Obedience- social-psychological factors Flashcards

1
Q

Obedience- social-psychological factors

list

A

Agentic state

Legitimacy of authority

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2
Q

Agentic state

A

-a mental state where we feel no personal responsibility for our behaviour
-as we believe we are acting as an agent for an authority figure
└=can obey even a destructive authority figure
└still experience moral strain (high anxiety)

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3
Q

Autonomous state

A

-opposite of being in an agentic state

  • feel a sense of responsibility for own actions as
  • an individual is free to behave according to their own principles
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4
Q

Agentic shift

A
  • agentic shift: shift from autonomy to agency
  • Milgram (1974) suggested this occurs when a person perceives someone else as a figure of authority (high power as high position in social hierarchy)
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5
Q

Binding factors

A

-explains why an individual remains in an agentic state

-allow the person to ignore or minimise the damaging effect of their behaviour
=reduce the moral strain they are feeling

└e.g.shifting responsibility onto the victim and denying damage they are doing to the victims

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6
Q

agentic state

strengths

A

Research support

-Blass and Schmitt (2011)

-showed a film of milgrams study
-students said experimenter was responsible for harm to learner
└due to legitimate authority (as he was on top of the hierarchy) and expert authority (because he was a scientist)

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7
Q

Legitimacy of authority

A

-an explanation for obedience which suggests we are more likely to obey people who we perceive to have authority over us
(have higher position of power in social hierarchy)

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8
Q

Destructive authority

A

-powerful leaders (e.g. Hitler, starlin) have used their powers for destructive purposes
└ordering people to act in cruel and dangerous ways

  • in milgrams study
  • experimenter used prods to order participants to behave in ways that went against their consciences
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9
Q

Agentic state
Limitations
Summary

A

Limited explanation - Hofling et al

Obedience alibi - mandel (1998)

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10
Q

Agentic state
Limitations
Limited explanation

A
  • agentic shift doesn’t explain many of the research findings
  • doesn’t explain why some participants didn’t obey

-doesn’t explain findings from Hofling et als study
└nurses didnt show distress as predicted from Milgrams study

└agentic shift can only account for some situations of obedience

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11
Q

Agentic state
Limitations
Obedience alibi

A

-behaviour of nazis cannot be explained in terms of authority and agentic shift

-mandel (1998)
└men in german reserve police battalion 101 obeyed orders to shoot a small town in poland
└despite the fact they didn’t have direct orders to do so, could have been assigned other duties if preferred

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12
Q

Legitimacy of authority
Strengths
Summary

A

Real life crimes of obedience - Kelman and Hamilton (1989)

Cultural differences - Kilham and Mann (1974), Mantell (1971)

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13
Q

Legitimacy of authority
Strengths
Real life crimes of obedience

A

-can help explain how obedience can lead to real life war crimes

-Kelman and Hamilton (1989)
└argue that the my lai massacre (1968) during the vietman war can be understood in terms of hierarchy of the US army
└504 unarmed civilians were killed by American soldiers, women gang raped and animals killed

└only one soldier faced charger and was found guilty- Lt William Calley- he said he was doing his duty and only following orders (same as Nazi officers defence at Nuremberg trials)
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14
Q

Legitimacy of authority
Strengths
Cultural differences

A

-studies account for cultural differences in obedience, show that countries differ in the degree to which people are traditionally obedient to authority

-replications of milgrams procedure in different countries:
-Kilham and Mann (1974)
└Australia: 16% of participants went to top of voltage scale
└Mantell (1971)
└Germany: 85% of participants went to top of voltage scale

└reflects the way that different societies are structured and how children are raised to perceive authority figures

└supportive findings from cross cultural research increase validity of the explanation

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