[Topic 5] Agentic state and the legitimacy of authority Flashcards
1
Q
What is the Agentic State?
A
- Milgram defined the agentic state as being when we see ourselves “as an agent for carrying out another person’s wishes”
2
Q
What is the autonomic state?
A
- We see ourselves as being responsible for our behavior
3
Q
What is the Agenitc shift?
A
- When we move from seeing ourselves as being responsible for our behaviour to seeing someone else as being responsible for it.
- It may occur as a way of maintaining a positive self- image.
Because behaviour is no longer our responsibility, our self image is unaffected
4
Q
What is a legitimate authority figure?
A
- Someone who is perceived to be in position of social control in a situation.
- For a shift to the agentic state to occur, we must perceive the person telling us how to behave as a legitimate authority.
5
Q
How is authority perceived as legitimate?
A
- Must occur within some sort of institutional structure such as the military
- In Milgram’s studies, it was the category of the institution rather than the uni itself which was the institutional structure.
6
Q
Evaluation 1: Legitimate authority can be used to justify harming others
A
- Legitimate authority can be used to justify harming others
- When directed by a legitimate authority figure to engage in immoral actions, people are willing to do so
- This unquestioning obedience to authority occurs no matter how destructive the actions that these orders called for. This is especially true in the military
- This implies that when people authorise another person to make judgements for them about appropriate conduct, they no longer feel that their own moral values are relevant to their conduct
7
Q
Evaluation 2: People are not always in the agentic state and can revert back to an autonomous state
A
- People are not always in the agentic state and can revert back to an autonomous state
- When participants considered the experimenter a legitimate authority they underwent an agentic shift but reverted to an autonomic state afterwards
- However Lifton found that doctors at Auschwitz showed a gradual and irreversible transition from caring professionals to individuals who carried out evil acts.
- Therefore, carrying out evil actions over time may change people’s behaviours more than a sudden and reversible agentic shift