Of course, they're people, so there will be personality differences, but what stands out in the article is that so many of them found this very difficult to do. Types who might get a kick out of it, or merely not care, might be the the 1% of psychopaths:
"He suggested the experiment to one of his graduate student classes, but the students recoiled. Finally, one student, Ira Goodman, volunteered to try it with a partner. But instead of coming back after 20 trials as he had promised, he returned with only 14. When Dr. Milgram asked him what had happened, he said that it was just too difficult." ;;;The following semester, he asked 10 members of his class on experimental social psychology to complete the experiment. ... Those tension-filled subway rides in the spring of 1972 are still easily recalled by many of Dr. Milgram's former students scattered across the country. "I really did feel sick to my stomach," said Dr. Krogh ... Two weeks ago, a pair of reporters who set out to replicate the experiment struggled with similar inhibitions."
;;;The following semester, he asked 10 members of his class on experimental social psychology to complete the experiment. ... Those tension-filled subway rides in the spring of 1972 are still easily recalled by many of Dr. Milgram's former students scattered across the country.
"I really did feel sick to my stomach," said Dr. Krogh ... Two weeks ago, a pair of reporters who set out to replicate the experiment struggled with similar inhibitions."
Milgram's point about the shock experiments and to a lesser extent the subway ones is that this had nothing to do with some "darker" side, quite the opposite. He argued that the problem was not that the Germans who ran camps, or the people in the shock experiments were evil or sadistic, but that they were too compliant, too inclined to obey and that Americans can't comfort themselves they are morally superior. The other important fact in the subway experiments, apart from the difficulty for those doing the experiment, was the very unexpected result that in one version, 68% of New Yorkers gave up their seat.
Maybe it's because I'm a Londoner - that I moved to Nice.
He argued that the problem was not that the Germans who ran camps, or the people in the shock experiments were evil or sadistic, but that they were too compliant, too inclined to obey and that Americans can't comfort themselves they are morally superior.
to train a future generations of moral giants would be a good thing, but the fact remains most will do whatever they perceive they need to to ensure survival.
hard to make a value judgment about that...
and as for the Jungian shadow thingy, i think it proves even more that it's a much better approach to confront our own surprisingly aspects seeing it as a (not immutable) part of our nature, rather than projecting it outside on some satan image.
put even simpler, people need to learn that their own sense of responsibility for their actions can never be deflected on to anyone else, no matter how scary they are, without some collective karma.
i remember my dad saying once he was glad the british army had never ordered him to shovel murdered corpses into ovens all day, and my being shocked at that, still so young and naive... so matter of fact he was.
but then i tried to put myself in some german conscript's shoes ordered to do the same, and i realised i could only hope i'd do the right thing under those conditions, but it would be unbelievably arrogant to assume that moral fibre without a similar, diabolically nightmarish test.
romantically noble notions probably look different at gunpoint.
the milgram experiment was an ersatz situation, but it showed only too clearly how impressed and intimidated people found scientists at the time!
this french episode only reveals how nakedly people feel not to be celebrities, the ultimate circle of hell, for pomo man. reality shows...
but not in 'reality' shows.
first time i met my shadow was in a rugby scrum. i loathed the sport heartily, and was so pissed off one day i just kicked into the middle of it hoping to hurt someone's ankle, whoever.
i was very disturbed by this, i really had no clue i could be such an asshole.
teh stupid got to me. i think about that when i read about the milgram experiment.
course in the 70's and later shrewd entrepreneurs made big $ holding workshops that basically taught people how to celebrate assertiveness, at the price of being assholes, so it goes... ~"When an inner situation is not made conscious, it appears outside as fate." Karl Jung~
Most people went on very unwillingly and were in clear discomfort, this has nothing to do with your angry violence in a game. Yes, we are extremely flexible creatures and we are capable of anger and violence, necessary for survival in some extreme situations. Stressful situations can lead to unprovoked violence, as we know from experience such as yours as well as experiments on rats.
But it's as well to make relevant distinctions between compliance, deference to authority and angry violence and personally I don't find the need to put the latter into a "shadow" category; it's just another human capacity, sometimes necessary and justified - like compliance. Maybe it's because I'm a Londoner - that I moved to Nice.
But it's as well to make relevant distinctions between compliance, deference to authority and angry violence and personally I don't find the need to put the latter into a "shadow" category; it's just another human capacity, sometimes necessary and justified - like compliance.
i get your point. it's a good one, possibly more evolved than my present position of understanding. ~"When an inner situation is not made conscious, it appears outside as fate." Karl Jung~