Obedience: Situational Explanations Flashcards

1
Q

Explanation 1: Agentic State

A

Acting as the ‘agent’ of someone in authority –> easy to deny personal responsibility for our actions - ‘‘just doing our job / just following orders’’.

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2
Q

Agentic Shift

A

2 ways of behaving:
Autonomous state: individuals direct own behaviour, take responsibility for consequences.
Agentic state: allow others to direct behaviour, pass on responsibility.

Agentic Shift: Ppl move from auto to agentic –> when confronted by authority figure.

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3
Q

Binding Factors

A

1) Binding Factors - aspects of a situation that allow person to ignore/minimise the damaging effect of their behaviour & reduce the ‘moral strain’ they feel –> makes it difficult to stop.

2) Moral Strain: obeying order that goes against our conscience can cause moral strain (results when we do smthin we believe is immoral in order to function as an agent of authority).

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4
Q

Social Hierarchy

A

1) Most societies are structured hierarchically - ppl in certain positions hold authority over us, e.g. parents, teachers, police.
–> These authorities have legitimacy through society’s agreement so we accept that they can exercise social power over others.

2) Legitimate authority have power to punish others - we give up some independence to ppl we trust to exercise authority properly.

3) Leaders use legitimate powers for destructive purposes (e.g. Hitler, Stalin) - Ordering ppl to behave in cruel & dangerous ways.

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5
Q

Explanation 2: Legitimacy of Authority

A

More likely to obey ppl who have more authority –> this authority is justified (legitimate) by individual’s position of power within social hierarchy.

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6
Q

Kelman & Hamilton

A

3 Factors to Explain Obedience:
1) Legitimacy of System
- the extent to which the ‘body’ is a legitimate source of authority (gov, army, school, family)

2) Legitimacy of Authority within System
- the power individuals hold to give orders because of their position in the system –> linked to status & hierarchy within establishment.

3) Legitimacy of Demands
- extent to which the order is perceived to be a legitimate area for the authority figure (not reasonable for teacher to ask you to wash their car)

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7
Q

Strength of Agentic State

A

RESEARCH SUPPORT

1) Milgram’s pps asked who is responsible if learner is harmed - experiment replied ‘I’m responsible’ –> pps went through procedure quickly without objecting –> shows pps acted more easily as an agent when they believed they weren’t responsible for their behaviour.

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8
Q

Limitation of Agentic State

A

AGENTIC SHIFT DOESN’T EXPLAIN MANY RESEARCH FINDINGS

1) Research found most nurses disobeyed a doctor’s order to give an excessive drug dose.
2) Doctor was authority figure but nurses remained autonomous & didn’t shift - same is true for some of Milgram’s pps.
—> Shows agentic shift can only explain obedience in some situations.

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9
Q

Strength of Legitimacy

A

LEGITIMACY CAN EXPLAIN CULTURAL DIFFERENCES

1) Research shows countries differ in obedience to authority.
E.g. 16% of Australian women obeyed, 85% of German pps obeyed.
—> Shows authority is more likely seen as legitimate in some cultures, reflecting upbringing.

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10
Q

Limitation of Legitimacy

A

LEGITIMACY CANNOT EXPLAIN ALL OBEDIENCE

1) Ppl may disobey even when they accept the legitimacy of the hierarchal authority structure.
E.g. most of Rank & Jacobson’s nurses were disobedient, as were some of Milgram’s pps.
–> Suggests innate tendencies towards obedience may be more important than legitimacy of authority.

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