"Obedience to Authority"
Posted by CarolSeer2014 10 years, 2 months ago to Government
In the 1960's, the psychologist Stanley Milgram, in attempting to understand the brutality prevalent in Nazi Germany, did a study investigating the reasons people obey authority figures. Ostensibly, he told participants he wanted to study the effects of punishment on learning ability. The results were amazing, and also frightening.
He published a book in 1974--"Obedience to Authority", about these results. Please Google in your interested in government and human nature and ...all else.
I'd like your comments.
He published a book in 1974--"Obedience to Authority", about these results. Please Google in your interested in government and human nature and ...all else.
I'd like your comments.
2. experts appeal. This is dependent on the dominant ideology. In Universities, it has been that reason is impotent. Somehow, a small group of "experts" are the only ones who can understand this and you should not question their reasoning. In fact, it's an asset that you are surrounded by "experts" that let you focus on things you want to and just absorb their analysis through media.
3. Don't think as individuals and nurture social systems that hold altruism as a standard of living (Comte). This is what we fight worldwide.
http://www.altruists.org/about/altruism/...
And yeah, it's caused me difficulty in dozens of situations throughout my life. But I would rather have had the difficulty that just accept that anyone had automatic or positional authority over me.
KYFHO
Also at the core is common public training of society's youth as well as religions, which teach “don't think independently, obey the higher powers.”
It is rare that the mystics of the “greater good” will respect individual rights, which include property rights, and the right to own oneself.
But then after having been educated in our conformist dominated education arenas, they seem no longer able to make differentiations, or judgements.
We're inclined to make decisions based on things we learned or worked out in the past. Then we rationalize the logic behind them later. When we encounter a new situation like this, it's not normal for us to stop and make a logical and ethical decision. We can overcome this, but we must work at it consciously.
If this experiment had been done to me w/o my having heard of it, I would have not pressed the buzzer b/c it violates the National Electric Code (NEC). Instead of refusing b/c it's wrong, I'd follow some other stupid authority, the NEC. Hopefully having heard about the experiment, I would not participate even if it was something completely new to me. It chills me to think maybe some gov't standard has so much sway.
I can't be sure that w/o knowledge of electricity and the NEC I would not have pressed the buzzer.
http://youtu.be/an1arrfDlYQ
I also told him that power in corporations is different than power in government, because government could always make it a law--thus the exponential growth in gov't regulations--his thinking is that gov't making it a law is, again, a good thing. His Marxist, Socialist background.
As I've said about Bill Ayers, as long as it's government making the rules!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QhTo3QmB...