Social Pyschology - Obediance Flashcards
Intro of agency theory
- Humans live in hierarchically organised groups and for these groups to work subordinate indv have to suppress their desires and obey their leaders
- Stanley milgram believed that obedience is necessary for a well functioned society
- Milgram stated that we have two mindsets that make us obedient : our autonomous and agentic states
What is our autonomous state
A mindset where we behave independently, make our own decisions on how to behave and take responsibility for the consequences of our own actions
What happens in the autonomous state
- our behaviour is self directed
- we are in control of our own behaviour and take full responsibility for the consequences of our actions
- we have understanding to our morals
- we operate in this state when we are on our own, with peers or ppl who are below us in status
What is the agentic state
A mindset which allows us to carry orders from an authority figure, even if they conflict with our own personal sense of right and wrong. We absolve our self from responsibility believing that we are acting on someone else’s behalf, blame for any negative consequences lie on them.
What is agentic shift
The shift that occurs we change from our autonomous state to agentic state
Why can being in the agentic state a bad thing
As it can cause us from going against our morals to fulfill the wishes of an authority figure
What is moral strain
A state of mental conflict where ppl may experience symptoms of anxiety as they are going against their morals to fulfill the wishes of others
Does moral strain stop obedience and explain why
No as ppl do not want to destroy their status quo
Strengths of agency theory
- support by milgrams 1963 study
Found that 100% of his pp would administer a shock of 300V, 65% would go up to 450V which was beyond the shock labelled “danger extreme shock” to a confederate as a punishment for getting a Q wrong in the learning task
Supports milgrams suggestion that in face of a legitimate authority ppl are more likely to enter their agentic state despite high levels of moral strain
Weakness of Agency theory
- Milgrams research lacked ecological validity since irl teachers do not electrocute students, this artificial and unnatural nature of the supporting research might affect his results and not accurately support his theory
- milgram makes it seem that agentic state is inevitable when in present of a legitimate authority
Rank and Jacobson study with nurses found that 89% of nurses failed to obey orders when asked by a doctor to prescribe an overdose of a drug showing that most nurses stayed in their autonomous state proving a person does not always switch to their agentic state when in present of a authority figure
Application of agency theory
- the agentic shift may help reduce prejudice as the authority figure can tell people to be understanding and kind to each other
Demonstrated irl at schools and on social media with influencers
What is the social impact theory
An explanation of the extent to which other peoples real or imagined presence can alter the way an individual thinks, feels or acts.
Components of SOCIAL IMPACT THEORY
- social force
- psychological law/ law of diminishing returns
- divisions of impact
What is the social force
The pressure that gets out in an indv to change their behaviour
Components that make up social force in the SOCIAL IMPACT THEORY
- STRENGTH - the power the source has and the messages they convey
- IMMEDIACY - the proximity of the source (how close they are)
- NUMBERS - how many sources are present during the interaction