way without such an order. This can be distinguished from conformity, which is the act of matching values, attitudes, and behaviors to group norms, and from compliance, which is behavior affected by peers. Obedience necessitates a hierarchy of power or status. The person giving the command must have

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    Obedience is defined as “compliance with an order, request, or law or submission to another’s authority” (“Obedience”). In 1963, Stanley Milgram, a psychologist at the University of Yale, conducted an experiment to examine the effects of authority. The Obedience to Authority experiment has become one of the most renowned psychological experiments to date. Milgram decided to perform these experiments after he heard the Nazi trials at Nuremburg. He was searching for an explanation to the Nazi atrocities

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    Essay on Obedience

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    Comparative Critique Obedience and Disobedience has been a part of key moments in history. Many have studied forms of obedience to learn how it affects people and situations. For example, Stanley Milgram conducted a well-known experiment in which the subject, named the “teacher” must shock the “learner” every time he doesn’t remember a word pair from a memory test. The focus of this study is on the teacher, and whether they will administer killing shocks when told to by an authority figure. Another well-known

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    Disobedience Vs Obedience

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    In society, obedience to authority is ingrained in humanity from an early age, causing some individuals to blindly obey orders without contemplating the credibility of the source. In psychoanalyst Erich Fromm’s article “Disobedience as a Psychological and Moral Problem,” he explains that throughout human history obedience has been associated with virtue and disobedience with sin (Fromm 127). Fromm suggests that our conscience is an internalized voice of authority (126). Fromm claims individuals need

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