Charting the psychology of evil, decades after 'shock' experiment

<http://www.cnn.com/2008/HEALTH/12/19/milgram.experiment.obedience/index.html?eref=rss_latest>http://www.cnn.com/2008/HEALTH/12/19/milgram.experiment.obedience/index.html?eref=rss_latest
 


Story Highlights
    * Experts: Any person, when placed in a 
particular situation, may do harm when told
    * In the Milgram experiment, participants 
believed they were giving electric shocks
    * Recent research confirms Milgram's findings
    * The Stanford Prison Experiment explored the 
horrors of a prison environment
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    SLIDESHOW
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By Elizabeth Landau
CNN


(CNN) -- If someone told you to press a button to 
deliver a 450-volt electrical shock to an 
innocent person in the next room, would you do it?
Stanley Milgram began conducting his famous psychology experime


Stanley Milgram began conducting his famous psychology experiments in 1961.
[]


Common sense may say no, but decades of research suggests otherwise.

In the early 1960s, a young psychologist at Yale 
began what became one of the most widely 
recognized experiments in his field. In the first 
series, he found that about two-thirds of 
subjects were willing to inflict what they 
believed were increasingly painful shocks on an 
innocent person when the experimenter told them 
to do so, even when the victim screamed and pleaded.

The legacy of Stanley Milgram, who died 24 years 
ago on December 20, reaches far beyond that 
initial round of experiments. Researchers have 
been working on the questions he posed for 
decades, and have not settled on a brighter vision of human obedience.

A new study to be published in the January issue 
of American Psychologist confirmed these results 
in an experiment that mimics many of Milgram's 
original conditions. This and other studies have 
corroborated the startling conclusion that the 
majority of people, when placed in certain kinds 
of situations, will follow orders, even if those 
orders entail harming another person.

"It's situations that make ordinary people into 
evil monsters, and it's situations that make 
ordinary people into heroes," said Philip 
Zimbardo, professor emeritus of 
<http://topics.cnn.com/topics/Psychology>psychology 
at Stanford University and author of 
<http://www.lucifereffect.com/>"The Lucifer 
Effect: Understanding How Good People Turn Evil."

How Milgram's experiments worked

Milgram, who also came up with the theory behind 
"six degrees of separation" -- the idea that 
everyone is connected to everyone else through a 
small number of acquaintances -- set out to 
figure out why people would turn against their 
own neighbors in circumstances such as 
Nazi-occupied Europe. Referring to Nazi leader 
Adolf Eichmann, Milgram wrote in 1974, "Could it 
be that Eichmann and his million accomplices in 
the Holocaust were just following orders? Could we call them all accomplices?"

His experiment in its standard form included a 
fake shock machine, a "teacher," a "learner" and 
an experimenter in a laboratory setting. The 
participant was told that he or she had to teach 
the student to memorize a pair of words, and the 
punishment for a wrong answer was a shock from the machine.



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The teacher sat in front of the shock machine, 
which had 30 levers, each corresponding to an 
additional 15 volts. With each mistake the 
student made, the teacher had to pull the next 
lever to deliver a more painful punishment.

While the machine didn't generate shocks and a 
recorded voice track simulated painful reactions, 
the teacher was led to believe that he or she was 
shocking a student, who screamed and asked to 
leave at higher voltages, and eventually fell silent.

If the teacher questioned continuing as 
instructed, the experimenter simply said, "The 
experiment requires that you go on," said Thomas 
Blass, author of the biography "The Man Who 
Shocked The World: The Life and Legacy of Stanley 
Milgram" and the Web site <http://www.stanleymilgram.com/>StanleyMilgram.com.

About 65 percent of participants pulled levers 
corresponding to the maximum voltage -- 450 volts 
-- in spite of the screams of agony from the learner.

"What the experiment shows is that the person 
whose authority I consider to be legitimate, that 
he has a right to tell me what to do and 
therefore I have obligation to follow his orders, 
that person could make me, make most people, act 
contrary to their conscience," Blass said.

An update

Because of revised ethical standards for human 
subject research, this kind of experiment cannot 
be replicated exactly. But Jerry Burger, 
professor of psychology at Santa Clara University 
in Santa Clara, California, made some tweaks to 
see if Milgram's results hold up today.
[]
 Watch an audio slide show for more on these experiments ยป

His study's design imitated Milgram's, even using 
the same scripts for the experimenter and 
suffering learner, but the key difference was 
that this experiment stopped at 150 volts -- when 
the learner starts asking to leave. In Milgram's 
experiment, 79 percent of participants who got to 
that point went all the way to the maximum shock, he said.

To eliminate bias from the fame of Milgram's 
experiment, Burger ruled out anyone who had taken 
two or more college-level psychology classes, and 
anyone who expressed familiarity with it in the 
debriefing. The "teachers" in this recent 
experiment, conducted in 2006, also received 
several reminders that they could quit whenever 
they wanted, unlike in Milgram's study.

The new results correlate well with Milgram's: 70 
percent of the 40 participants were willing to 
continue after 150 volts, compared with 82.5 
percent in Milgram's study -- a difference that 
is not statistically significant, Burger said.

Still, some psychologists quoted in the same 
issue of American Psychologist questioned how 
comparable this study is to Milgram's, given the differences in methods.

The idea of blind obedience isn't as important in 
these studies as the larger message about the 
power of the situation, Burger said. It's also 
significant that the participant begins with 
small voltages that increase in small doses over time.

"It's that gradual incremental nature that, as we 
know, is a very powerful way to change attitudes and behaviors," he said.

Stanford Prison Experiment

This idea of circumstances driving immoral 
behavior also came out in the Stanford Prison 
Experiment, a study done in 1971 that is the 
subject of a film in preproduction, written and 
directed by Christopher McQuarrie. Work on the 
film will resume in 2009 after McQuarrie's 
"Valkyrie" is released, his spokesperson said.

In this study, designed by Stanford's Zimbardo, 
two dozen male college students were randomly 
designated as either prison guards or prisoners, 
and lived in the basement of the university's 
psychology building playing these roles in their respective uniforms.

Within three days, participants had extreme 
stress reactions, Zimbardo said. The guards 
became abusive to the prisoners -- sexually 
taunting them, asking them to strip naked and 
demanding that they clean toilet bowls with their 
bare hands, Zimbardo said. Five prisoners had to 
be released before the study was over.

Zimbardo's own role illustrated his point: 
Because he took on the role of prison 
administrator, he became so engrossed in the jail 
system that he didn't stop the experiment as soon 
as this cruelty began, he said.

"If I were simply the principal experimenter, I 
would have ended it after the second kid broke 
down," he said. "We all did bad things in this 
study, including me, but it's diagnostic of the power situation."

Turning the principle around

But while ordinary people have the potential to 
do evil, they also have the power to do good. 
That's the subject of the 
<http://www.everydayheroism.org/>Everyday Heroism 
project, a collection of social scientists, 
including Zimbardo, seeking to understand heroic 
activity -- an area in which almost no research has been done, he said.

Acts such as learning first aid, leading others 
to the exit in an emergency and encouraging 
family members to recycle are some heroic 
behaviors that Zimbardo seeks to encourage.

"Most heroes are everyday people who do a heroic 
deed once in their lifetime because they have to 
be in a situation of evil or danger," he said.

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are needed and very much appreciated <*}}}><
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<http://www.halfthekingdom.org/>Kingdom!<*}}}><

Lord, may everything we do begin with Your 
inspiration and continue with Your help,
so that all our prayers and works may begin in You and by You be happily ended.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.
Amen.


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