2015年12月17日星期四

Milgram Experiment

The Book of Milgram Experiment
——'Obedience to Authority', Stanley Milgram 
     Hey! This is Dr. Behaviorson. Remember last time when we talked about Stanford Prison Experiment. The investigation was applied extremely because people were arrested for unknown reasons and they were blindly imprisoned to a secret prison. In fact, throughout the whole experiment, many “prisoners” chose to obey the rules given by experiment conductors despite many times of violent struggles and forceful complaints. But why is that? Why do people have to obey the rules suddenly made for them and become so subordinate beyond expectation? So this time we are going to talk about why people would be obedient to certain rules. In 1963, Yale psychology professor Stanley Milgram decided to devise an experiment to test people’s willingness of subordination under certain pressure. Especially, Stanley Milgram chose some Yale college students as the subjects of the experiment. you may ask why he chose Yale college students to be the subjects. My personal conjecture is that college students are easy to form a disobedient and even rebellious mindset under the circumstances embraced by broader scope of social communication and various choices and opportunities provided by society. Therefore, under such influence, college students would be likely to defy the settled facts. On the other side, Stanley Milgram also chose a wide variety of people of different ages to achieve the universality of the experiment.
     In the experiment, there are 3 types of individuals involved: experiment conductors, subjects and confederates. Wait! Why is the position of confederate set? The confederate is like an associative actor of the experiment conductor. In other words, experiment conductor is the protagonist on the stage to perform and confederate is like a perfect foil to increase the dramatic intensity. Of course, the subject is the blind man on the stage to sense this dramatic intensity and decide whether to believe. Therefore, instead of being an elaborate experiment, this investigation is rather a planned show with histrionic effects. Back to the experiment, the experiment conductor and the subject were placed in one room and the confederate was place in the other. When the subject was invited to join in the experiment, they were told with misleading details of the experiment. Actually, the experiment conductors and subjects interacted in a way of QAQ. With every correct one, the subject can continue the next question posed by the conductor. With every wrong one, the experiment conductor had to increase the 15-voltge on the meter to “electrify” the confederate. The punishment was so absurd that many people began to question the motives of the questioner and his rules. But after a succession of questions, they are reluctant to go on. And with every time pressing with minor conviction and major doubt, the subjects would hear a frightening, though feigned, shout from the confederate, who was painfully bounded by the electrodes and trapped in the dimmed closet. Maybe the imagination of the subject would not go so far because the terror associated with the shout, like a warning bell, petrified the subject each and every time they pressed the button. In other words, their anxiety escalated over and over and affected negatively on the correctness of their answers. Therefore, as the experiment proceeded by the time, the subjects gradually lost their rational thinking for the frequent shout and approached the blink of the collapse. Needless to say, after certain degree of electrical shock, the subjects could not accept the punishment to the confederate instead of themselves. But they did not know that the pain from the punishment in the confederate was empathized to themselves. Of course, people exhibited various reactions of disparate emotions. Some showed extreme anger onto the absurdity and meaninglessness of the instructions given by the conductor. They also repeated times after times that they would not continue under any condition. Some showed the sense of despair and even begged to quit the experiment. Thus, the similarity shared by the majority of experimenters was the unwillingness to proceed. They, of course, indicated their personal wills to reject and defy.
Depression in choosing
whether to obey
     But here is a noticeable point in the experiment: the instructions given by the experimenter. What is the magic lurked in the words of the experimenter to maintain the subjects’ willingness at the beginning but to make them refuse in the end? What kind of communicative hint should be given to show the subjects’ willingness of obedience? Actually, instructions given by the experimenter were brief and clear and there are only four types of instructions given: “Please continue”, “The experiment requires that you continue”, “It is absolutely essential that you continue” and “You have no other choices, you must go on.” Under a close examination, the words are found forceful and especially determined. From the other aspect, the instructions implied that the subjects’ actions would not responsible for the injuries suffered by the confederate. This implication offered an excuse for the subject to press the button. Yes, the human stain. The obedience came from free of duty and the invisible power embraced in the words. Basically, the subjects reacted to the instructions subconsciously, using the crucial factors in the surroundings instead of the rational thinking to make the choice. Therefore, their unwillingness was successively performed and the experiment was halted times after times, forming an increasing pressure for the subjects either to answer or to press the button for the wrong answer. When their fingertips approached the maximum indicators on the meter, most people felt half-relieved, for there is no more painfully-struck screaming from the next      room, and half-horrified, for possible accusation of murder of electrification. In reality, about 65% of subjects pressed the 450-voltage, which is the highest indicator on the meter. But when they finally saw the confederate walking out of the room unharmed, extreme negativity shown in their emotions soon vanished.
     After the experiment, people’s reaction achieved the polarization again, but mostly about criticisms. Certainly, one perspective from the experiment was that what the subjects were assured was not validated. For example, they were unaware of the fact that they would exert execution on the victims. Therefore, the breach of the promises also gave an opportunity for critics. The other perspective from the criticism was the exploration of the hidden aspects of the human nature——obedience. It forced us keep in touch with certain facts, suppressing to a superior power. But here is the question. To what extent was obedience applied to measure the human nature? Did it mean that obedience to the superior power equals to the stain in the human nature? Maybe the inappropriateness in the experiment revealed us from the measure of the extremes of obedience. And the way to measure them was so ruthless and unconventional. It can be imagined that when the person was forced to press the 450-voltage button, enormous pressure forced him to follow the obedience but there should be an inner voice deep down in the subject’s heart, associated with the principles of social ethics, calling out to forbid. In fact, it is person’ competition of his inside with his outside. And the purpose of the investigation is to see which side wins.
Indications on the Meter 
     Overall, the obedience in the modern society has always been an unsettled subject. Maybe when we face certain pressure from the unchallengeable authority, we would mostly obey to it. But when certain rule is flexible enough or much freedom is given, we would have a different choice. And that’s rational thinking. But under the controlled experimental conditions, rationality did not apply and only sub-consciousness worked, which functioned as a critical factor that influences the subjects in every pressured pressing.


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