The human conscience and the ability to harm has long been a question of philosophical and psychological debates—are humans innately good or evil? Do humans, despite centuries of developing civilization and establishing moral codes, resort so quickly to our primal urges to destroy and kill? The answer, as with everything human, is ambiguous. Humans and human consciousness always sit on one spectrum or another. However, the cases of the Milgram and the Stanford Prison experiment suggest a clean-cut answer: that when given the right conditions, there is nothing holding us back from returning to our innate malicious tendencies.
While I do not contest the data of these experiments, I am critical of the absoluteness of the conclusions. Both trials enlisted the participation of “normal” people, and put them in situations where they were given the ability to inflict harm on others, and the data collected showed that a good number of the subjects opted to do so. However, a key factor in both the studies has largely been overlooked in the discussions of the results, which is that in both experiments, a hierarchy was established. In the Milgram experiment, there was a distinction made between two “test subjects” (of which only one was the actual subject), as the “teacher” and the “student.” In the Stanford Prison experiment, the test group was divided into “guards” and “prisoners.” I believe that this distinction created emotional distance between the test subject and the victim, making it easier for the “teachers” or the “guards” to inflict harm on others.
In general, it is a strong moral principle that no human being should harm another human being. However, by creating a hierarchy in which the subject is above the victim, the superior ceases to see the inferior as an equal, effectively dehumanizing the victim and subconsciously justifying any cognitive dissonance that the inflictor may feel.
This phenomenon of dehumanization to excuse harm can be seen across history. Hitler’s Mein Kampf described Jewish people as the root of all evil and established all races other than the “Golden Race” as inferior, leading to the systematic genocide of entire populations. Slavery was justified by false scientific studies claiming that African Americans were biologically inferior to white people, establishing them as such an “other” that they were considered a different species. Propaganda posters in the World Wars often depicted the enemy as animalistic or barbaric to remove any guilt that the citizens may hold for the murder of enemy soldiers and raise morale.
This ability to dehumanize others to the point where harming or killing them comes easy to someone is ironically an echo of our most primal genetics. In the pack mentality drilled into our subconscious, we desire to be part of a group—the right group—and that desire causes us to ostracize and denounce any other group. The oxytocin in our brain not only increases empathy towards individuals we consider to be part of our own “group,” but also increases hostility towards individuals in the “out group.” These experiments make sure to emphasize the difference between the subjects and the victims, establishing the victims to be in a different group than the inflictors. The lessened feelings of guilt and the subconscious increase of hostility together make it easier for the test subjects to inflict pain on others.
Humans are not innately good or bad, but a product of centuries of biological hardwiring and social manipulation. Our decisions are a product of our environment and our biology, neither of which rules above the other. It is important to recognize that just as not all the test subjects of the two studies resorted to harm, not all of humanity will fall into this principle. We are endlessly varied in our perspectives, decisions, and cognitions, and thus it is essential that we recognize that fact and not seek to restrict or define our population with incorrect or insufficient labels.