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BrokenTile
Boston, Massachusetts, US
Posts: 3

Milligram Experiment and Obedience Theory

I think that everyone has the potential to become a perpetrator of violence against others when in fear of authority or as part of a mass movement, and not feeling responsible for their actions. For example, Adolf Eichmann argued that he was just a cog in the machine and was “just following orders”. Having the attitude that you’re not responsible and doing what the authority is telling you to do shifts blame off of yourself and makes you go: it wasn’t my fault, it was (insert authority figure)’s fault. The Milgram experiments suggest that when pressured by an authority figure, people might question what they’re doing, but a percentage of people will go through with it, while others might stop. If people were held more accountable, they might reconsider their actions, and to what degree they act on their violent ideas.


I think that experiments like Milgram’s actually explain ordinary people’s active participation in violence, mass atrocities and genocide. As mentioned before in the course certain cults, like the Jonestown cult, or the Manson family. Other factors that might play a role in participation of violence and atrocities would be a sense of belonging in a group, or meaning. Or the “us vs them dynamic”, and polarization in society. There’s also a very small percentage of people who might be characterized as sociopaths who genuinely feel no remorse, the David Cash guy shown in class, but in the Stanford Prison experiment it showed that even with the brightest minds, when given power over others, could become tyrannical. Although this could be skewed due to people seeking power over others as a guard and how the researchers framed the Stanford Prison experiment to their subjects.


Some of the important factors and personality traits that led the “teachers” in the Milgram experiment to disobey the experimenters’ commands to continue to shock the learner would be having actual concern for the learner and being willing to disobey the authority figure and give up the money paid in the experiment. While you can try to create societies that value and encourage the traits of people who disobey unethical authority figures, I think you’ll run into the problem of people questioning authority that might not be considered unethical. For instance, recent public assassinations of the UnitedHealth Care CEO and Charlie Kirk. If we give too much freedom to question authority, you have anarchy, and anarchy leads to chaos. We still need some semblance of order in our society, especially with these increasingly polarizing times. But these experiments should be taken with a grain of salt, because these people know that they are participating in an experiment. If it were the real world and there was a strong authority figure that you had to obey, I have a feeling most people wouldn’t rebel due to fear for themselves and a desire for self-preservation. I believe that there is a major difference between situations where it is easy to disobey because it doesn’t threaten you personally, but if it did, you might see less people willing to disobey.

DiaryoftheSillyKid
Boston, Ma, US
Posts: 3

While Milgram's experiments may seem “extreme” to some people, they show how the human mind reacts in multiple scenarios. For example, in the experiment we watched in class, the act of shocking a person with heart problems with dangerous amounts of electricity is very intense, but it shows how the brain reacts to serious situations while also listening to the directions of a higher authority. The Milgram experiment exposes that with a stroke of authority over hearing and observing others' actions, we as humans can become perpetrators of violence against others. The human mind often goes against personal morals and empathy for another individual when a higher power instructs it to do otherwise. This can happen for several reasons, like lack of information, trust in a higher authority, etc., but these things are not necessarily able to go against the mind's “instinct” to do what's right. During the video, when each participant reaches a certain point in the experiment, typically when a dangerous amount of electricity is being applied to the other individuals, they begin to question the reality of the experiment, and provide excuses to stop it. This demonstrates humans' basic instinct of morality and empathy toward themselves and other humans, but when a higher authority, such as the scientist in this instance, continues to harm others, most likely because of their vague knowledge of the experiment and the extremity of the experiment, it allows the brain to go against its instincts.

Milgram's experiment helps people understand the human brain better, in terms of participation in violence or mass genocide. Milgram's experiment goes hand in hand with the idea of “mob mentality,” even when there isn't much of a mob in this experiment. This explains the idea where people feel isolated and are not willing to complete an action because the “correct” side is saying to do otherwise. In the experiment, there is no “group” necessarily, a higher authority, where the teacher goes against their own judgment of the situation and follows the orders of the scientist. This experiment shows that people feel the need to follow the orders of an authority figure when they lack information about the situation, making it easier for leaders, like Hitler or Stalin, to “control” a group of people to the “right” objective. Moreover, I believe that people could enjoy inflicting pain on others, but most people do it in fear of punishment from a higher authority. In society, we call these people sociopaths, where an individual enjoys or has no reaction to seriously gruesome activity, especially when pain is inflicted on another person or even themselves. Something that leads to this is when people start to dehumanize other humans, making them seem like objects rather than human beings. When a group or individual is seen as less than human, it becomes easier to justify violence against them. Propaganda in war times and mass genocide movements are a way to dehumanize people, making pain towards them “justifiable”. This is similar to Maria Korrinkova’s point in The Real Lesson of the Stanford Prison Experiment that “any random human being is capable of descending into sadism and tyranny. It’s that certain institutions and environments demand those behaviors—and, perhaps, can change them.” Some things that may have affected the participant’s ability to to disobey in the experiment is the fact that the scientist was in very close contact with the learner. If the participant was in another room than the scientist, it would be easier to refrain from shocking the other person because there would be less of an obligation to do so, and repercussions against the teacher are less likely. Another thing was the relationship between the two participants. Usually, the teacher starts to develop a relationship with the learner based on pure empathy. The teacher would commonly ask if the learner was alright to continue the experiment because they did not like the feeling of inflicting pain on the learner. Moreover, I believe that it would be hard to create these societies where people go against these types of authority figures, but in history, people have done so, leading to different reformation acts like Women's suffrage and the Civil Rights movement. With all this said, I leave my classmates to think, what societal changes could be made to stop people from hesitating to the pressures of unethical authority figures?

lordofthenumbers
Boston, MA, US
Posts: 3

I believe that most people have the potential to become a perpetrator of violence against others. I say most mainly because there are too many people in the world to make a complete generalization. People are cruel when they want to be, and even when they don’t. The Milgram experiments suggest that the way that humans perceive others has a strong impact on how possible it would be to inflict pain on others. The subjects that could see the “student” were able to stray from authority much earlier, implying that sight and perception has a strong influence on how a person thinks. Being able to see and hear the pain that they are causing could influence their decision making, increasing their empathy or need to humanize the other person.

Milgram’s experiments might reveal some of the reasoning behind an active participation in genocide, though I believe that the explanation requires more nuance and other causes. For example, the lack of connection they feel to their actions can only partially explain away their actions, as many people still acted to stop hurting the other person, even when they couldn’t see the person. This displays the importance of human perception when they act, as they feel separated from the act of inflicting pain onto another person. There could be an aspect of obligation, where the subjects felt obligated to carry out the experiment due to their payment, which was still going to be given even if they didn’t fully go through with it. This “duty” probably shouldn’t have as much effect as it does, but there is a human need to finish something you’ve been assigned to. Additionally, there was a very strong “authority” in the experiment, as he didn’t flinch or doubt the experiment at all. This sort of sureness can strongly influence a person’s trust and faith in an action. This is, in many words, just a way of interpreting or even justifying the way that people can act in a situation where they are harming someone. I think that these three factors also added to the willingness of a person’s participation in a cruel act.

This experiment doesn’t actually explain the entirety of the reasoning behind a person’s participation in genocide, rather a specific part of the processing behind their actions. Of course, according to another experiment, “when people act “under orders,” they seem to experience less agency over their actions and outcomes than when they choose for themselves” (Barajas 2). There has to be a direct correlation between the action and the consequences, or else people feel separated from them. This idea was likely taken advantage of, mostly by leaders taking advantage of the bystander effect. They felt their inaction or their slight actions didn’t matter in how it impacted people. It is likely that people did also actually feel the impact of their actions, but it was more easily pushed away due to this disconnect. There also exist people that also just completely feel justified in their actions, feeling that the harm that they were doing onto other people was justified. Additionally, their faith in the authority figure, in the actions or beliefs that they are abiding by can impact the willingness or want to complete the orders given to them. The stronger the faith, the less disconnected they even need to feel from the harm they are inflicting onto other people.

snoopythedog
Boston, Massachusetts, US
Posts: 3

Response to LTQ 2

Originally posted by vytygygvhbuy on September 22, 2025 10:43

Nowadays, everyone has the potential to become a perpetrator. The person may not have wanted to be a perpetrator of violence, but they could’ve had to defend themselves, and in the end be the one to be called perpetrator of violence. For example, Ishaan Sharma had started a fight on a plane with a man. The video went viral on social media, but instead of calling Sharma the perpetrator, they said that the black man fighting back and protecting himself was the perpetrator only because he did more damage than Sharma did to him. Even though Sharma had started the attack the black man was still seen as the perpetrator and I feel like anyone could end up in this position, especially with how violent and crazy people have become these last few years. The Milgram experiments suggest that humans are more likely to inflict pain on others if they don’t have to directly do it themselves, which is why not as many people went through with the experiment if they had to physically push their hand down on the plate, but more people finished the whole experiment when they only had to click a button. Another thing that the experiment shows is that people are less likely to inflict pain on others if they feel like they will be the one to take the responsibility of what has happened to them. The man in the video only continued on after the man said everything that happens here is his responsibility. People will inflict pain if they feel like there will be no consequence to what they did. Another thing I noticed about the experiments is that when the man found out that the people weren't actually on his side and thought what he was doing was wrong, he flipped the script and started to act like he stopped when in all honesty he could've stayed there all day and finished the experiment if they kept insisting he did. This goes along with the concept of group think and conformity. At first, he thought everyone was okay with what was going on so he went along with it, knowing it was wrong, but as soon as he started to be questioned and put in a position where people weren’t agreeing with what was being done he tried to change what happened. He did this to try to make it seem like he was on the side of the majority when in reality, he failed the test and he was only conforming to what the instructor would say. This shows that people often put on masks to fit in with their surroundings because they are afraid to be wrong or in the minority. “According to Milgram’s experiments, 65 percent of his volunteers, described as “teachers,” were willing (sometimes reluctantly) to press a button that delivered shocks up to 450 volts to an unseen person,” and this can show that if you chose 100 people, at random, at least 65 of them would have continued on with the experiment. This shows that most people in society are going to submit to the obedience theory. This can match up with other things we’ve seen in the past. Most people, knowing it was wrong, followed Hilter and regretted it after the holocaust. Another example could be people raising their hand in class for answers knowing that they think another answer is correct. That is something that happens almost everyday and is a constant form of group think. With all this being said, yes I think experiments like Milgram’s actually explain ordinary people's active participation in violence and so many other different things.

I like the contribution of the modern aspect with the attack of Ishaan Sharma. Likewise, I think it is interesting that the majority of people will deliver the full shock to a participant, knowing full well that that shock could kill them. It's also suprising to me that when they were debriefed following the experiment and relieved that their actions were in fact not causing any major shock to the student, they felt the need to rashly justify themselves saying they were "about to" stop or "going to" leave the room, when in fact, while we all were aware of their reluctance, they were fully likely to continue. I would like to add one particular perspective that might make you think: were there any confounding variables in this study? That is, could there be the influence of other factors that might have led to this particular statistic of 65% of participants delivering the full shock? Is the sample size of participants appropriate? Maybe more researchers should seek to apply this experiment in other contexts instead of the laboratory at Yale. They could, say, conduct it in a psychiatry clinic in the suburbs, or a military school for students under 18. Would the results be the same?

PeanutButterBoy
Boston, MA, US
Posts: 3

Originally posted by Seven_Gill on September 21, 2025 21:26

There are many people that look at the Holocaust and believe that the perpetrators of the excessive violence were simply evil or sociopathic, but in reality there was far more at play that made those people do what they did. In fact, a lot of it had to do with the historical developments of the early/mid 1900’s, in particular Hitler’s rise to power. Hitler rose to power at a vulnerable time in German history, when the economic state of Germany was in shambles after the first World War. The question that many people have about Hitler’s rise to power is how it even happened in the first place if what he advocated for was so violent and abhorrent? Even some may agree (in retrospect) that Hitler was able to take advantage of the people’s impressionable minds with his skills as an orator, and the fact that he was able to offer the people an opportunity to both reestablish Germanies power and economy. “Holocaust organizer Adolf Eichmann wrote that he and other low-level officers were ‘forced to serve as mere instruments,’ shifting the responsibility for the deaths of millions of Jews to his superiors. The ‘just following orders’ defense, made famous in the post-WWII Nuremberg trials, featured heavily in Eichmann’s court hearings” (Barajas 1). As stated by Barajas in his article, he states that there are ordinary people who are capable of performing horrific acts, and the Nazi’s are not an exception. Although there were probably some sociopathic people who carried out the acts of the Holocaust, the majority of the people were simply “following orders”. Following orders was the main justification for many of the people that contributed to the Holocaust, and they use this form of cognitive dissonance to escape any form of wrongdoing that they are responsible for. This is often an issue that comes with groupthink because of the fact that oftentimes humans have a harder time making the distinction between right and wrong when it comes to the majority and minority. If hundreds of thousands of people supported Hitler, and were loud and voca about how Hitler would have a positive impact on Germany as a whole, then it’s only natural that people who were initially skeptical may be swayed into the majority. Now this doesn’t mean that everybody who supported Hitler, or even carried out these actions were “bad people”, but it does show how groupthink can be dangerous and incite mass violence. Another issue with the Holocaust that relates to the Milgram experiment is the idea that an authority figure can incite violence as well. The Nazi party was brutally oppressive in the sense that when anybody was not in support of the Nazi’s, then they were viewed as acting against the Nazi’s and their beliefs. Even something as miniscule as a photo of you refusing to salute to Hitler could be viewed as grounds for imprisonment or worse. This proved to be true for August Landmesser (and likely many others) as he was imprisoned after he was investigated for having not saluted during a Nazi parade, with their only evidence being this photo. This oppressiveness greatly contributed to the groupthink that influenced so many of the people that contributed to the Holocaust, and anybody who had a differing opinion that could’ve possibly swayed people’s opinions were silenced. Lastly, something like the Stanford prison experiment can give a slight insight as to how people justified their actions during the Holocaust. Jews were persecuted and labeled as less than human, and that was a way in which they could justify the mass slaughter of millions, because they were “inferior”. This was similar to the mistreatment of the “prisoners” in the Stanford prison experiment, as they were simply given a label that theorectically should not change their value as a person, but it still gave the “guards” the idea that they were inferior. In general, I would say that a mixture of psychological factors as well as historical factors were the main drivers of Nazi Germany’s initial rise to power, and the actions committed suring the Holocaust by seemingly normal people were due to fear of an authority figure, groupthink, and dehumanization.

I read the same article and I agree with many points that you're making here. I like how you back up your points with Hitler’s rise to power by explaining why he was able to gain power quickly. For me, I focused on how Hitler himself would be able to convince German citizens to fight for him, so I appreciate how you expand on that point and mention how those same citizens would use their own voices to convince skeptics to join in the Nazi movement. I also like how you tied this example of groupthink back to what we've learned about cognitive dissonance. Your example of August Landmesser is very important to prove a point of their harsh rule, but I feel you could talk about how that shows groupthink in the Nazi regime. The connection made between the Stanford prison experiment and Jewish persecution is a valuable insight, and I think you could discuss how that shows groupthink as well, as each guard works together and has similar ideas of how to treat prisoners. I like how you gave these examples to show how the Nazi regime fully consumed the minds of Germans. You do a great job at explaining what would influence them to act the way they did, explaining the shift of responsibility and the claim that the Nazi soldiers were “just following orders”. Overall, I agreed with your points and enjoyed hearing your perspectives on the reading.

flower123
Boston, Massachusetts, US
Posts: 3

Originally posted by sunnydays on September 22, 2025 10:27

I think Milgram's experiments do explain, to a large extent, ordinary people's active participation in violence and mass atrocities. Ordinary people have a tendency to believe that authority figures have more knowledge than they do. Like, who knows more about the political relations between the United States and China right now, me or the American ambassadors who actually go talk to Chinese officials? Because of this, we tend to follow orders authority figures give because we'll look stupid if we're wrong and we mess something up because we acted without having all the knowledge. Additionally, in the article about the Stanford Prison Experiment, they mention that they redid the experiment years later without the expectation of brutality from the guards. In this redo, the prisoners actually had more power than the guards and successfully rebelled. The conclusion the author takes away from this is that "[a]ll else being equal, we act as we think we’re expected to act—especially if that expectation comes from above."

I don't think we blindly follow authority. I think we have our reasons. Feeling less educated is definitely one. I think people also think about themselves. That was a major motivation during the Holocaust: was it really worth becoming a political enemy and most likely getting killed yourself to help someone else? Additionally, there's that sense of social conformity theory. Similarly to assuming authority figures know more than we do, we tend to assume the group does, too. And we're scared to ask questions because we don't want to look stupid and be ostracized for it. If everyone in your community normalizes violence, you'll probably go along with it because you feel like you're missing something that justifies the violence. And, if you don't do anything, is it really your fault? I think it is, because you should at least ask for a reason before going along with anything you don't understand.

Finally, I think we can attempt to create societies that value and encourage the traits of people who disobey unethical authority figures. We need to teach kids to question everything and feel brave enough to be different. I think we're headed there by "celebrating our differences" in the media, but we also need to emphasize that it is safe to have and share opinions, and give ourselves time to think about things, rather than trying to drown everything bad by doomscrolling or bingeing TV because we don't want to have to remember how doomed we feel.

In a prison, obviously, the prisoners are subordinates to the guards. But the BBC's prison experiment showed that, by setting different precedents, the prisoners were able to take power. By changing the expectations we set for people, we can completely change the environment and actions of our society and the people in it. This is dangerous, of course, because we don't want actual prisoners taking over their prisons or anything like that. But we should treat them more humanely, and act like everyone has the ability to be good and redeem themself, no matter what they've done.

This answer is very multi-dimensional and captures the complex layers of Milgram's experiment. The author connected selfishness to obedience and the role it has in mass movements. I was most compelled by the point they made about the fact that we follow a leader for our own reasons. The most prominent being uneducation. Gaining confidence to object to a leader who you are sure you know more than, is significantly easier than the alternative. It being, not knowing, which can have many monumental effects on the individual. This response then bridged this idea of direct impact on the individual and then added an extra layer of sacrifice. In the case of most mass movements, objecting to a political figure would then turn you into a political enemy. The question then became, is it worth it to stand against people being harmed? The author depicted the idea that with the both, people assuming the group holds more knowledge than the individual, and the motivation of not wanting to be an enemy of the government, it makes sense that people “justified” their violent tendencies. Therefore they avoided personal responsibility, making the violent acts easier to commit and the feeling of them defining one's character less.

ABC123
Brighton, Massachusetts, US
Posts: 2

LTQ Post 2: The Milgram Experiment and Obedience Theory

Not everyone has the potential to become a perpetrator of violence, but many do. The Milgram experiment demonstrates that some individuals are willing to inflict pain on others when instructed by an authority figure, which reveals human tendencies to obey even in situations that conflict with personal morals. If you look at this on a more detrimental scale, considering Nazi leaders and other cult “second in command” type of people, we can see that even though they aren’t the main overseer like the experimenter was in the Milgram experiment, they were still willing to carry out harmful acts. These acts often stemmed from a similar obedience to authority and detachment from their own responsibility, as the teachers in the Milgram experiment did. This detachment from personal responsibility seems to play a key role. It was specifically targeted in the experiment by separating the teacher and student into different rooms. This theory has not only been used to examine higher-level Nazi leaders, but also lower-level concentration camp soldiers. The entire gas chamber design exploits the fact that you can’t see or really hear it happening, no gunshot sounds, no views of people crying, nothing, just a building with people in it. The personal responsibility and the regular human tendency to preserve life were specifically pushed to the back of the mind. I think the factor often not taken into account is the idea that if orders are not followed in an authoritarian rule like Hitler with the Nazis, your own life is possibly at risk. If you don’t follow orders, you get killed, and someone else just does your job. Possibly the only thing that could make people resist the orders is their own morals, and I don't believe that morals are worth more than their own lives.

Another piece of the puzzle is greed for power. It might not be strongly applicable in the Milgram experiment, but when you're a higher-up in an organization like the Nazis, power is at the tip of your fingers. Whether you’re power-hungry and the decisions you are told to make give you that validation of power, or you have hopes for more power and a climb up the ladder, it definitely plays a role in people's decisions. If you’re a Nazi leader and you have the assumption that there's no way the Nazi’s lose the war, if I stay in power, I'm both safe and have a strong role in society, but if I leave and run away now, I will be replaced, and wanted for some sort of treason my whole life. It can be turned not into a moral dilemma, but into one of life or death. Do you truly hate the Americans, or do you just cherish your own life? Now, the probability that this is actually the thought process of some Nazi leaders is probably pretty low. They probably were all straight-up, evil, cold-blooded killers, but we weren’t in their shoes; we didn’t have Hitler overseeing our every move, and we weren’t scared for our lives.

IliaElMatadorTopuria
Hyde Park, Massachusetts, US
Posts: 3

I think that everyone can become a perpetrator of violence regardless of our learned behavior throughout our lives. Especially when put in a place of power, I think that it is inevitable that some corruption, violence, or wrongdoing is committed. In the Milgram experiment we see how specifically combined with pressure from authority and social norms, this violence is present, and also explored more by any given individual. In the Milgram experiment we see that people naturally follow social norms and orders regardless of the effect on others. Ordinary and non-violent people alike intentionally hurt others in the experiment. Regardless of the true nature of the experiment, that the actors were okay, it still reveals how people seem to naturally follow orders. Given this, I think that everyone has the capacity to commit heinous acts, whether deep within themselves or otherwise, it is still there. Thus, I think that given the means, anyone can become a perpetrator of violence against others. The Milgram experiment shows us how easy it is for us to be manipulated into doing such heinous acts. It suggests that we are predisposed to being subject to manipulation by authority figures in our lives. In How Nazi's Defense of "Just Following Orders" Plays Out in the Mind by Joshua Barajas, he lays it out clearly stating that when people act under orders, they have less agency and control over their actions. This shows that there is a reduced responsibility when following orders. He even goes to state that people in charge should be held more accountable for the actions they compel others to do if this is true. This suggests that the Milgram experiment shows us that people simply feel less responsible for their actions when they are under orders. This is echoed in Nazi Germany where many people justified their actions in an attempt to save face by saying that they were “just following orders.” Now, there is no justification for the horrible acts committed by the Nazis, bottom line. However, this statement gives us insight into how the brain almost loses itself when following orders. In addition to many other psychological factors including manipulation by propaganda and forced groupthink, the Nazi party was able to forcibly change the German population into tools for horror. This example shows how ordinary people, when morality is concealed by outside factors, have the capability to commit violence. Importantly, this does not mean everyone is a murderer or okay with heinous acts like that. Disregarding the select few genuine sociopaths, this suggests that a lot of horrible acts committed can be partially attributed to the environment as well as the perpetrator. Additionally, it is important to say that the line between cold-hearted killer and average citizen is not as concrete as you may think and that it is wildly dynamic. At the heart of everyone, I believe that there is good and bad, which shows outwardly or takes over is based on a great many factors. What the Milgram experiment shows us is that we are susceptible to that bad side rearing its head. I think given different circumstances, the opposite can be achieved as well, and that by harboring a positive environment we can coerce similar actions.

Jeff
Boston, MA, US
Posts: 3

The Illusion of Control

Zygmunt Bauman’s reflection that “the most frightening news brought about by the Holocaust... was not the likelihood that ‘this’ could be done to us, but the idea that we could do it,” connects directly to the questions raised by Stanley Milgram’s obedience experiments. The documentary footage of ordinary men showing concern, but continuing to administer what sounded like extremely painful shocks, is so disturbing because it confirms Bauman’s fear. The experiments show that the capacity for cruelty is not limited to a small number of individuals, but is in many of us, waiting to be activated by specific situations. However, this theory is a bit more complex than simply demonstrating a human tendency to blindly follow authority. A deeper analysis, backed by newer interpretations of Milgram’s work, reveals that factors such as group identification and psychological distance are more significant in explaining our cruel actions.

This terrifying idea is exactly what the Milgram experiments seemingly supported on the surface. When put in a room with a person of authority in a lab coat (a scientist), 62.5% of participants were willing to give shocks up to a deadly 450 volts. The documentary shows their internal conflict as they protest, question the experimenter, and show visible signs of distress, but most people still go along with the commands. This tells us that when a strong authority is there, it can take over someone's morals. This creates a situation where the participant’s main concern shifts from the student’s well-being to reducing their own stress caused by defying the scientist in the lab coat. This shows how ordinary citizens could become active participants in actions they wouldn't typically support.

You wouldn't expect people to be internally conflicted and stressed out if they were just passively obeying orders. The idea of “just following orders" is incomplete. A more convincing idea is that it's not about obedience, but about identification. You must take into consideration that the participants had to choose who to side with. Do they side with the scientist from Yale, or with the guy screaming in the other room? The people who continued with the shocks weren't hypnotized; they chose to believe in the experiment and saw the scientist as a trustworthy leader for a good cause. This changes the argument from mindless rule following to active, engaged behavior, which is a more disturbing reason for why people do terrible things.

So, how does someone psychologically get to a place where they can do that? It happens through a strong sense of detachment. The research shows that when you act under orders, your brain experiences a reduced feeling of control. Your actions start to feel like passive movements and not things you fully chose to do. This creates an emotional gap between you and your actions, so you don't feel like you're doing the harm. When putting together that disconnection with a strong belief in a leader's goals, ordinary people tend to do horrific things. Milgram’s experiment doesn't tell us that we're all robots, but that our choices are shaped by who and what we follow.

BuzzBrdy
Boston, Massachusetts, US
Posts: 3

Milgram Experiment

I do think that experiments such as the Milgram’s explain the reason why ordinary people’s participation in violence due to the fear of breaking rules. People tend to be unsympathetic when it benefits them or even simply when they want to be. The Milgram experiment revolves around a teacher choosing the pain levels to inflict on a student when they get an answer to a question wrong. As the pain increases,the student begs to stop the experiment. The experiment questions the idea of conformity, and if the teacher will stop the experiment or continue it based on the scientist’s demands. When people break rules, they may associate it with punishment for themselves which leads them to conformity, listening to and fulfilling every command. I believe that if there wasn’t a scientist forcing the experiment, the teachers would stop. The teachers saw the scientist as the one responsible, and decided to comply with the orders as it shifts the blame off of them. As seen by this quote “In other words, people actually feel disconnected from their actions when they comply with orders, even though they’re the ones committing the act” (Barajas), it doesn’t matter if you are the one inflicting pain, but it is the teacher’s fault. If they were to bring in a teacher that is not afraid of breaking rules, they stopped the experiment immediately as seen with the first teacher. Another barrier to showing empathy and stopping the experiment was seeing the student. When a teacher physically sees the student’s pain, they are more likely to stop the experiment than if they were not able to see. This is similar to what we learned about in Nazi Germany, where they used gas chambers as the Nazis wouldn’t be able to see the death they caused. I believe that any moral compass is turned off this way, and they had a reason to justify their actions as they were just following orders. Reduced responsibility gives people a reason to commit atrocities, and they see themselves as just the person doing it. Shifting the blame onto another person gives people the idea that the person asking them to do it should be held more accountable for any outcomes that end badly. Along with following authority blindly, I believe another reason that people willingly inflict pain on others is because of desensitization. When people are constantly confronted with violence, their tolerance can gradually increase. What starts off as small acts of violence can quickly become larger as it is more normalized. This is illustrated in the Milgram experiment as the shocks start off as light. As the student continues to get questions wrong, the pain increases until they can no longer handle it. In addition to this, the repeated action of violence numbs the teacher, who cares less and less. As they continue to inflict harm, there becomes less shock and the individual may start to feel detached, disregarding it as a virtuous choice. Ultimately, the experiment shows us how authority and desensitization work together to explain how atrocities are justified in the eyes of the perpetrator.

microwavedpizza
Boston, Massachusetts, US
Posts: 4

I think that under the right circumstances, everyone has the potential to become a perpetrator of violence against others, whether intentionally or unconsciously. The Milgram experiments (a clear example of this idea) suggest that when someone who seems to be more knowledgeable instructs us to do something and provides reassurance, we are likely to do what is asked of us. In the experiments, one man continues to deliver shocks all the way up to nearly the highest voltage despite knowing it was wrong. Afterwards, when the scheme was revealed to him and he was asked why he failed to halt, the man began to explain himself away. He took the easier way out and shifted the blame onto the instructor, communicating how he didn’t have a choice and that he was not personally responsible. I believe that even though the experiment was all planned, the man experienced cognitive dissonance knowing that he followed through with the instructions. His response demonstrates an attempt to justify himself and reduce any feelings of guilt. The fact that he couldn’t see the person he was shocking definitely played a role in his continuation as well. In a more general sense, I think that if we cannot physically see the harm we are implementing onto others, we are able to play it down. This same tactic was used during the Holocaust in gas chambers. Supporting this idea, when the experiment was conducted with the “student” and “teacher” in a closer proximity to one another, the teacher was more likely to stop. To start off one of his papers, Milgrim wrote “Obedience, as a determinant of behavior, is of particular relevance to our time,”. I find this interesting and relevant as it was written over 60 years ago and still pertains to modern life. After reading it, I question how we as a society determine who we will be obedient to. Without question, there are laws we (most of us, at least) follow such as not murdering, kidnapping, or committing arson. There is still a lot of gray area though, and I wonder how it came to be that we collectively choose who not to listen to.

It seems to me that such experiments can serve as smaller-scaled symbols that explain ordinary people’s active participation in violence, mass atrocities, and genocide. A large cause of this is the personality of the leader, as we have learned in class. Those with charisma, leadership, and confidence can manipulate groups with lower self-esteem into actions they would not typically engage in. These characteristics are not inherently bad, in fact I believe them to be largely valuable and encouraging. I see no problem with those who harbor similar personality traits. When they use them with bad intentions or to harm someone else, however, is when it becomes an issue. We like to believe that if we ever found ourselves in a similar situation, we would 100% not fall for the tactics… but then again many who are sucked in had the same mindset and when it comes to it, we can never be so sure.

believerchalkboardcomputer
Boston, Massachusetts, US
Posts: 3

The Milgram Experiment and Obedience Theory

While I don’t think it is someone’s natural response, I think everyone has the potential to become a perpetrator of violence against others if they are pushed hard enough to do it. The Milgram experiment suggests that human behavior can be manipulated into willingly and knowingly committing acts that are against our better judgment or our moral compass. While some participants in the documentary were more questioning of what an authority figure tells them to do and hesitant to carry out the shockings, most people placed in a situation where they are confused or unsure of what to do will defer to the authority figure. This can be because having someone tell them what to do can make people feel better about a situation or what they are doing, especially in the Milgram experiment where a lot of the participants had no idea about how dangerous voltage can be so they trusted the scientist who they believed had more knowledge than them. It can also reduce the burden of the action on their conscience if the person is told to do something rather than doing it of their own will. Also, people have a tendency to want to appease those that they think have authority and fear the consequences of disobedience. I think that experiments like Milgram’s help explain part of how ordinary people can participate in mass atrocities, but it does not provide the whole answer. In Rethinking one of Psychology’s most infamous experiments, it says “The notion that we somehow automatically obey authority, that we are somehow programmed, doesn’t account for the variability [in rates of obedience] across conditions,” he said; in some iterations of Milgram’s study, the rate of compliance was close to 100 percent, while in others it was closer to zero. “We need an account that can explain the variability—when we obey, when we don’t”. This brings up the idea that some people are naturally more resistant to the influence of authority than others, which can be due to a whole range of reasons like their personal moral compass, past experiences or things like proximity to the victim. In the documentary we saw that when the learner was put in another room away from the teacher, the teacher was more likely to obey than when the teacher could see the learner and had to physically intervene with the learner to shock them. The environment also plays a large part in how obedient people are as well. In the article The Real Lesson from the Stanford Prison Experiment, it talks about how some of the participants who were given the role of guard felt they had to act tougher for the experiment. The way the authority figure gives the instructions can also influence how people will react. If the order is given in a reserved and monotone fashion, then it can cause a person to feel more at ease and willing if the authority figure is calm. In order to create a society that values and encourages the traits that encourage disobedience to unethical behavior we would need to teach and encourage critical thinking in everybody so that when people can think about the implications of the actions they are doing.

lemonloaf
Boston, Massachusetts, US
Posts: 2

Originally posted by flower123 on September 19, 2025 13:08

The obedience theory depicts how humans have an extreme tendency to follow orders when received from a person in authority. The Milgram experiment, conducted at Yale in 1962, tests this. It puts humans in a position to inflict pain and cause harm to another stranger, it was looking for a boundary and testing when the person would actually resist an authority figure with actions. It did not take a lot for the people to question their actions and object with words, however when it came to bringing the harm to a stop, it took significantly longer. Most people had to get 85% of the way through the experiment, knowing they are causing direct harm, before stopping. In my opinion, everyone has the potential to commit violence until their brain is fully developed at around 25. Young people, under the age of 25, are flooded with hormones and have not developed emotional regulation skills because their brains were developing. However when someone who is above that age commits a violent act, they are piercing and permanently damaging any type of moral foundation they might have had. It defines someone's character, which has been well established. Therefore if it is a defining feature of someone, not everyone is capable of committing these acts. People can train themselves to react to situations in different ways and it takes a unique type of emotional immaturity to commit acts of violence.

While that point remains true, after reading the first article, I began to question the validity of the experiment. The article dives into the archives of the experiment that paint Milgram to be a liar. Within the archives, researchers found accusations of volunteers knowing it was a “hoax” and of the teacher characters going off script. If this experiment is not real, how much of what is stated above can actually be proved. However I have one main concern with the questioning of Milgram's experiment, are people trying to disprove the test because of the human tendency of justification. Does the very question of the test prove his point? Especially given the fact that all that was found in the archives themselves, were solely accusations. There are so many layers to this experiment and it leads in circles. I don't think there is a way to undoubtedly prove the theory one way or the other using Milgram’s technique.

Another aspect that is intriguing to think about is the value in the “disobeyers”. To disobey an educated person in a position of power who is giving you simple commands that do not harm oneself, characterizes a person greatly. Creating a boundary in a place where one lacks support can be a very difficult thing to do. Therefore, while expected and anticipated, in order to do the right thing the person must possess courage, the ability for rebellion, and persistence. Those qualities are highly valued and they are not all seen in every individual, yet this would then defy the expectation. This is because of empathy. The foundation of this layer is the fact that at a certain point, causing someone else harm, inflicts mental suffering on the individual. The expectation is that a person's empathy should make up for each individual's lack of other qualities (if applicable).

I want to touch upon the discussion of the "disobeyer" and how you stated that their actions reveal qualities such as courage and empathy. I agree to some extent because it highlighted an often-overlooked part of the milligram experiment. While some people may have obeyed the researcher's commands, others resisted, and their defiance demonstrates that obedience is not inevitable. It begs the question of which humans will demonstrate human weaknesses, and how we will be the ones who have the right to stand against it? This is something that must be considered in uncomfortable or pressured situations, such as the Milgram experiment. From my own viewpoint, I agree that empathy plays a crucial role in resisting authority; however, I disagree with the idea that people under the age of 25 are more prone to violence simply because of a lack of brain development. While yes, that does play a role, I also believe that environment and upbringing also play an equally strong role. Overall, I like how layered your analysis is, but I would suggest a minor adjustment: the section about Milgram being a "liar" could be simpler and made more concise for readers to understand which parts of the study were questioned. That would solidify your credibility.

dunkindonuts
JAMAICA PLAIN, MA, US
Posts: 3

I think that everyone has the potential to become a perpetrator of violence against others. However, I think some people are more likely to go the full length than others. The Obedience Theory suggests that humans are socialized to obey authority and follow the rules even if the authority figure is not present or if they contradict with our beliefs. The Milgram Experiments suggest that we are obedient towards authority. We are also especially confident in our actions when we are told that we are not responsible for the consequences or end results, but that the authorities are responsible. This is clearly shown in the video about the Milgram Experiment. One of the test subjects was hesitant to continue administering the shocks because the learner was yelling about his heart problems. He did not want to be responsible for injuring or killing the man, so he insisted on stopping the experiment. However, after the scientist told him that he would not be responsible or blamed for the pain, he continued on and kept intensifying the shocks. Many of the teachers were aware of the learners’ heart condition. They also were able to hear the screams of pain and heard the learners pleading for them to stop shocking. The teachers knew that the learners were uncomfortable in the situation, and most of them verbally told the scientists they did not want to continue. Very few of them stuck by their morals and disobeyed the scientist telling them to continue. Despite their morals, they ultimately continued the experiment because they were told to by the scientist. I think that the scientist’s calm, persuasive, and knowledgeable tone helped convince the test subjects that they were doing the right thing by continuing. I thought this connected really well to the quote in “How Nazi’s Defense of ‘Just Following Orders’ Plays Out in the Mind” that stated that “people actually feel disconnected from their actions when they comply with orders, even though they’re the ones committing the act”. This quote explains why the majority of the test subjects continued with the shock punishments. They felt that they weren’t really contributing to the learner’s pain as much as the scientists were. Since they were only just doing as they were told by the authority, this feeling of lack of responsibility was used to further justify their actions. It emphasizes the social norm that people listen to higher authority even when it goes against what they stand for. I found that the rejection of their morals to obey higher authority was very interesting and prevalent in history. I think it highlights some of the causes of historical instances of obedience, like the Nazis. The document also explained that “coercion could change someone’s ‘sense of agency’”. I think the coercion in the Milgram experiment was the scientists’ calm yet monotone way of speaking. Furthermore, the same repetitive scripted lines they said such as “the experiment requires that you continue” probably helped more to convince the teacher to continue.

D5 Athlete
Hyde Park, Massachusetts, US
Posts: 3

Sociologist Zygmunt Bauman once wrote that “The most frightening news brought about by the Holocaust and by what we learned of its perpetrators was not the likelihood that ‘this’ could be done to us, but the idea that we could do it.” This observation presents us with something that most people don’t want to hear. The potential to be so cruel lies in ordinary people. The Milgram Experiment, conducted at Yale in the 1960s, shows how obedience and an authoritative figure can transform an individual into someone who would cause harm to someone else. When you look at this beside Joshua Barajas’s article How Nazi's Defense of "Just Following Orders" Plays Out in the Mind, it shows that obedience is not just weakness but that in people's minds, they use it to not take responsibility. The Milgram Experiment suggests that almost everyone has the potential to harm others under the right conditions. In the study, many of the volunteers were willing to give the other person high voltage electricity shocks only because an authority figure told them to continue. The participants were not inherently violent (I assume) and they believed they were helping science. Yet when they were urged by the scientist, they continued to inflict pain despite all the shouts of the learner begging them to stop. This shows that human beings prioritize authority over what their own moral conscience is telling them to do, especially when an authority figure will take the responsibility. The article helps explain why this happens. Barajas uses research that shows when people act under orders, their sense of agency lessens and they feel less responsibility for their actions. As Patrick Hoggard notes, people experience their actions under authority as “passive movements” instead of voluntary choices. This mirrors the mindset of one of the Holocaust’s chief organizers, who claimed he was “forced to serve as a mere instrument.” While Haggard cautions that just following orders should not be a viable excuse, he says that feeling the effect of less responsibility can really happen to anyone. However, obedience to authority is not the only factor that explains why ordinary people participate in atrocities. Other influences such as fear of punishment, peer pressure, and prejudice. For example, in the Milgram experiment, many participants said they were uncomfortable but continued shocking the learner because they felt they had to. Quitting would have meant they failed the experimenter and disrupted the study. On a larger scale like genocide, people may fear imprisonment, job loss, or being ostracised if they resist. Propaganda is also used to make the victims seem like less than human, making the violence more justifiable. All this to say, obedience combines with other social pressures to create the conditions in which mass violence becomes possible.

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