Actually, I tend to be very cautious in extrapolating experiments to the real world. You would be shocked (pun, sadly, intended) to see the extent to which Milgram has been used to explain inhumanities. Take a stroll through the literature, and you will (unless you deny everything I sayLuxFerum said:
Don't get me wrong.(I don't tell me that I said that just because I deny everything that you say.)
I just want to have a clear picture of the experience, and what the conclusion really mean.
And I won't deny that I think that you somehow overextended the conclusion.
Remember, the biggest predictor of when people stop was nothing at all to do with personality or profession variables--it was the experimental condition they were in. And yes, they were in unknown territory, and yes, it was against their will. Yes, they were assured that the shocks were safe, but the interviews (and the behavior of the subjects) indicate clearly that they believed they were harming or even killing the "learner". There were, to my knowledge, no subjects who could at all reasonably be considered "comfortable with the situation".
They were in an unknow territory, doing a research on punishment, which is by definition, against the persons will. Administrating eletrical shocks that are allegeable safe. Following instructions by an authority figure, pretty confortable with the situation, that assure every time he ask, that the proceding is completely normal and that there is nothing to be worried about.
By this point of view, I don't know why would someone stop?
Nor do I--it was human nature. The people who thought it was monsterous were the subjects themselves, and the "experts" who believed and predicted that fewer than 1% of subjects would obey. Perhaps it is an artifact of American culture that this obedience was seen as monstrous.
This is where you lost me.
First I don't see what those people did was a monstruosity.
The vast majority of those who stopped stopped after 300 volts, well after the "learner" was already screaming. So not tolerating "even the remote possibility of harming someone" is too charitable a description.
In fact, the number of people that stoped show that a considerable number of people (30%+-) don't tolerate even the remote possibility of harming someone.
Oh...and there were other variations on the experiment. One required subjects to physically force the <s>victim's</s> learner's hand down onto a grounding plate so that he could be shocked. My book is at the office, but from memory...between 10 and 20 percent still went to 450 volts (by this time the learner was apparently unconscious (at best). There were many different variations on the experiment...I really cannot recommend strongly enough that you find and read the book if you at all in doubt. And find and watch the movie. The interest you have shown on this thread alone merits that.
In his book "Obedience to Authority", Milgram makes an explicit connection to the Mai Lai Massacre; his research was originally inspired by the actions of the Nazis who followed orders to kill millions. Perhaps you do not call these examples of "monstrous" behavior, but I find it hard to find fault with one who does. If we reserve "monstrous" for situations in which we actually grow horns and breathe fire, it is not nearly so useful a word.
Others may give the benefit of the doubt to the authority, but clearly unconfortable with the possibility of harming someone.
Sorry but that says nothing about turning someone into a moster.
How is that for a turnaround?![]()