Learn to Question Post: Milgram Experiment
I think we all want to believe the absolute best in ourselves and that we are incapable of inflicting pain or cruelty against others, but we don’t truly know until we’re actually in a situation that pressures us to go against all of our morals and integrity. I think under specific circumstances, people definitely have the potential or at the very least, are more prone to become a perpetrator of violence against others. The Milgram experiment strongly suggests just this by ordering ordinary people to shock students when they got answers incorrect. While this study was conducted mainly to study human behavior under authority, the results show that people were especially prone to becoming the perpetrator when they couldn’t physically see their victim and are emotionally distant from them, allowing them the ability and comfort of dissociating and preserving their self image by justifying both their action and inaction as just simply following orders: a defense that is heavily overused and illegitimate, according to Joshua Barajas and his team, but yet was made well known in the infamous post-WWII Nuremberg trials, which featured heavily on Eichmann’s court hearings and his inhumane actions during the Holocaust.
I think Milgram’s and experiments like his do actually explain ordinary people’s active participation in violence, mass atrocities, and genocide though by studying ordinary people’s willingness to blindly follow directions, regardless of whether or not they are hurting someone else, and how they reason throughout it to allow themselves to do this while also protecting their self image because “people actually feel disconnected from their actions when they comply with orders, even though they’re the ones committing the act” (Joshua Barajas, 2016). I think these studies are also important because it helps us to better understand human behavior and how a society can get to a point where millions were able to participate in the inhumane treatment of others and do the unforgivable. It also gives us a better understanding of how authority and blindly following orders is dangerous as well as gets us thinking about how every person a part of the experiment and all perpetrators of mass atrocities and genocides, such as the Holocaust, were all ordinary people with ordinary jobs and ordinary lives like us at some point. Doctors, teachers, lawyers, soldiers were all able to participate in the inhumane treatment of others under the Nazi regime’s charismatic leader and the pressure to conform of a mass movement.
However, we can’t forget that in every situation and society, there will be people who are brave and strong-willed enough to stand up for what they believe in and what they know to be morally and ethically right, even when it may be difficult to do so. I think the most important factors or personality traits that the ‘teachers’ in the Milgram experiment who chose to disobey the ‘experimenters’ commands to continue to shock the ‘learner’ is a strong sense of self and moral compass. People who believe they are good people who should always strive to do good and have a strong sense of what is considered right and wrong are less likely to actively participate in actions that harm others or be a bystander to injustice. We should strive to build societies that value and encourage others to think for themselves more so they are able to form their independent opinions on situations instead of blindly following an authority figure or getting sucked into dangerous mass movements due to the pressure to conform.